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:Grand-Jury: The
grand jury goes back to Athens and pre-Norman England. By 1681
the last "grand jury abuse" had taken place in England under
Charles II. In 1791 the grand jury was incorporated into our
Fifth Amendment: If those serving on grand juries knew how grand juries were supposed to work, we would not have the federal government misbehavior that we have to put up with on a daily basis: Ruby Ridge, Waco, gun laws, income tax criminal laws, and all the rest. Compare what all three branches of government have done to the original meaning of "indictment by grand jury" and you can come to only one conclusion: what is today called the federal grand jury and " indictment by grand jury" is the most monstrous constitutional fraud ever perpetrated upon the American people. Published opinions in the Supreme Court Reporter, the Federal Reporters, the Federal Supplements, and more ancient books, tell us how the phrase has been read at different times in our history. Compare what all three branches of government have done to the original meaning of "indictment by grand jury" and you come to the conclusion: what is today called the federal grand jury and "indictment by grand jury" is the most monstrous constitutional fraud ever perpetrated upon the American people. The purpose of the requirement that a man be indicted by a grand jury is to limit his jeopardy to offenses charged by a group of his fellow citizens acting independently of either prosecuting attorneys or judge. Stirone v. the United States , 80 S.Ct. 270, 273 (1960). After grand jurors are "sworn to secrecy" in grand jury investigations, federal prosecutors treat grand juries as a formality on an indictment that has been prepared solely by the prosecutor, in advance of the so-called "investigation." All grand jury "investigations" these days are manipulated by federal prosecutors to reach a predetermined result. See e.g., In Re November 1979 Grand Jury , 616 F 2d. 1021, 1026 (7th Cir. 1980). A sufficient basis for indicting for a criminal offense should only emerge at the end of an investigation. U. S. v. Dionisio, 93 S.Ct. 764, 772 (1973). The grand jury is to act as a "shield" between the power of the federal government and the accused. First National Bank of Tulsa v. U. S. Dept. of Justice, 865 F. 2d 217, 219 (10th Cir. 1989). "It is edifying indeed to a new prosecutor to learn how willing people are to let trouble descend upon their fellows." Melvis P. Antell, judge, in 51 A.B.A.J. 153, 154 (1965). Any experienced prosecutor will admit that he can indict anybody at any time for almost anything before any grand jury. Campbell, Delays In Criminal Cases, 55 F.R.D. 229, 253 (1972). Imagine that someone has committed a federal crime and you happen to be the victim: tampering with your mail, in violation of 18 U.S.C. section 1701, 1702, 1703, and for conspiracy against your rights, 18 U.S.C. section 241, and you want the grand jury to issue an indictment and bring the miscreant to justice. It won't happen. First, you can't go to the grand jury directly. To attempt to do so is a felony, 18 U.S.C. section 1504. Second, you are supposed to go, under modern legal procedure, to the United States Attorney, or one of his assistants, and file a complaint, which will then be presented to the grand jury for consideration. It won't happen. What will happen is that a career bureaucrat, a United States Attorney will spend about five minutes evaluating your complaint with two thoughts in mind:
