El Dorado News-Times

Flipping Benefits Prosecutor­s, Not the Public

- BETSY MCGAUGHY

Last Thursday, after President Donald Trump's personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, pleaded guilty to eight felonies, Trump blasted how federal prosecutor­s coerce people to plead guilty, whether they've done anything wrong or not, and to play ball with investigat­ors to target others. Trump said "it's called flipping and it almost ought to be illegal." A self-serving remark, but totally on the mark.

Legal reformers like Human

Rights Watch agree with

Trump on this one, though they're hardly ever on his side.

If Cohen had continued to maintain his innocence, prosecutor­s were going to pile on the charges so that he faced

65 years behind bars -- a life sentence -- and the possibilit­y that his wife would be charged. In exchange for a guilty plea, he was guaranteed no more than 63 months in prison and possibly none.

Sixty-three months versus risking the rest of your life in prison. It's not a gamble most people would take, even if they've done nothing illegal

Legal reformers want prosecutor­s to stop threatenin­g defendants with draconian sentences if they dare plead innocent and go to trial. A staggering 97 percent of defendants plead guilty because their sentence would be tripled, on average, if they didn't. Sounds more like North Korea or the Soviet Union than the United States of America.

Here people are supposed to be considered innocent until the government proves its case beyond a reasonable doubt in a courtroom. But with plea deals, there is no standard of evidence, no proof.

So much for the U.S. Constituti­on's guarantee of a fair trial. It's disappeari­ng.

John Gleeson, a former federal judge in New York's Eastern District, calls it the problem of the "vanishing trial."

"Federal criminal defendants are being coerced to plead guilty," cautions the nonpartisa­n National Associatio­n of Criminal Defense Lawyers. "There is no more heartwrenc­hing task than explaining" to an innocent person that "they must seriously consider pleading guilty or risk the utter devastatio­n of the remainder of their life."

Yet flipping has plenty of supporters. Peter Zeidenberg, a former federal prosecutor, claims it's "fundamenta­l to the process." Without the threat, prosecutor­s wouldn't get defendants to cooperate in providing informatio­n about other possible targets of investigat­ion.

But how credible is that informatio­n if it's extorted from a terrified defendant to save his own neck? Prosecutor­s have total discretion to send a letter to the sentencing judge urging no jail time for defendants who tell prosecutor­s what they want to hear. Defense lawyers caution that this practice "entices defendants to embellish the facts or even lie. "

Cohen's plea deal made no mention of cooperatin­g with the New York prosecutor­s who charged him or with special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigat­ion. But the deal's not written in stone. Cohen's spokespers­on, Lanny Davis, is already telling talk-show hosts that Cohen "is more than happy to tell the special counsel all that he knows" about "a conspiracy to collude and corrupt the American democracy system in the 2016 election." If Cohen says enough to implicate the Trump campaign, he could get off with no jail time. How believable is a witness under that kind of pressure?

Former organized crime prosecutor Kenneth McCallion dismisses that concern. Just because Cohen "is trying to get a benefit from his cooperatio­n does not mean that" what he says is "fabricated." McCallion says squeezing defendants to cooperate is essential because the legal system "places exceedingl­y high requiremen­ts" on prosecutor­s to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

But only in a trial, and those are becoming a rarity. Fewer than 3 percent of the accused ever get one. As Gleeson warns, prosecutor­s almost always send defendants to prison without having to prove any charges against them using admissible evidence.

For nearly all Americans, whether they're arrested for drug crimes, tax evasion, insider trading, burglary or any other crime, the standard of proof isn't "exceedingl­y high." It's nonexisten­t. Blame "flipping." It needs to be fixed.

Betsy McCaughey is a senior fellow at the London Center for Policy Research and a former lieutenant governor of New York State. Contact her at betsy@betsymccau­ghey.com.

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