Prompt
Read the editorial from the Los Angeles Times concerning the public’s right to see police personnel files when information within might bolster the defense of individuals accused or a crime. At the same time, it’s understandable that police desire to keep their personnel files private - for reasons that are not necessarily nefarious.
Currently, police themselves examine files in question and decide what is released to the public.
Defense lawyers understandably object to this. In a 1963 case - Brady vs. Maryland - the courts ruled that people have must be given timely access to police personnel files. California is the only state that does not ensure this ruling is carried out.
Transparency is a hot button issue these days. Write a short essay (250-300 words) responding to the editorial. Make sure you have a strong thesis statement that makes your response clear. Back up your opinion carefully with strong topic sentences and strong evidence. Make sure your essay is clear and well-organized. Proofread your essay carefully.
Police Privacy vs. Public Right To Know
In
California, police officers have a right to keep their personnel files
confidential. At the same time, all criminal prosecutors are constitutionally
bound to disclose to the defendant any evidence that's reasonably likely to
affect a conviction or punishment.
So: What if
the defendant believes that such evidence is located in the arresting officers'
personnel files? Who has the right and duty to look through those records?
In many
police departments, the task is performed by the police themselves. Defense
lawyers quite reasonably object that police officials have an inherent conflict
of interest in choosing which information in their officers' files to flag.
The duty to
disclose is assigned to prosecutors under the landmark 1963 U.S. Supreme Court
decision in Brady
vs. Maryland. But in
California, it's not clear if, or when, prosecutors are allowed to look through
police files.
Those and
related questions come before the California Supreme Court in arguments
set for Thursday. At issue
is an effort by Daryl Lee Johnson, who was charged in San Francisco with
domestic violence, to obtain access to the records of the officers who arrested
him. Any evidence of past officer misconduct could bolster his defense.
A lower court explained that the police
and the district attorney are already on the same team, so confidentiality of
records isn't undermined when prosecutors examine them. But other courts have
rejected prosecutorial access to police files absent a court order. The state's
high court has to sort it out.
In doing
so, the justices must certainly recognize that in order to satisfy the Brady
requirement they need to grant someone, whoever it may be, meaningful and
timely access to police personnel files. It would hardly serve justice to
perpetuate a system in which exculpatory evidence sits unexamined in police
files while prosecutors, with a duty to disclose it, can never see it.
More than
half a century after the Brady ruling, it is startling that so much uncertainty
remains over when, how and even whether prosecutors must disclose exculpatory
information. The problem is even more vexing in California, given the interplay
between Brady and strict laws and court rulings protecting officer files.
In addition, California is the only state in the union that does not
complement the Brady requirement with an
enforceable attorney's rule of ethics that clarifies what
to turn over and when. A State
Bar panel is
currently considering such
a rule. It wouldn't answer the sorts of questions coming before the Supreme
Court this week in Johnson's case, but it would help clarify a prosecutor's
constitutional obligations to criminal defendants.
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