England used to have "attainting juries" bring in a bad verdict like many of those handed down today and, upon a second trial, the jurors on the first jury were put in prison, had their houses leveled, their woodlands cut down, their crops burned, and when released from prison, were legally "dead" with no rights whatsoever. If grand juries were operating properly, it is possible half the "public servants" in the State would be indicted. In 1681 Lord Shaftesbury and Stephen Colledge were "no-billed" for treason. The indictment had been requested by the King of England, Charles II. After the first "no bill" was returned, Charles managed to get another grand jury convened in Oxford. The two were duly indicted. Lord Shaftesbury fled to the Continent and Stephen Colledge was beheaded. Government attorneys tried to get Colledge to implicate others to save himself. He refused. Sometime later the fellow who held Janet Reno's job in England wrote the following: "I know not how long the practice in that matter of admitting counsel to a grand-jury hath been; I am sure it is a very unjustifiable and unsufferable one. If the grand jury have a doubt in in point of law, they ought to have recourse to the court, and that publicly, and not privately, and not to rely on the private opinion of counsel, especially of the king's counsel, who are, or at least behave themselves as if they were parties. Remarks on Colledge's Trial, by Sir John Hawles, Solicitor-General in the Reign of King William III, 8 Howell State Trials 724 (1681) In English practice, prosecutors were not allowed in the grand jury room, either for investigations or deliberation (voting). This is true in the state of Connecticut even to this day. Cobbs v. Robinson , 528 F. 2d 1331, 1338 (2nd Cir. 1975). This was the same practice in the United States 15 years after the Fifth Amendment was adopted. On November 3, 1806, Joseph Hamilton Daviess, United States Attorney for Kentucky, moved that a grand jury be convened to consider indicting Aaron Burr (whose second in the famous duel with Alexander Hamilton was a Swartwout) for attempting to involve the United States in a war with Spain. On December 3rd the grand jury was called. Daveiss immediately moved "to be permitted to attend the grand jury in their room". This motion was considered "novel and unprecedented" and was denied. After hearing the evidence in secret the grand jury deliberated and, on December 5th, an ignoramus bill returned. Demythologizing The Grand Jury, 10 American Criminal Law Review 700, 734 (1972) United States v. Burr , Fed. Case No. 14, 892 (C. Ct. D. Ky. 1806) In England, allowing a prosecutor in the grand jury room was a violation of the grand juror's oath. Proceedings against the Earl of Shaftesbury 8 Howell State Trials 759, 773 (1681) By the latter part of the 19th Century the "sappers and miners of the Republic," as Thomas Jefferson referred to federal judges, had begun to undermine the grand jury system. One judge in Tennessee went so far as to state that the function of the government prosecutor was to protect the accused from the grand jury. In re Dist. Atty. of U. S. , Fed. Case No. 3925 (C.C. Tenn. 1872). A recent Supreme Court case states: Undoubtedly "No person shall be held to answer for capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless upon a presentment or indictment of a grand jury." That does indeed confer a right not to be tried (in the pertinent sense) when there is no grand jury indictment. Undoubtedly, the common-law protections traditionally associated with the grand jury are required by this provision -- including the requisite secrecy of grand jury proceedings. [and traditionally no prosecutor in the room] Midland Asphalt Corp. v. U. S. , 109 S.Ct. 1494, 1499-1500 (1989). If a constitutional theory has no basis in the history of the amendment it seeks to interpret, it is difficult to apply and yields unprincipled results, I see little use in it. Wallace v. Jafree , 105 S. Ct. 2479, 2519 (1985) (Chief Justice William Rehnquist dissent) As drafters of our Bill of Rights, the framers inscribed the principles that control today. Id. The constitution is a written instrument. As such its meaning does not alter. That which it meant when adopted, it means now. South Carolina v. United States , 26 S.Ct. 110, 111 (1905). A lower court ruling by Justice
Harry Blackmun: U. S. v. Udziela , 671 F. 2d 995, 999 (7th Cir. 1982) Harry Blackmun wrote the "majority opinion" in Roe v. Wade, introducing concepts that had never occurred to those who wrote the Fourteenth Amendment relied upon for the decision. The Executive Branch, headed
by the President, appoints the Attorney General, who controls all
United States Attorneys. The executive branch has never had any "legitimate.
