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Maurice A. Deane School of Law, Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0, 2016

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MAURICE A. DEANE SCHOOL OF LAW

HOFSTRA

LAW

Legal Studies Research Paper Series
Research Paper No. 2017-07

Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0
Bruce Green
Ellen Yaroshefsky

Cardozo Legal Studies Research Paper No. 480
Fordham Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2722791

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PROSECUTORIAL ACCOUNTABILITY 2.0
Bruce Green* & Ellen Yaroshefsky**
“There is an epidemic of Brady violations abroad in the land.
Only judges can put a stop to it.”1
INTRODUCTION
Given prosecutors’ extraordinary power,2 it is important that they be
effectively regulated and held accountable for misconduct. Although prosecutors perceive that they are in fact well-regulated,3 if not over-regulated,4
public complaints about prosecutorial misconduct and demands to reform
the regulation of prosecutors have grown louder and carried further in the
information age. The clamor over prosecutorial misconduct derives from
many quarters and consists of critiques that build upon each other. National
© 2016 Bruce Green & Ellen Yaroshefsky. Individuals and nonprofit institutions may
reproduce and distribute copies of this Article in any format at or below cost, for
educational purposes, so long as each copy identifies the authors, provides a citation to the
Notre Dame Law Review, and includes this provision in the copyright notice.
* Louis Stein Chair of Law and Director of the Stein Center for Law and Ethics,
Fordham University School of Law. The authors thank the many academics who
commented on earlier drafts of this Article, including when they were presented at the
following workshops and conferences: Notre Dame faculty workshop (2015); Fordham
faculty workshop (2014); Criminal Justice Ethics Schmooze (2014); International Legal
Ethics Conference VI (2014); Conference of the International Working Group for
Comparative Studies of Legal Professions (2014).
** Howard Lichtenstein Distinguished Professor of Law and Director of the Monroe
Freedman Institute for the Study of Legal Ethics, Maurice A. Deane School of Law at
Hofstra University.
1 United States v. Olsen, 737 F.3d 625, 626 (9th Cir. 2013) (Kozinski, C.J., dissenting
from denial of rehearing en banc).
2 See Robert H. Jackson, The Federal Prosecutor, 31 AM. INST. CRIM. L. & CRIMINOLOGY 3,
3 (1940) (“The prosecutor has more control over life, liberty, and reputation than any
other person in America.”).
3 See Ensuring That Federal Prosecutors Meet Discovery Obligations: Hearing on S. 2197 Before
the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 112th Cong. 15 (2012) (statement of James M. Cole, Deputy
Att’y Gen. of the United States) [hereinafter Cole Statement] (maintaining that the incidence of federal prosecutors’ discovery violations is “infinitesimally small” and that with
disclosure obligations is adequately addressed by internal self-regulation); see also Bruce A.
Green, Federal Criminal Discovery Reform: A Legislative Approach, 64 MERCER L. REV. 639, 655
(2013) (discussing argument that prosecutors are well-regulated).
4 See Bruce A. Green, Prosecutors and Professional Regulation, 25 GEO. J. LEGAL ETHICS
873, 879 (2012).
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and local publications, websites, and blogs regularly chronicle prosecutorial
misconduct.5 In a 2015 article on criminal justice reform, Judge Kozinski of
the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals called for holding prosecutorial misconduct “up to the light of public scrutiny.”6 The New York Times editorial page
has criticized discovery abuse by the New Orleans prosecutor’s office.7 Significantly, conservative publications have roundly condemned prosecutorial
misconduct and urged elevating the problem to the national political
agenda.8
The discourse about prosecutorial misconduct has expanded and
evolved in the past two decades. For a long time, the media and judiciaries
focused primarily on intentional violations of law, not abuses of discretion or
negligent law-breaking. They assumed intentional prosecutorial law-breaking was aberrational, the fault of rogue prosecutors—“a few bad apples.”9
The public and judicial response was limited to calls to punish individual
wrongdoers, whose misconduct did not seriously erode public and judicial
confidence in the prosecution’s basic fairness and integrity. But over time,
there has been increased acceptance of the argument that prosecutorial misconduct is widespread and systemic, as reflected in the popularization of
5 See, e.g., Robyn Hagan Cain, No Sympathy for Prosecutorial Misconduct Discretion Plea,
FINDLAW BLOG (Feb. 17, 2012, 3:05 PM), http://blogs.findlaw.com/ninth_circuit/2012/
02/no-sympathy-for-prosecutorial-misconduct-discretion-plea.html; see also Brenda Grantland, More on Prosecutorial Misconduct, TRUTH & JUSTICE BLOG (Nov. 18, 2014), http://truth
andjusticeblog.com/more-on-prosecutorial-misconduct/; MARSHALL PROJECT, https://www
.themarshallproject.org (last visited Oct. 19, 2016); New Report: A Path for Prosecutors to
Reduce Incarceration, BRENNAN CTR. FOR JUSTICE AT N.Y.U. (Sept. 23, 2014), https://www
.brennancenter.org/press-release/new-report-path-prosecutors-reduce-incarceration; Joe
Newman, Report Finds Prosecutorial Misconduct and Secrecy at Justice Department, PROJECT ON
GOV’T OVERSIGHT (Mar. 13, 2014), http://www.pogo.org/blog/2014/03/report-findsprosecutorial-misconduct-and-secrecy-at-justice-department.html; Prosecutorial Misconduct
and Accountability, OPEN FILE, http://www.prosecutorialaccountability.com (last visited Oct.
19, 2016); SEEKING JUSTICE, http://seeking-justice.org (last visited Oct. 19, 2016); “The GOP
Should Turn Its Attention to Prosecutorial Misconduct”, SENTENCING L. & POL’Y (June 1, 2015,
9:06 AM), http://sentencing.typepad.com/sentencing_law_and_policy/2015/06/the-gopshould-turn-its-attention-to-prosecutorial-misconduct.html.
6 Alex Kozinski, Criminal Law 2.0, 44 GEO. L.J. ANN. REV. CRIM. PROC. iii, xxxvi (2015);
see also Jacob Gershman, Judge Kozinski: Time to Reign in Prosecutors, WALL ST. J.: L. BLOG
(June 30, 2015, 12:53 PM), http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2015/06/30/judge-kozinski-time-torein-in-prosecutors/.
7 See Editorial, How to Force Prosecutors to Play Fair, N.Y. TIMES (Feb. 16, 2015), http://
www.nytimes.com/2015/02/16/opinion/how-to-force-prosecutors-to-play-fair.html?_r=0.
8 See, e.g., Kevin D. Williamson, When District Attorneys Attack, NAT’L REV. (May 31,
2015), http://www.nationalreview.com/article/419110/when-district-attorneys-attackkevin-d-williamson; see also Prosecutors Burn Down the Law: How Fire Investigators Distorted Evidence to Loot a Company, WALL ST. J. (Jan. 2, 2015) http://www.wsj.com/articles/prosecutors-burn-down-the-law-1420242330.
9 Bennett L. Gershman, New Commission to Regulate Prosecutorial Misconduct, HUFFINGTON POST (May 20, 2014, 12:09 PM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bennett-l-gersh
man/new-commission-to-prosecutorial-misconduct_b_5353570.html.

