The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Coercive plea bargaining is a national embarrassm­ent

- Orge F. Will He writes for the Washington Post.

Michael Flynn, who was President Trump’s national security adviser for 24 days and who has been entangled in the criminal-justice system for 40 months, pleaded guilty of lying to FBI agents and now recants that plea. We shall return to Flynn below, but first consider Habeeb Audu, who is resisting extraditio­n from Britain to the United States, where he is charged with various financial crimes.

The Cato Institute’s Clark Neily was asked by Audu’s lawyers to write, in accordance with British extraditio­n practices, a Declaratio­n — an “expert report” — about the risk that Audu would not have a meaningful right to a fair U.S. trial. Neily, a member of the American Bar Associatio­n’s Plea Bargaining Task Force and head of its subcommitt­ee on impermissi­bly coercive plea bargains and plea practices, concludes that extraditio­n would “guarantee” Audu’s subjection to a process that “routinely” coerces through plea bargaining.

Plea bargaining is, Neily argues, “pervasive and coercive” partly because of today’s “trial penalty” — the difference between the sentences offered to those who plead guilty and the much more severe sentences typically imposed after a trial. This penalty discourage­s exercising a constituti­onal right.

The pressure prosecutor­s can exert — piling on (“stacking”) criminal charges to expose defendants to extreme sentences; pretrial detention, nearly always in squalid confines; threatenin­g to indict family members — can cause innocent people to plead guilty in order to avoid risking protracted incarcerat­ion for themselves and loved ones. Such pressures effectivel­y transfer sentencing power from judges to prosecutor­s. How exactly are these pressures morally preferable to those that used to be administer­ed by truncheons in the back of police stations?

These are reasons why of the nearly 80,000 defendants in federal criminal cases in fiscal 2018, just 2% went to trial and 90% pleaded guilty. In 2018, 94.7% of criminal conviction­s were obtained through plea bargains in the Southern District of

New York, which is seeking Audu’s extraditio­n.

Prosecutor­s have discovered that almost any defendant can be persuaded to plead guilty. This discovery has been partly a response to the fact that the over-criminaliz­ation of life, and particular­ly Congress’ indefensib­le multiplica­tion of federal crimes, means that otherwise the court system would, in Justice Antonin Scalia’s words, “grind to a halt.”

There is, Neily says, “abundant, undisputed evidence” of innocent defendants pleading guilty. Of the 367 convicts exonerated by DNA analysis to date, 11% had pleaded guilty. Various studies have concluded that between 1.6% and 8% of defendants who plead guilty would not have been convicted in a trial. The lowest estimate would mean that in 2009 there were more than 1,250 innocent people incarcerat­ed in the federal system.

Responding to Neily’s Declaratio­n, the Justice Department complacent­ly asserts that U.S. law guarantees fair trials: Coercive plea bargains are forbidden, therefore they do not occur, so innocent people do not plead guilty.

Perhaps Flynn now regrets leading “Lock her up!” chants at the Republican National Convention. All Americans should regret the need for Neily’s many proposed reforms, including a DO J Office of Plea Integrity to scrutinize coercive plea bargaining, a national embarrassm­ent.

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