Amanda Culbertson has a conscience, which is
another way of saying that she wasn’t well-suited to government “work.” Until
recently she was employed by the Houston Police Department as a crime lab
supervisor. In 2009, she became aware of serious problems with the reliability
of the department’s roadside blood alcohol testing vehicles, more commonly
known as BAT vans.
Over the past decade, hundreds of police departments nation-wide have purchased the vehicles with the help of federal grants. The testing device deployed in them, the Intoxilyzer, is considered infallible by law enforcement agencies and most trial judges. However, the Kentucky-based company that manufactures the the Intoxilyzer has refused to disclose its source code. Without access to the source code, the device's findings are unverifiable. As one defendant points out, the machine could simply be a gimmicky random number generator, rather than a finely calibrated scientific instrument.
In 2008, it was discovered that a supervisor for the Houston Police Department had falsified BAT van inspection records for at least the previous eighteen months, thereby calling into question test results in at least 2,600 cases. When Culbertson was appointed to supervise the inspections, she learned that indifferently trained police officers allowed the units to
overheat, which would skew test results. In addition, a glitch in the system
caused the much-heralded Intoxilyzer to reset every time
the air conditioner was turned on.
Over
the course of several months, Culbertson tried to get officials in the police
department and the Harris County DA’s office to address her concerns. None of them was interested in disturbing what had become a very
profitable scam.
In June, Culbertson and two of her colleagues quit their jobswith the HPD. “We could no longer choose between a paycheck and our integrity,”
Culbertson explained. Not surprisingly, she was called to testify by attorneys
representing some of the hundreds of people facing DUI charges as a result of
BAT van tests.
In
professional terms, Culbertson landed on her feet: She was hired by a
laboratory at Lone Star College that had a contract to conduct breathalyzer
analysis for the Harris County Sheriff’s Office. Shortly thereafter, the Harris
County Commission – at the initiative of DA Pat Lykos – ended its contract with
the Lone Star College lab. In effect, Lykos – in an act of vulgar retaliation--
arranged for Culbertson to be fired.
Harris
County’s 185th criminal court grand jury, which had been
investigating problems with the BAT vans, called Culbertson to testify, along
with former Harris County Prosecutor Brent Mayr. Lykos dispatched two members
of her flying monkey corps – assistant DAs Carl Hobbs and Steve Morris – to
“monitor” the grand jury testimony.
Since
Lykos and her office were suspected of covering up the use of tainted evidence
and retaliating against a whistleblower, the DA and her underlings were barred
from being present in any capacity other than as sworn witnesses. Accordingly,
when Lykos’s minions materialized during Culbertson’s testimony, the Grand Jury
Foreman ordered them to leave. When that directive was ignored, the
Foreman instructed the Baliff to remove them or place them under arrest.
Lykos
unsuccessfully sought a court order compelling the grand jury to grant access
to her underlings. When that effort failed, the DA's office exploited a
back-channel to obtain official transcripts of the grand jury testimony. That
led to a summons from Judge Susan Brown to Hobbs and Morris, along with court
reporters Javier Leal and Katherine Chagaris, who face the possibility of
contempt citations and the prospect of six months in jail.
The
Harris County grand jury's insurrection caused consternation in the DA's
office, and astonishment in the local media. "All too often in the past,
Harris County grand juries have functioned as rubber stamps providing
prosecutors with indictments without impartial scrutiny of their
substance," notes the Houston Chronicle. Of course, this is true of practically every grand jury since
the enactment of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure in 1946.
The
Advisory Committee had no legislative authority or popular mandate; it was a
pure creation of the prosecutorial class. Thus it’s hardly surprising that one
of its most urgent priorities was to transform the grand jury from a citizen’s assembly into an instrument of the
prosecution. This meant “rectifying” – in the Orwellian sense – the Fifth
Amendment by effectively removing the troublesome word “presentment.”
The
Fifth Amendment specifies that “No person shall be held to answer for a
capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of
a Grand Jury….” A “presentment” is essentially a proprio motu indictment delivered by a grand jury without approval
of a government prosecutor.
Presentments were often filed by grand juries
investigating official corruption – such as the grand jury in Minneapolis that
forced the resignation of the mayor and police chief in 1902, or the one that
dislodged Boss Tweed and his politically sheltered cronies thirty years
earlier.
This
was an entirely appropriate function of the grand jury. The “grand jury in its
primal, plenary sense … was a group of men who stood as a check on government,
often in direct opposition to the desires of those in power,” points out constitutional scholar Roger Roots.
Rather than being an instrument of the political class, Roots continues,
“American grand juries initiated prosecutions against corrupt agents of the
government, often in response to complaints from individuals.” It also served
as “a people's watchdog against arbitrary and malevolent prosecutions."
For
most of America’s history, “the evil that the grand jury sought to address was
the exercise of distant power locally,” wrote Kevin K. Washburn in an article
for the Fordham Law Review. “Indeed,
the grand jury came to us as an institution that was respected for its profound
ability to protect local communities – indeed, possibly rebellious ones – from
central government authority. It was, in essence, a local check on Crown
authority.”
In
1734, grand juries twice refused to indict John Peter Zenger for “seditious
libel.” New York’s Royal Governor William Cosby bypassed the grand jury by
filing a “criminal information” against Zenger – only to see the trial jury
nullify the sedition law and acquit the newspaper publisher. During the 1760s,
Crown prosecutors in Massachusetts were constantly stymied by grand juries that
refused to indict colonists accused of violating the Stamp Act and other
impositions.