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Judge Kozinski’s 2013 declaration that there is a national “epidemic” of
prosecutorial misconduct.10
A regulatory shift has accompanied this rhetorical shift. Slowly and sporadically, courts and other regulators have become more receptive to allegations of prosecutorial misconduct, more inclined to initiate inquiries into
these allegations, and somewhat more willing to afford remedies and impose
punishment. Perhaps most importantly, the public and regulators have
become increasingly supportive of systemic measures aimed at deterring or
preventing prosecutorial wrongdoing. These evolutionary changes are significant because they point toward greater legal and political accountability for
prosecutors, both individually and institutionally, for errant behavior. This
regulatory shift is a transition toward what this Article terms “Prosecutorial
Accountability 2.0.”
This Article describes the rhetorical and regulatory changes that characterize the new prosecutorial accountability, identifies the conditions that
have enabled them to occur, and considers their implications. While identifying various necessary conditions, the Article argues that information technology has been the essential catalyst; the evolution could not be sustained
without the aggregation, accessibility, and communication of data and commentary about prosecutorial misconduct that new information technology
makes readily available to the public. Given the permanence of information
technology in modern society, the Article concludes by cautiously predicting
that the contemporary regulatory movement will be sustained; the pendulum
will not swing back to the period when courts and the media presumed the
integrity of prosecutors and counted on them to ameliorate the excesses and
injustices of the police. Rather, the current pressure to hold prosecutors
accountable will be ongoing.
This Article proceeds in four Parts. Part I describes the traditional rhetoric of, and regulatory approaches to, prosecutorial misconduct. Part II then
discusses how rhetoric and regulation are changing in the information age.
Part III looks at the conditions contributing to these changes, emphasizing
the role of information technology. Finally, Part IV considers the future of
the new prosecutorial accountability.
I. PROSECUTORIAL ACCOUNTABILITY 1.0
This Part looks at prosecutorial accountability prior to the information
age. It focuses on two defining features—the discourse about, and the regulation of, prosecutorial misconduct. It describes the traditional view—the
view that most prosecutors could be counted on to act lawfully and ethically
and that their offices promote lawful and ethical conduct. Wrongdoing, as
narrowly conceived, was assumed to be rare and the fault of a few rogue
prosecutors. This rhetoric impelled courts and other regulators to focus on
individuals, and, in many cases, defer to prosecutors’ offices to deal with presumably aberrant misbehavior.
10

