Conrad Black attacks the US justice system

Conrad Black, now out of jail and appealing his fraud conviction on the basis of a Supreme Court ruling in his favor last month, has wasted no time getting into US justice system. And whatever one might think about a man who, along with his associates, was convicted of stealing $3.5 million by awarding themselves tax-free bonuses from the newspaper sell-offs, without the approval of Hollinger's board, he certainly raises some valid points.

In his column in the National Post Black gets stuck into the American justice system that has produced incarceration rates that are racially based and the highest in the world, and a war on drugs that's going nowhere.

" It had been an interesting experience, from which I developed a much greater practical knowledge than I had ever had before of those who had drawn a short straw from the system; of the realities of street level American race relations; of the pathology of incorrigible criminals; and of the wasted opportunities for the reintegration of many of these people into society,'' Black writes. "I saw at close range the failure of the U.S. War on Drugs, with absurd sentences, (including 20 years for marijuana offences, although 42% of Americans have used marijuana and it is the greatest cash crop in California.) A trillion dollars have been spent, a million easily replaceable small fry are in prison, and the targeted substances are more available and of better quality than ever, while producing countries such as Colombia and Mexico are in a state of civil war. I had seen at close range the injustice of sentences one hundred times more severe for crack cocaine than for powder cocaine, a straight act of discrimination against African-Americans, that even the first black president and attorney general have only ameliorated with tepid support for a measure, still being debated, to reduce the disparity of sentence from 100 to one to 18 to one. And I had heard the vehement allegations of many fellow residents of the fraudulence of the public defender system, where court-appointed lawyers, it is universally and plausibly alleged, are more often than not stooges of the prosecutors. They are paid for the number of clients they represent rather than for their level of success, and they do usually plead their clients to prison. They provide a thin veneer for the fable of the poor citizen's day in court to receive impartial justice through due process. And I had the opportunity to see why the United States has six to twelve times as many incarcerated people as other prosperous democracies, (Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Japan, and the United Kingdom), how the prison industry grew, and successfully sought more prisoners, longer sentences, and maximal possibilities of probation violations and a swift return to custody. Before I got into the maw of the U.S. legal system, I did not realize the country has 47 million people with a criminal record, (most for relatively trivial offenses,) or that prosecutors won more than 90% of their cases."

True, Black has another agenda and undermining the US justice system is all part of his game plan. But his first hand observations still raise questions about the priorities of US governments and the way they are spending public money at a time when the economy is going down the tube and when the future of pensions and health care benefits are in doubt.


Trackback

no comment untill now

Add your comment now