. . activities" before the grand jury. Wallace v. Jaffree at 2516. The constitution was framed in the language of the English common law. Jacoby, The American Prosecutor: A Search for Identity, page 7 (1980). Until 1853 there was nowhere general organized control of Federal prosecution. Id. at 20. In England every private person had the same rights as the Attorney General to initiate a prosecution. Once a case had been presented to the grand jury, it was entirely out of the prosecutor's hands. Stephen, A History of the Criminal Law of England , Vol. I pages 493-502 (1883). The Department of Justice was created June 22, 1870 [and by the following year, the United States was registered as a corporation...in London]. At the time the only authority the Justice Department had was to investigate postal crimes and compile crime statistics. In the early days of our Republic "prosecutor" was simply anyone who voluntarily went before the grand jury with a complaint. United States v. Sandford , Fed. Case No. 16, 221 (C. Ct. D.C. 1806). Almost a century later a private citizen could still have an arrest warrant issued. In re Price , 83 F. 830 (C. Ct. S.D.N.Y. 1897). Back then grand jurors themselves were the only ones competent to ascertain who was the prosecutor. United States v. Farrington , 5 F. 343, 346 (D.C.N.Y. 1881). The rise of the "public prosecutor," both at the federal and state levels, has drastically altered grand jury statistics. For example, of 448 cases examined in 1838, there were 80 "no bills." 1 The Law Rptr 215 (Suffolk County Mass. 1838). In 1976 there were 23,000 federal indictments returned. There were 123 no bills. Hearings on H.R. 94 , 95th Cong., 1st Sess. 738 (1977). Congressman Joshua Eilberg, the author of H.R. 94 (The Grand Jury Reform Act), failed to get his bill passed. The Justice Department then retaliated against him by suing him for running up too much of a telephone bill while he was a member of Congress. United States v. Eilberg , 536 F. Supp. 514 (E.D. Pa. 1982). The absurdity of the present system
was recognized over a century ago. Debates and Proceedings of the State of California pages 308-17 (1880) Remarks of Mr. Huestis during 1878-79 California Constitutional Convention The fact is, allowing career civil service bureaucrats into the grand jury room has rendered that part of the Fifth Amendment (as the statistics prove) a nullity. As a federal judge stated over a century ago, "The moment the executive is allowed to control the action of the courts in the administration of criminal justice, their independence is gone." In re Miller , Fed. Case No. 9, 552 (C.Ct.D. Ind. 1878). "He truly lives
dangerously who trusts his health to
a doctor; GRAND JURY INDICTMENT VERSUS PROSECUTION BY INFORMATION-AN EQUAL PROTECTION- DUE PROCESS ISSUE By Richard Alexander* Following almost two hundred years of continuous and unwavering support of the institution we know as the grand jury, the United States Supreme Court recently announced an opinion which suggests the first leak in the dike of its regard for that once exalted institution. Speaking for the six-member majority in United States v. Dionisio,[1] Justice Stewart acknowledged that "[tlhe grand jury may not always serve its historic role as a protective bulwark standing solidly between the ordinary citizen and an overzealous prosecutor . . . .[2] Even stronger expressions of concern over the continuing viability of the grand jury are found in the dissenting opinions of Justices Douglas and Marshall. Justice Douglas observed: "It is, indeed, common knowledge that the Grand Jury, having been conceived as a bulwark between the citizen and the Government, is now a tool of the Executive.[3] Justice Marshall emphasized the dangers facing grand jury independence as compounded by the Dionisio decision itself.[4] These comments are significant not only because of their source but also because they were not germane to the resolution of the problem before the Court. The volunteered concern of some of the highest judicial officers of our land over the method by which criminal prosecutions are initiated indicates the need for careful scrutiny of the grand jury process, particularly in the light of modem constitutional doctrines. Accordingly, this article presents a discussion of an important due process-equal protection issue inherent in the two contrasting felony-charging procedures authorized under Article 1, Section 8 of the California Constitution, prosecution by information following a preliminary examination or by grand jury indictment. For a full understanding of this problem, the discussion will begin with a review of the origin of the two procedures. Historical Introduction