See infra notes 92–106 and accompanying text.

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The Traditional Rhetoric

Judges have traditionally professed that the overwhelming majority of
prosecutors are honest and law-abiding, and they have sometimes elevated
this belief to the level of a legal presumption.11 When there is a question of
whether a prosecutor’s wrongdoing was willful or simply careless, judges
tended to give the prosecutor the benefit of the doubt.12 Likewise, judges
assumed that most prosecutors’ offices could be trusted to, and had the
means to, regulate their prosecutors, by, for example, punishing individual
misconduct.13 Judges occasionally remarked on the prevalence of certain
kinds of prosecutorial misconduct within their jurisdictions,14 and on the

11 See United States v. Navarro, 608 F.3d 529, 536–40 (9th Cir. 2010) (upholding the
district court’s instruction to the grand jury, which stated that “[i]f past experience is any
indication of what to expect in the future, then you can expect that the U.S. Attorneys that
will appear in front of you will be candid, they’ll be honest, that they’ll act in good faith in
all matters presented to you”); see also United States v. Johnson, 241 F.3d 1049, 1055 n.4
(8th Cir. 2001) (expressing hope that prosecutors’ integrity will deter them from misleading future courts about their assessment of cooperators’ assistance); United States v. Turner, 104 F.3d 1180, 1185–86 (9th Cir. 1997) (reversing district court finding that
prosecutors targeted street gangs for racially discriminatory purposes and stating that
“[n]o reason was given by the district court to doubt the ‘background presumption’ that
United States Attorneys are properly discharging their duties, no reason given to doubt the
integrity of prosecutors and investigators whose honesty, good faith, and absence of racial
bias are unimpaired by anything in evidence before the court”); United States v. BernalObeso, 989 F.2d 331, 335 (9th Cir. 1993) (explaining that with regard to accomplice testimony, the law relies on “the integrity of government agents and prosecutors not to introduce untrustworthy evidence into the system” (first citing Berger v. United States, 295 U.S.
78, 88 (1935); and then citing United States v. Agurs, 427 U.S. 97 (1976))); People v.
Jackson, 548 N.Y.S.2d 987, 994 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1989) (noting prosecutors are generally
taken at their word), rev’d, 558 N.Y.S.2d 590, 590 (N.Y. App. Div. 1990).
12 See, e.g., Rice v. Collins, 546 U.S. 333, 337–38 (2006) (sustaining the state trial
court’s grant of “the benefit of the doubt” to a district attorney accused of striking a juror
for racial reasons (quoting 2 App. 14–15)).
13 Of most pertinence, federal courts traditionally had confidence in the Justice
Department’s Office of Professional Responsibility and referred federal prosecutors to that
office to investigate possible misconduct. See United States v. Hasting, 461 U.S. 499, 506
n.5 (1983); Jefferson v. Reno, 123 F. Supp. 2d 1, 5–6 (D.D.C. 2000). But in general, U.S.
Attorneys’ Offices and state and local prosecutors’ offices were assumed to engage in adequate self-regulation. See Reid v. Beard, 420 F. App’x 156, 160 n.8 (3d Cir. 2011) (encouraging Philadelphia District Attorney’s office to counsel and discipline a prosecutor who
engaged in misconduct).
14 See United States v. Peveto, 881 F.2d 844, 862 (10th Cir. 1989) (“[T]here has over a
substantial period of time, nearly since I have been here, but at least with the present
administration of the United States Attorney’s office [been] a pattern of conduct or misconduct of not presenting evidence until very late, many times during the trial. . . .” (alteration in original) (quoting from the trial record at IV R. 17–18)); People v. Pigage, 6 Cal.
Rptr. 3d 88, 101 (Cal. Ct. App. 2003) (“[T]his type of misconduct is but one example of an
alarming trend.”).