Both
before and after American Independence, “the grand jury’s primary method for
exercising its power was not rigorous review of facts, but nullification of
validly enacted laws,” Washburn observes. They didn’t dispute the prosecutor’s
presentation of the facts, but rather “the legislator’s right to impose such
laws, or at least the prosecutor’s decision to enforce them in a given
context.”
Obviously,
this kind of power simply couldn’t be left in the hands of mere Mundanes.
Accordingly, the term “presentment” was conspicuously absent from Rule 6 of the
original Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which dealt with the role of the
grand jury. Lester B Orfield, who served on the Advisory Committee, later
explained that retaining the term “might encourage the use of the `run-away’
grand jury as the grand jury could act from their own knowledge or observation
and not only from charges made by the United States attorney.”
“Today,
the grand jury is the total captive of the prosecutor, who, if he is candid,
will concede that he can indict anybody, at any time, for almost anything,
before any grand jury,” wrote federal District Judge William J. Campbell in a 1973
law journal article calling for formal abolition of the institution
on the grounds of redundancy. This isn't to say that the grand jury is considered useless by the prosecutorial caste: It helps maintain the pretense that prosecutors are servants of the public will.
What is happening in Harris County is not an example of a grand jury going "rogue," but rather one behaving exactly as it should. It is interposing itself on behalf of the public by investigating a federally subsidized revenue-collection racket, and the abusive prosecutor who presides over it. Hopefully its example will prove to be contagious.
Programming Note
This Saturday (November 5) I will be one of several featured speakers at the United Republicans of California state convention at the Embassy Suites Hotel in Arcardia, California. UROC, which bills itself as "The republican wing of the Republican Party," is emphatically not a neo-con group: In 2008, it unanimously endorsed Ron Paul's presidential bid.
Your help in keeping Pro Libertate on-line is urgently needed, and most deeply appreciated. God bless!
Dum spiro, pugno!
no need to post
ReplyDeleteGreetings Will
Shared
Thank you for writing this
You wrote
the Grand Jury Foreman ordered the DA’s them to leave.
Doesn't look right.
Doc Ellis 124
no need to post
kudos
ReplyDelete... perhaps the standard manual procedure is best?
ReplyDeleteExcellent article, Mr. Grigg. I would like to share this with Oath Keepers' readership. Also, thank you for alluding to Roger Roots in your article - a man whose work can greatly benefit American citizens in their quest for freedom.
ReplyDeleteSalute!
Elias
Perhaps too early to celebrate the Rogue grand jury. This may only be internecine strife among two groups of statists.
ReplyDelete(The contempt show-cause order for the "flying monkeys" is here.)
DUI lawyers all have a expert witness they can call upon, but for a price to thoroughly debut and destroy these machines in court.
ReplyDeleteI've seen them in action on more than one occasion and if you ever get charged for DUI, hire a lawyer and pony up the extra $1500 or so for a days testimony from one of these folks and your DUI is done.
These machines are crap.
As a "rogue juror" myself, per U.S. Circuit Judge William G. Young (http://www.lewrockwell.com/eddlem/eddlem28.html), let me posit the idea that genuine nullification is unnecessary. All we need to do as jurors is enforce the Constitution, and we'll have a revolution!
ReplyDeleteAs someone who has been called a "rogue juror" myself (courtesy of U.S. Circuit Judge William G. Young - http://www.lewrockwell.com/eddlem/eddlem28.html), let me posit the idea that we don't need nullification. All we need to do is enforce the existing Constitution as jurors, and we'll have a revolution!!!!!
ReplyDeleteExcellent post. Best wishes for the event this weekend. Spread the message!
ReplyDeleteAs a former Texan I always have to cringe when I see how far the state strays from the myth people have in their minds. You have socialists from Houston to Austin and everywhere in between who have that particular knack in rising to the top of the political toilet bowl. To see the citizenry actually take a stand, any meaningful stand at all, is so gratifying.
ReplyDeleteOn numerous occasions, I have attempted to present evidence and testimony of criminal wrongdoing by law enforcement to grand juries, only to be barred access by the DA. Several times I managed to contact grand jury forepersons at home who seemed very interested, but upon a second call, discovered the DA had "gotten" to them.
ReplyDeleteMark, your experience simply shows how the criminal nomenklatura operates. You have politicians, judges, DA's, lawyers, cops, and an entire prison-industrial complex glued together for mutual benefit at YOUR expense. What a racket!
ReplyDeleteWhat needs to happen in this country is for the entire judicial system to be "depoliticized". Too many judges and prosecutors are using their offices to gain political power, instead of seeking justice.
ReplyDeleteThis behavior by the Houston PD makes me sick. That judges go along with it makes me sicker. It just proves how corrupt our system has become. I cannot believe that people would do this kind of thing especially in light if how devastating a DUI conviction can be to someone's life. How cruel these police and prosecutors are! How incredibly corrupt the judges. We really need to revamp the entire judicial system in this country.
ReplyDeleteExcellent article, but be aware that having access to source code (of a device like this, of a voting machine, etc.) does not guarantee that there is no funny business going on, as one of the most famous computer science essays points out:
ReplyDeletehttp://cm.bell-labs.com/who/ken/trust.html