Historically, the grand jury has been looked upon as a suitable device for protecting the weak or unpopular from judicial harassment or politically motivated prosecutions. The grand jury is supposed to function as a body of neighbors who aid the state in bringing criminals to justice while protecting the innocent from unjust accusation.[5] However, both the grand jury and the criminal information have ceased to fulfill these original role-obligations and have become increasingly subject to incapacitating manipulation and abuse. All of the major recent studies conclude that the grand jury has become, in effect, a rubber stamp of the prosecutor and not the check on his power that it is required to be.[6] The origins of the institution of the grand jury are obscure. In some form it was found early in all the Teutonic peoples, including the Anglo-Saxons before the Norman conquest.[7] Forms of the grand jury have also been traced in Scandinavian countries where jurors came to determine both law and fact.[8] The grand jury originated in Anglo-American law with the summoning of a group of townspeople before a public official to answer questions under oath, a system of inquiry used for such administrative purposes as the compilation of the Domesday Book of William the Conqueror.[9] In 1166, the crown first established the criminal grand jury, a body of twelve knights, or other freemen whose function was to accuse those who, according to public knowledge, had committed crimes.[10] The purpose was to give to the central government the benefit of local knowledge in the apprehension of those who violated the king's peace. Witnesses as such were not heard before this body. The use of accusing juries provided for in the Assizes of Clarendon (1166) and Northhampton (1176), closely resembles the modern grand jury in personnel, duties and powers.[11] During the thirteenth and early part of the fourteenth centuries, the grand jurors themselves served as petit jurors in the same matters in which they presented indictments.[12] Not until the eventual separation of the grand jury and petit jury did the function of accusation become clearly defined and did crown witnesses come to be examined in secret before the grand jury.[13] By the time of the appearance of le graunde inquest in 1368, the grand jury had acquired the powers and duties of the present-day grand jury and it has not changed materially since that time. [14] Even as it was still developing, prior to le graunde inquest, the grand jury was becoming lame. As reported by Dean Morse: Holdsworth points out that the sheriff's tourn, with its presenting jury, became so powerful in the twelfth century that it aroused the suspicion of the king who ordered an inquest of the sheriffs in 1170. To check the power of the sheriff's tourn, the office of the coroner was created.[15] Origin of the System of Prosecution by Information Parallel to the development of the grand jury was the development of the criminal information. The use of the criminal information dates at least from the time of Edward I, 1272-1307.[16] Other evidence tracing the origins of the criminal information makes clear that its history and use in certain times and cases is almost as old as that of the indictment.[17] Like its counterpart, the grand jury, the criminal information was also subject to manipulation and abuse from early times. As stated by Dean Morse: The king's council came to initiate
criminal prosecutions based on informations not only of the king,
but also of private persons, and as a result, there were many false
and malicious prosecutions started and then dropped. The procedure
. . . came to be abused in that it was used for political Prosecutions
. . . . To check private persons from using information to initiate
false and malicious prosecutions, a statute was passed in 1692 [4
W. & M., c.18] which required that the informations of private
citizens should be approved of by the court. . . .[18] Criticism of the Grand Jury System In this country numerous studies undertaken to assess the efficacy of the grand jury have all concluded that it is no longer effective in protecting individuals against arbitrary prosecutions, and that it no longer exercises the independent judgment required by due process. The landmark study in this century was conducted by Dean Wayne Morse of the University of Oregon Law School. After an exhaustive study of 7,414 indictments and extensive questionnaires sent to prosecutors and judges, Dean Morse concluded: Grand juries are likely to be a fifth wheel in the administration of criminal justice in that they tend to stamp with approval, and often uncritically, the wishes of the prosecuting attorney. At best the grand jury tends to duplicate the work of the committing magistrate and prosecutor.[20] Dean Morse found that in only 5.15 percent of the cases initiated by the prosecutor in which he expressed an opinion was there a disagreement between the opinion of the prosecutors and the grand jury dispositions.[21] Similarly, the National Commission on Law Observance and Enforcement concluded: The grand jury usually degenerates into a rubber stamp wielded by the prosecuting officer according to the dictates of his own sense of propriety and justice. [The grand jury] has ceased to perform or be needed for the function for which it was established. [22] These findings are reinforced by Professor Moley who determined that the prosecutor "seems to dominate the grand jury to such a degree that its actions are in reality his own . . . ."