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courts’ ineffectual responses,15 but more often, courts expressed faith in the
general integrity of individual prosecutors and their offices.16
Judges took this position based on cues from the U.S. Supreme Court.
Eighty years ago, in its classic elaboration on the prosecutor’s quasi-judicial
role, the Court echoed the public’s confidence that prosecutors will faithfully
observe their obligations to play fairly and seek justice.17 Three decades
later, even as the Warren Court expanded protections against police abuse,18
it did not question criminal procedure law’s underlying “confidence in the
integrity of the federal prosecutor.”19 Later Supreme Court jurisprudence,
building upon Brady v. Maryland,20 the Warren Court’s most significant decision regarding prosecutorial conduct, trusted prosecutors to decide for
themselves whether evidence in the state’s possession is exculpatory and
material and, if so, to disclose it, notwithstanding temptations to do otherwise.21 Further, the Warren Court left other large and important swaths of
15 See United States v. Antonelli Fireworks Co., 155 F.2d 631, 661 (2d Cir. 1946)
(Frank, J., dissenting) (criticizing courts’ “attitude of helpless piety” in condemning prosecutors’ misconduct, but upholding convictions under the harmless error rule); People v.
Johnson, 803 N.E.2d 405, 412 (Ill. 2003) (describing prosecutorial misconduct as “a problem that courts across the country have, for the most part, been unable or unwilling to
control” (citing Paul J. Spiegelman, Prosecutorial Misconduct in Closing Argument: The Role of
Intent in Appellate Review, 1 J. APP. PRAC. & PROCESS 115, 115–18 (1999))).
16 See, e.g., Kiser v. State, 893 S.W.2d 277, 285 (Tex. App. 1995) (explaining that in
finding that the prosecutor improperly introduced and relied on inadmissible evidence,
“we [the court] in no way attempt to impugn the integrity of Texas prosecutors
generally”).
17 Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935) (“It is fair to say that the average jury,
in a greater or less degree, has confidence that these obligations, which so plainly rest
upon the prosecuting attorney, will be faithfully observed.”). As a general matter, the
Court “presume[s] that public officials have ‘properly discharged their official duties.’”
Bracy v. Gramley, 520 U.S. 899, 909 (1997) (citation omitted) (quoting United States v.
Chem. Found., Inc., 272 U.S. 1, 15 (1926)).
18 See, e.g., Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436 (1966); see also Mapp v. Ohio, 367 U.S.
643 (1961).
19 Singer v. United States, 380 U.S. 24, 37 (1965) (“[T]he government attorney in a
criminal prosecution is not an ordinary party to a controversy, but a ‘servant of the law’
with a ‘twofold aim . . . that guilt shall not escape or innocence suffer’. . . . Because of this
confidence in the integrity of the federal prosecutor, Rule 23(a) does not require that the
Government articulate its reasons for demanding a jury trial at the time it refuses to consent to a defendant’s proffered waiver” (alteration in original) (quoting Berger, 295 U.S. at
88)).
20 373 U.S. 83 (1963). The decision assumed that government lawyers embraced the
idea that the prosecutor’s “chief business is not to achieve victory but to establish justice.”
Id. at 87 n.2.
21 Trial judges do not ordinarily oversee prosecutors’ decisions about what evidence to
disclose to the defense. See, e.g., Giglio v. United States, 405 U.S. 150, 154 (1972) (“To the
extent this places a burden on the large prosecution offices, procedures and regulations
can be established to carry that burden and to insure communication of all relevant information on each case to every lawyer who deals with it.”); see also United States v. Cobb, 271
F. Supp. 159, 164 n.4 (S.D.N.Y. 1967) (“[T]he Court believes that the best solution in terms
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prosecutorial conduct to essentially unreviewable discretion, subject at best
to unenforceable professional or internal guidelines.22
Thus, the Warren Court’s criminal procedure revolution largely overlooked prosecutors. The Court evidently regarded prosecutorial misconduct
as a rare and individual problem,23 not one, like police investigative conduct,
requiring sweeping reform.24 No doubt, the Court’s general confidence in
the professionalism of prosecutors partly reflected Chief Justice Warren’s
confidence, as a former Alameda County prosecutor, that other prosecutors’
offices maintained the high professional standards he attributed to his own
former office.25 That level of confidence is apparently shared by most current-day Justices, including another former local prosecutor, Justice Sonia
Sotomayor.26
For the most part, in the years leading up to the Internet era, only academics and defense and civil rights lawyers offered a counter-narrative that
depicted prosecutorial misconduct as a widespread, systemic problem. Academics examined how prosecutors conducted their work and identified how
some prosecutors violated laws or ethics rules or otherwise abused their
power, whether intentionally or inadvertently. For example, Professor Bennett Gershman’s treatise on prosecutorial misconduct, first published in
ment of the United States Attorney” to determine whether evidence in the government’s
possession is exculpatory.). See generally Daniel J. Capra, Access to Exculpatory Evidence: Avoiding the Agurs Problems of Prosecutorial Discretion and Retrospective Review, 53 FORDHAM L. REV.
391 (1984).
22 See, e.g., Bordenkircher v. Hayes, 434 U.S. 357, 365 & n.9 (1978) (acknowledging
that the risk of individual and institutional abuses of prosecutorial discretion have “led to
many recommendations that the prosecutor’s discretion should be controlled by means of
either internal or external guidelines”). Although separation of powers considerations
restrict federal courts’ authority to review prosecutors’ discretionary decisions, many state
courts interpret their state constitutions to allow more meaningful judicial review of charging and plea bargaining decisions. See Darryl K. Brown, Judicial Power to Regulate Plea Bargaining, 57 WM. & MARY L. REV. 1225, 1253 (2016).
23 See Burgett v. Texas, 389 U.S. 109, 116 n.1 (1967) (Warren, C.J., concurring)
(“Prosecutorial bad faith, of course, is not an irrelevant element in our review of state
criminal convictions. It can often make even more intolerable errors which demand correction in this Court.” (first citing Miller v. Pate, 386 U.S. 1 (1967); then citing Napue v.
Illinois, 360 U.S. 264 (1959); and then citing Mooney v. Holohan, 294 U.S. 103 (1935))).
24 See, e.g., Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 447 (1966) (explaining that police misconduct in interrogations is “sufficiently widespread to be the object of concern” and that
without “a proper limitation . . . there can be no assurance that practices of this nature will
be eradicated in the foreseeable future”).
25 See Yale Kamisar, How Earl Warren’s Twenty-Two Years in Law Enforcement Affected His
Work as Chief Justice, 3 OHIO ST. J. CRIM. L. 11, 12 (2005) (noting that Justice Warren’s
deputy district attorneys were so keen to avoid shady practices that they were known
around the courthouse as the “Boy Scouts” (quoting ED CRAY, CHIEF JUSTICE: A BIOGRAPHY
OF EARL WARREN 48 (1997))).
26 See, e.g., Calhoun v. United States, 133 S. Ct. 1136, 1337–38 (2013) (Sotomayor, J.,
respecting the denial of certiorari) (portraying a federal prosecutor’s appeal to racial
prejudice as a vestige of a bygone era, rather than as an expression of racial prejudice that
still pervades the criminal justice system).

