New York Post

Target: Crime Victims

Albany’s latest ‘wrongful’ bill

- RAY TIERNEY Ray Tierney is the district attorney of Suffolk County. He has been a prosecutor for over 30 years.

APPARENTLY, the New York state Legislatur­e is not finished with its persistent campaign to disrespect and damage the rights of crime victims while simultaneo­usly making it infinitely more difficult to hold convicted criminals responsibl­e for their actions.

Its latest bill, inaccurate­ly named the “Wrongful Conviction Act,” could be the worst of all.

The WCA is a hastily drafted, last-minute piece of legislatio­n that was just passed — at a time when lawmakers hope no one was paying attention.

Th act will eviscerate any hope of having finality in our criminal-justice system and will result in infinite appeals in the same cases and more criminals released onto our streets.

It is guaranteed to create more crime victims. Just what we need!

I call on Gov. Kathy Hochul to exercise her veto power and stop the bill from becoming law to prevent fatal harm to our criminal-justice system.

The act is packaged as a mechanism to prevent wrongful conviction — a perfectly fine goal of allowing “innocent” people to challenge past conviction­s. Yet New York already leads the nation in post-conviction relief and provides numerous pathways for defendants to challenge their conviction­s.

Apart from the normal appeal process, post-conviction relief is already available for newly discovered evidence, exoneratio­n through DNA, coerced or misunderst­ood guilty pleas, prosecutor­ial or police misconduct, ineffectiv­e assistance of counsel, retroactiv­e changes in the law and failure to warn of immigratio­n consequenc­es.

Under this bill, defendants would be allowed infinite meritless challenges to criminal conviction­s. If their motion gets denied, they can file it again and again, as often as they like. They can wait decades and then file the identical motion again.

Perhaps most alarming, if a defendant succeeds on a challenge to their conviction, under current law they get a new trial.

Yet under this misguided legislatio­n, they walk free and can never be tried again for that crime. This is true even where the error is due to an ineffectiv­e defense attorney, something that the trial judge and prosecutor cannot prevent.

Under this bill, murderers will be incentiviz­ed to hire the worst attorney they can find, get convicted and have the case thrown out without a possibilit­y of a retrial.

The bill is also poorly drafted, allowing trial-level courts to review decisions made by appellate courts and not even requiring defendant to swear that their claims are true.

It’s also a discovery nightmare requiring prosecutor­s to provide discovery and hold onto evidence in perpetuity to respond to motions on decades-old cases because the bill allows courts to vacate a judgment if evidence is no longer available.

Were you a crime victim or witness a long time ago? Have you put the pain and anxiety of that terrible experience behind you?

Tough. You are about to be called back in for these motions.

And when you are, it probably will not be for the last time.

No conviction will ever be final. No case will ever be “over” and an endless stream of guilty defendants will be exonerated on a myriad of seemingly unending technicali­ties created by our out-of-control Legislatur­e.

These are just a few examples from yet another horrendous piece of “criminal justice” legislatio­n that would have swift, severe, and painful consequenc­es for law-abiding citizens of New York.

It is an unnecessar­y “fix” for a system that is not broken.

By eliminatin­g finality in conviction­s, the bill undermines the rights of victims, burdening them with eternal anxiety and hopelessne­ss. Our Legislatur­e has forgotten the victims of crime.

Prosecutor­s across the state have borne the burden of attempting to maintain public safety while working in a system increasing­ly rigged to subvert justice.

This bill goes too far, as it will cause an immediate explosion of meritless appeals, which will deplete law enforcemen­t resources, already stretched to the breaking point. Again, I ask the governor to remember those victims.

Please Gov. Hochul, exercise your veto power to prevent this atrocious bill from becoming an unconscion­able law.

The integrity of our criminal-justice system is at stake.

 ?? ?? Brace for the worst: Expect more crime scenes like this June 17 shooting if Gov. Hochul signs the Wrongful Conviction Act into law.
Brace for the worst: Expect more crime scenes like this June 17 shooting if Gov. Hochul signs the Wrongful Conviction Act into law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States