[23] Most recently, Weinberg and Weinberg, in discussing preliminary hearings in federal courts, concluded with respect to grand juries: The grand jury is not a proper body to reach an "independent judicial determination" of probable cause. Its determination is unlikely to be "judicial" because it is composed of laymen, whose sole guidance on legal questions will normally come from the prosecutor. Its determination is also unlikely to be "independent" in most cases because, in practice, the prosecutor's influence is usually controlling.[24] The Second Circuit recently described the grand jury as basically "a law enforcement agency"[25] a conclusion supported by numerous studies.[26] Most recently William J. Campbell, Senior Judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, recommended that the grand jury be completely eliminated and replaced by a procedure encompassing an advisory preliminary examination before a judicial officer to determine probable cause.[27] Nature and Function of the Preliminary Examination The due process clauses of both the Fourteenth Amendment [28] and the California Constitution [29] require that the state adopt a procedure which will insure that no person is required to stand trial at the whim or caprice of the prosecuting attorney. [30] The form is not mandated to be either a grand jury or a preliminary examination [31] but rather a procedure which effectively secures to the accused the substance of due process: an independent judicial determination of the reasonableness of the charge.[32] Two methods for initiating a felony prosecution are authorized under the California Constitution in the following language: Offenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment shall be prosecuted by information, after examination and commitment by a magistrate, or by indictment, with or without such examination and commitment, as may be prescribed by law.[33] The California Penal Code authorizes
prosecution by either information or indictment [34] with the overwhelming
majority of all criminal prosecutions being initiated by information
pursuant to Penal Code Section 858. [35] Under this procedure, an
accused is entitled to a preliminary examination before a magistrate
[36] and is afforded the right to representation by counsel [37] and
the right to present witnesses in his own behalf.[38] In People v. Elliot [40] the purpose of the preliminary examination process was described in the following language: The preliminary examination is not merely a pre-trial hearing. "The purpose of the preliminary hearing is to weed out groundless or unsupported charges of grave offenses, and to relieve the accused of the degradation and the expense of a criminal trial. Many an unjustifiable prosecution is stopped at that point, where the lack of probable cause is clearly disclosed."[41] In Jennings v. Superior Court [42] this constitutional and statutory purpose was held to require that the defendant "be permitted, if he chooses, to elicit testimony or introduce evidence tending to overcome the prosecution's case or establish an affirmative defense."[43] The critical nature of the preliminary hearing and its constitutional concomitant assistance of counsel, during that stage were established recently in Coleman v. Alabama.[44] Although Alabama law forbade the use at trial of anything that occurred at a preliminary hearing held without counsel, nevertheless, the Court ruled: [I]t does not follow that the Alabama preliminary hearing is not a "critical stage" of the State's criminal process. The determination whether the hearing is a "critical stage" requiring the provision of counsel depends, as noted, upon an analysis "whether potential substantial prejudice to defendant's rights inheres in the . . . confrontation and the ability of counsel to help avoid that prejudice." United States v. Wade, [388 U.S. 218, 227 (1967)]. Plainly the guiding hand of counsel at the preliminary hearing is essential to protect the indigent accused against an erroneous or improper prosecution. First, the lawyer's skilled examination and cross-examination of witnesses may expose fatal weaknesses in the State's case that may lead the magistrate to refuse to bind the accused over. Second, in any event, the skilled interrogation of witnesses by an experienced lawyer can fashion a vital impeachment tool for use in cross-examination of the State's witnesses at the trial. Third, trained counsel can more effectively discover the case the State has against his client and make possible the preparation of a proper defense to meet that case at the trial. Fourth, counsel can also be influential at the preliminary hearing in making effective arguments for the accused on such matters as the necessity for an early psychiatric examination or bail. The inability of the indigent accused on his own to realize these advantages of a lawyer's assistance compels the conclusion that the Alabama preliminary hearing is a "critical stage" of the State's criminal process at which the accused is "as much entitled to such aid [of counsel] . . . as at the trial itself." Powell v. Alabama, [287 U.S. 45, 57 (1932 )].