“Could we discuss potential punishments?” asked the tall, middle-aged man identified as “Juror 25” during the voir dire for the trial of Matthew Townsend on a ludicrous felony charge of “witness intimidation.” His supposed offense was to publish a well-reasoned and inoffensive Facebook post complaining about being arrested without cause.
Pointing out that he had worked as a prison mentor for many
years, and had actually counseled inmates facing the death penalty, the juror
thought it would be worthwhile to know what would happen to Townsend if he were
found guilty. Trial Judge Lynn Norton pointed out that once the trial proper began,
the jury would be instructed not to consider punishment in their deliberations.
If prosecutor James Vogt succeeds in manipulating the jury
into delivering a guilty verdict, Judge Norton will decide how much of Townsend’s
life would be stolen by the state – one possibility is a prison term of five years.
Like most people in her justifiably disreputable profession,
Norton treats the jury as a trivial impediment to the efficient operation the
courts, which exist
to transform citizens into “offenders” for delivery to the prison system. Like
most of her peers she will not countenance the idea that citizens conscripted
to sit in judgment of their neighbors should also be able to determine whether
the potential punishment is proportionate to the alleged offense. The jury’s
role is to go in the direction the judge points them, which
in almost every case leads to conviction.
So determined are Norton and Ada County Assistant DA Vogt to
avoid the question of proportionality that they arranged a mistrial when
Townsend’s defense attorney, Aaron Tribble, referred to the obvious fact that
the defendant had been charged with a felony.
Vogt’s artfully dishonest opening argument (discussed in
more detail anon) depicted Townsend as a violent, predatory stalker who
terrorized the valiant Meridian Police Officer Richard Brockbank by threatening
his life and his family.
Tribble began his opening argument by pointing out that the
arrest out of which the felony charge grew involved a contrived accusation of
jaywalking.
At the time Brockbank inflicted his unwanted presence on
him, Townsend “was protesting taxes” at a street corner in Meridian, Tribble
pointed out. After Brockbank saw Townsend legally crossing an intersection –
stopping briefly in the crosswalk to display his protest sign – the
officer decided to “educate” his better about pedestrian safety.
Brockbank tried to induce Townsend into admitting a
violation of the law. When Townsend asked if he was being charged, the annoyed
and frustrated tax-feeder didn’t answer, so Townsend shrugged and exercised his
legal right to walk away.
“At this point, Brockbank said, `OK, I’m going to arrest you
for resisting and obstructing,’” Tribble recounted. “And now what began as a
jaywalking case has become a felony charge….”
It was here that Vogt objected and asked that the jury be removed from the courtroom. Once the jurors had been escorted out, Judge Norton helpfully suggested that Vogt move for a mistrial.
It was here that Vogt objected and asked that the jury be removed from the courtroom. Once the jurors had been escorted out, Judge Norton helpfully suggested that Vogt move for a mistrial.
Tribble pointed out that the charge had been described as a
felony, and that the size of the jury – fourteen panelists, evenly divided
between male and female – made it clear that the offense being considered was a
felony, rather than a misdemeanor. Vogt
protested that the instructions to the jury do not permit them to be informed
of, or take into account, potential sentencing options, and contended that they
likewise “cannot take into account the degree of the offense.”
I have discussed this development with several trial
attorneys, all of whom said that referring to the “degree of offense” in an
opening argument is a novel reason for a mistrial. Then again, the Ada County
Prosecutor’s Office has displayed a gift for perverse ingenuity in pursuing its
jihad against Matthew Townsend.
During
voir dire, Vogt had clearly prepped potential jurors to see the charges against
Townsend as a violent felony. They had been informed that the charge was “intimidation
of a state’s witness,” and to illustrate the supposed seriousness of the
defendant’s actions Vogt had asked jurors to imagine being threatened or robbed
at gunpoint. His own opening argument was an extended riff that re-purposed a
Facebook post that pointedly and repeatedly repudiated violence into a
direct threat to Brockbank and his family if the officer testified against him.
“Mr. Townsend gave
Brockbank a choice, and he promised consequences,” Vogt intoned, mouthing the
mendacious mantra he had fashioned out of the Facebook post: “I know where you
all live … leave me alone or be the focus of my rage … kill me.”
Tribble undermined
the caricature of Townsend as a violent felon by explaining – in a presentation
punctuated by no fewer than four objections from Vogt – that Townsend had been
involved in the peaceful exercise of his rights when he was arrested without
cause, and was now being treated as a felon for complaining about that
mistreatment in public.
As
has been previously reported in this space, Townsend’s Facebook post, which
was published on the eve of his preliminary hearing on the “resisting and
obstructing” charge, was directed at Brockbank, the prosecutor’s office, and
everybody else representing the malign yet formless entity called “the State.” It
was “the State” that threatened his liberty and his life, Townsend observed,
and it was to that disembodied abstraction he made the demand that the
unwarranted charge against him be dropped.
He made no mention of
Brockbank’s testimony, nor did he seek to dissuade the officer from testifying.
Precisely the opposite was the case: Townsend clearly anticipated that
Brockbank would testify truthfully, and that by making clear “the REAL reason I
was harassed” he would leave the court no choice but to dismiss the spurious
charge.
