The Massachusetts Criminal Justice: A Chance To Experience A Time Warp

Present Day District
Court Clerk’s Office

Did you ever get nostalgic for the ‘20s or ‘30s. I was thinking back how things were done back then.  Do you remember carbon paper? If you wanted to copy a letter you’d put this flimsy piece of inked paper between two pieces of bond paper and type. Typing was done on a manual typewriter and at the end of a line you’d manually move the carriage back. Make a mistake and you’d have to start all over again. Remember mimeograph machines and pens with ink? 3” x 5” index cards in wooden or metal cabinets hopefully filed in order. If you wanted to look something up you’d have to go to where it was stored.

You probably think those are part of the distant past.  In one sense you would be right because they are rarely used nowadays.  In another sense you would be wrong because even though they disappeared the system that existed when they flourished still exists.

If you ever feel like seeing what it was like during those days you only have to go to one of our state courts and go into a criminal session. Much of what goes on in the courthouses is no different than the way things were done back then even though the carbon paper, mimeograph, index files and ink are gone.

One thing that always bothered me about the criminal justice system is the inability or lack of interest by anyone to do something about the most basic things that could improve it. I think rather than saying bothered I should say astonished.  Nothing has happened in at least the last seventy or more years to improve the basic operation of that system.

Why is this? I suppose the reason for it is most of us are not caught up in it so we don’t really care about it. Out of sight, out of mind as we’ve heard.

Another is the lack of interest by the district attorneys. I don’t recall them ever doing anything to bring about substantial changes in the way things are done. I read that they want more crimes (like the new crimes Annie Dookhan is charged with),the punishment for some crime or another made more severe (like the new mandatory minimums) or they want to make it easier for them to do wiretaps.  They never seem to address themselves to fundamental things that should be changed in our system.

I’d mention the judges but they really have no interest in influencing the way things are done. Most of them want to put in their seven or so hours a day and escape from the confines of the court. (At one time when the work was over they could go home but now they have to hang around the courthouse until four pm. because the media might be watching them.) Judges enjoy the title and the little prestige the position has among the law profession. Some recognize the importance of their position and give consideration to how it impacts the lives of the people before them. But mostly they handle the cases which appear assembly line-like fashion and complain that they should be paid more; but beyond that they really have little interest in the way the system operates.

The defense lawyers too aren’t too involved in considering making any changes.  They have their handful of clients. They adjust to whatever new forms they have to fill out or time standards they have to meet knowing that nothing has really changed since they began practicing. They are happy to go along with what exists, actually, more than happy.

You could take a judge, prosecutor and defense lawyer of today and put them back into a courtroom of the ’30s and they would not know the difference. Everything would appear about the same and they’d fit in quite easily. I’m sure few would suggest otherwise.

I’m not sure there is any other field that exists today that you could say that about. Yet no one seems bothered that this aspect of our society which has the potential to affect all of us is stuck back in the old days when the milk man delivered his product with horse and buggy.

I’ll be more specific about things tomorrow.

 

8 Comments

  1. Wow, didn’t know that last part regarding Weld, I agree in regards to his straightforward comments. Great post scratching the surface on this issue earlier.

    • Jim:
      Thanks but remember the issue vanishes if Judge Stearns decides it is not for the jury.

      • This really needs to go too the first circuit re: stearns presiding over this, it’s absolute bullshit in my opinion he’s refused to back down.

        • Jim:
          No one in the judiciary cares if Whitey gets a fair trial or not. They just want the thing to go away. I don’t see him getting much help on appeal. Stearns should recuse himself. It is very difficult to sit in judgment of the acts of one’s friends and working partners.

          • Agreed, his only hopes at this point is a mistrial, (If Griselda Blanco can get one, she was essentially the female Pablo Escobar who had ordered 200 murders and her group was primarily responsible for all the murders in Miami in the 80’s. She got a mistrial because her hitman who was her main witness was having phone sex with the prosecutions secretary, and recently in Suffolk County, if the defendant in the “mattapan massacre” trial who blatantly did the murders including a woman and baby can get one, Whitey definitely has a shot in hell in this city, albeit an extremely small one. Or if a juror that sees through all of this (someone who may initially have resentments against the gov’t anyways) and find him not guilty if they buy the immunity defense, in a “you guys (fbi/doj/usag) let this happen? well this is what will happen when you give informants a free pass for crime, Not Guilty”

            • Jim:
              Whitey would love a mistrial. Remember his goal is to stay in Plymouth the rest of his life since what awaits him after conviction is quite awful. What Whitey needs is for some jurors who know nothing about him to be on his jury. I’m not sure that is possible. If he does get a handful of truly impartial jurors who know nothing about him what are they going to see in the courtroom. An old guy looking a lot like Santa Claus dressed up nicely in his suit and tie sitting at counsel table. He’ll have a prison pallor which will make him look a little ill. They’ll then have these witnesses who look like gangsters testifying against him. They’ll find it difficult to believe this old guy had any dealings with these other guys especially after they hear what sweet deals the others got to testify against him.
              I really don’t see a not guilty. There will be some on the jury who know all about Whitey from stories in the press and will be anxious to convict him. Even if that were not the case, the way the government presents the case with big posters showing all the people who have been killed, with pictures of the bodies being dug up, and of the guns found in his apartment when he was in Santa Monica some jurors will want to convict him of some of them. He needs the others who don’t know him and figure he’s being set up to hold off and give him a mistrial which will get him another year in Plymouth.

  2. Matt,

    What do you read into this? http://www.necn.com/12/10/12/Weld-Never-heard-immunity-deal-for-White/landing.html?blockID=811837&feedID=11106

    Weld claiming he never heard of Whitey’s immunity deal – but unable to rule it out, due to him being “kept in the dark” on the extent of his activity. He says he does not know if he will be called to trial, but something tells me he will very much so be a defense witness.

    • Jim:
      I’ll write more about Weld tomorrow or the next day. I already showed how this statement may impact the trial. His interview was quite interesting. No doubt he will be a witness as you suggest since that statement along with others brings him clearly into the trial. The only thing that will stop this happening is if Stearns rules that is not an issue at trial. Weld’s looking for another run. He’s criticized Coakley for bringing the case against Cahill, the feds for going after the probation department and now this. I like the guy for telling it the way I see it.