[45] Of equal, if not greater, import to our citizens is the fact that a preliminary examination provides them protection from the ignominy and expense of going to trial unless there has been an evidentiary hearing and a holding that sufficient evidence exists to justify trial. Prosecution by Information and Indictment: A Comparison In a prosecution by information, California law requires that there be an independent evidentiary determination of probable cause in an adversary proceeding before trial [46] but no equivalent right is granted to an accused who is prosecuted by grand jury indictment. Where an indictment is issued by the grand jury, the accused is not afforded the safeguard of an independent judicial evaluation of the evidence. Indictment by grand jury affords none of the fundamental rights provided in a preliminary examination.[47] Unless he is called as a witness, the defendant has neither the right to appear and present evidence to the grand jury nor to confront witnesses against him [48] Only the district attorney, the attorney general or special counsel may appear and present evidence.[49] Even if called as a witness, a defendant may not have the assistance of counsel to advise him.[50] Although the grand jury may require the district attorney to issue process for defense witnesses when it "has reason to believe that such evidence exists,2[51] this provision is of little practical value since the proceedings are held in secret with no notice to a defendant. Furthermore, as indicated by the opening statement of Penal Code Section 939.7, the grand jury is "not required to hear evidence for the defendant," and thus may reject such evidence at the very outset [52] Without hearing the evidence in the first place, the opportunity to determine whether evidence exists to "explain away the charge" is in effect foreclosed, virtually assuring the finding of an indictment under Penal Code Section 939.8 on the basis of "unexplained or uncontradicted" evidence.[53] In support of its finding, the grand jury is required to "receive none but evidence that would be admissible over objection at the trial of a criminal action . . . . [54] In determining what is admissible evidence, the grand jury may ask for the advice of the judge or district attorney. However, unless such advice is requested, the judge is excluded from the session,[55] leaving the jury to rely upon the prosecutor to advise it.[56] These contradictions have been the object of criticism by one commentator who has observed: When the function of indictment is mated with the responsibility of determining the character of the evidence that supports it, and with the right to exclude all evidence which could explain or contradict, the result is not proper. In short, it is both derogatory of the jury's basic purpose and devoid of fairness.[57] Thus, a defendant who is subject to indictment by grand jury is denied the right to present evidence to explain or contradict the charge, has no right to appear or to have the assistance of counsel, and may not confront and cross-examine the witnesses against him. On the other hand, a defendant charged by information has all of these rights in addition to the fact that, unlike the grand jury indictment process, the evidence is judged by a neutral and detached magistrate capable of independently evaluating the admissibility of that evidence. In this regard, the criticism voiced against the grand jury process during the 1878-79 California Constitutional Convention is noteworthy.[58] A number of speakers stressed that modification of the grand jury system had been actively espoused and generally supported in political meetings leading up to the convention.[59] The criticism voiced by a delegate named Mr. Huestis is still applicable today: But, Mr. Chairman, in order to get a more distinct idea of this matter, let us for a moment briefly consider the functions and duties of Grand Juries; and, as I understand it, their main duty is to examine the record of witnesses, or both, and come to a conclusion as to whether persons accused of crime ought to be tried or not. This they do under the advice of the District Attorney. In many cases they are, in whole or in part, composed of persons ignorant of the law; and in a majority of cases, if the District Attorney tells them that the evidence is sufficient to convict they indict, and on the contrary, if he tells them the evidence is not sufficient, they do not indict. They are, in the very nature of things, almost entirely under the control of the District Attorney, in all matters coming up in the Grand Jury room, and merely echo his opinions. The whole thing, then, practically viewed, merely amounts to a roundabout and very expensive method of getting the opinion of the District Attorney. And I submit that if this be necessary in order to insure the ends of justice, then, in the name of common sense, why not get the opinion of the District Attorney directly, and thus curtail the enormous expense attending the present system.