To the extent
that Townsend’s statement implicated the question of Brockbank’s testimony, it
was an admonition to the officer to testify “freely, fully, and truthfully,”
rather than trying to prevent him from doing so, as the “witness intimidation”
statute would require.
Vogt
complained that Tribble had “poisoned” the jury through a presentation that
contrasted the innocent behavior of the defendant with the seriousness of the
charge against him. Norton found such contamination impermissible, which is why
she prompted Vogt to move for the mistrial.
When the
trial resumes on February 29, we can expect Judge Norton and her comrades in
the Ada County Prosecutor’s Office to do what is necessary to keep the
proceedings untainted by considerations of proportionality, accuracy, and
justice. They won’t be willing to proceed unless they can, in effect, nullify
the jury.
Judge
Alex Kozinski of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, one of the few
active jurists who consistently display concern for the rights of defendants,
insists that jurors should not only be allowed to consider punishments during
their deliberations, but should have a role in sentencing.
“In most
jurisdictions, jurors in non-capital cases are not told what the likely
punishment will be if the defendant is convicted,” Kozinski pointed out in a
magisterial essay published by the Georgetown Law Journal. “In fact, we
tell jurors not to consider punishment in deciding guilt. I don’t understand
why this is appropriate. In making most life decisions, we consider the
consequences in determining how much effort to put into deciding and the degree
of confidence we must feel before we go forward.”
Conscientious
individuals seek to learn everything they can about potential consequences before
making life-altering decisions for themselves, Kozinski observes. Why are
jurors not allowed to do the same when they’re required to make decisions that
will alter the life of others?
“Jurors
should be told the gravity of the decision they are making so they can take it
into account in deciding whether to convict or acquit,” he continues. “As
representatives of the community where the defendant committed his crime, the
jury should be allowed to make the judgment of whether the punishment is too
severe to permit a conviction. Having to confront the jury with the severity of
the punishment they are seeking to extract may well deter prosecutors from
using overcharging as a bargaining tool.”
That last
possibility implies the existence of a moral floor beneath which prosecutors
will not descend. On the basis of their irrational and vindictive pursuit of
Matthew Townsend, it appears that James Vogt and his professional colleagues are the kind of
officials who would attack that moral floor with jackhammers.
Dum spiro, pugno!
Dum spiro, pugno!
Today's headlines are the city of LA is going to settle with millions with people whom were wrongly convicted and spent years in prison. The people in government send away innocent people all the time to prison and knowingly.
ReplyDeleteThis case is yet another perfect example, that shows the people in the government are not what many would call, people of decent character.
Not to make light of Mr. Townsend's situation, but I'm sure the judge knew in advance there would be Trouble with Tribbles.
ReplyDeleteHumor -- it is a difficult concept. It is not logical.
ReplyDelete(Mr. Tribble is a Trekkie, not surprisingly.)
My one tiny criticism of your excellent piece would be that it is most likely a mistake, a misreading of the situation to ascribe the cause of the actions taken by the prosecutor to the presence of moral failing. Rather I think one finds that the fundamental purpose of the judiciary going back to the middle ages following the end of the Carolingian era, has been to keep the proletariat, for lack of a better word, in line.
ReplyDeleteThe whole form of state justice, according to Michel Foucault, from that time on has been constructed as a bulwark against seditious activity, against revolution. The creation of police, the invention of the prosecutor, the power seized by and arrogated to the judge are all part of the same system assembled to quickly squelch 'resistance' to control by a political elite. And in fact this very case begins with an individual waging a protest against taxation. The police evidently quickly intervene, quickly ensnare the protester on some petty offence. The more the protestor protests the whole thing the more the judicial system comes down on him. Now I don't think this is at all necessarily because of any moral failings on the part of the individuals occupying positions within the judicial system. Rather one must look to the medieval Western European political roots of the system, its
anti-seditional origins above and beyond its advertised function of securing a disinterested neutral 'justice', to understand it.
one must kowtow to authority.
ReplyDeletethose who refuse are fed to the prison complex for 'reeducation', as if labeling it such distinguishes it from something 'the other side' does, ie, punish for actions that injure neither person, nor property, but, rather, challenge a fetid order that relies on authority and utterly ridiculous 'laws' to maintain the status quo the authorities benefit from.
the 'legal' system constitutes the nuts and bolts of how this is done.
roland freisler (small letters intended), contrary to what many believe, is actually alive and well
I like the views of the posters on the legal system in regards to the criminal justice scam. It's pretty much a do as I say, not as I do system. Clearly on display is that the scam is one sided and equal protection is a complete and total scam. And think what would the likelihood be for a person to be able to have a serious and fair civil trial at suing government under the second 13th Amendment as a slave or a bondage prisoner with taxes taking more than half of their income, however income Is defined. That is a key question, which we will never see.
ReplyDeleteHEY WILL- LIKE YOUR ARTICALS, BUT YOUR BIG COLLAGE EDUMACATED WORDS IN THEM SUCK.
ReplyDeleteThink about this, isn't telling the jury what the law is influencing their decision? And not telling them what the punishment is, taking away the conscience of the community? Statutes, codes and regulations are not common law. The Magna Carta is the basis of common law. For every injury there must be remedy and for every crime there must be a victim and the state can not be a victim.
ReplyDelete