[60] Despite these critical sentiments and those expressed by other delegates as well, the unlimited availability of the indictment procedure and its arbitrary use as an alternative to prosecution by information persists to the present day. A recent blatant example of arbitrary use of the grand jury procedure, aimed at avoiding the exercise of rights accorded to a defendant at a preliminary examination, was presented in People v. Uhleman.[61] The defendant had been charged with the sale of marijuana. At a lengthy preliminary hearing at which the defendant presented evidence of entrapment, the magistrate sustained that defense and dismissed the charges. Thereupon, the district attorney presented his case to a grand jury and obtained an indictment. On appeal a majority of the California Supreme Court upheld this procedure over the vigorous dissent of Justices Mosk and Tobriner. The majority opinion rested its conclusion on the historic interpretation of California Penal Code Section 1387 [62] allowing the prosecution to refile felony charges regardless of a dismissal by a magistrate.[63] Despite the obvious motive of the prosecutor to avoid extending to the defendant those procedural rights accorded him at the preliminary examination, the issue was not raised by the parties nor considered by the court.[64] Such a deliberate prosecutorial circumvention of a magistrate's adverse ruling in a preliminary hearing is a practice of long standing. Even before the enactment of the constitutional provision authorizing alternative charging procedures, at a time when the preliminary hearing was utilized only as a detention procedure for later indictment, the practice of ignoring a magistrate's contrary ruling was bitterly criticized by a delegate to the Constitutional Convention of 1878-79.[65] The distinction between the procedures for prosecution by indictment and prosecution by information in regard to the rights accorded to the accused obviously placed one charged by indictment at a considerable disadvantage. Yet, there has never been a judicial or legislative determination which has attempted to define a basis for discriminating between those who are and those who are not accorded these important rights. The decision to proceed by grand jury indictment, and thus deny the accused these fundamental rights, is left entirely to the absolute discretion of the district attorney.[66] The Equal Protection-Due Process Issue The arbitrary discrimination permitted
under present law raises a serious constitutional question in light
of principles recently recognized and applied by the California Supreme
Court in the enforcement of the equal protection and due process provisions
of the United States Constitution. While recognizing that absolute
equality is not required and that differences may exist so long as
an invidious discrimination does not occur, the court has viewed the
"'concept of the equal protection of the laws [as compelling]
recognition of the proposition that persons similarly situated with
respect to the legitimate purpose of the law receive like treatment.'"[67]
Richard Alexander is recognized by The State Bar of California as a certified specialist in civil trial law and was first certified as a civil trial lawyer by the National Board of Trial Advocacy in 1980. Emphasizing working relationships with clients has led to an exceptional record of success. He has served as a member of the Board of Governors of The State Bar of California, President of the Santa Clara County Bar Association and the Board of Governors of Consumer Attorneys of California. He is a founding member of the National Association of Consumer Advocates, and heads Alexander, Hawes & Audet, LLP. © Richard Alexander, 1974. Alexander, Hawes & Audet, LLP a California law firm specializes in personal injury, wrongful death, and financial losses caused by negligence, defective products, toxic chemicals, corporate misconduct or insurance fraud on behalf of consumers, small investors, injured workers and small businesses. In addition to individual cases the firm prosecutes class actions for large groups of individuals who have suffered financial loss as a result of corporate fraud, defective consumer products, and environmental pollution. The firm holds Martindale-Hubbell's highest rating and is recognized in the List of Preeminent Law Firms in the U. S. New York State recognizes a defendant's absolute right to testify before the panel if he chooses and also recommend specific witnesses to the grand jury. The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers recognizes that the federal grand jury has been fashioned into a sword for the prosecutor, ceasing to perform its historic function as an independent entity acting as a shield to safeguard the citizenry against prosecutorial excess. A wrongful indictment, regardless of ultimate outcome, is devastating. As Justice Kennedy notes in his plurality opinion for the U.S. Supreme Court in Gentile v. Nevada , 501 U.S. 1030 (1991), in the time period between indictment and trial, the accused may suffer ruinous consequences to his reputation and employment from which he may never recover even if acquitted. See: |
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