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1985, surveyed a wide range of prosecutorial misdeeds.27 Other academics,
joined by some practitioners, also surveyed prosecutors’ misconduct28 or
targeted wrongdoing in aspects of prosecutors’ work, such as misconduct in
discovery,29 jury arguments,30 or other phases of the trial.31
Some academic writings identified apparent patterns of misconduct
among prosecutors within a specific jurisdiction.32 Some suggested that the
tendency to commit misconduct may be intrinsic to the role of a lawyer for
the prosecution in an adversarial system,33 while others attributed this tendency to prosecution cultures that value winning cases or convicting
criminals over playing by the rules.34 Furthermore, a handful of legal academics and many practicing defense lawyers inferred that certain known violations—in particular, discovery violations, which were not easily exposed—
were the “tip of the iceberg.”35 However, these critics’ accounts were largely
27 BENNETT L. GERSHMAN, PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT (1985).
28 See MONROE H. FREEDMAN & ABBE SMITH, UNDERSTANDING LAWYERS’ ETHICS § 10.14
(4th ed. 2010); Monroe H. Freedman, The Professional Responsibility of the Prosecuting Attorney, 55 GEO. L.J. 1030 (1967); Joseph F. Lawless, Jr., & Kenneth E. North, Prosecutorial
Misconduct: A Battleground in Criminal Law, TRIAL, Oct. 1984, at 26.
29 See Richard A. Rosen, Disciplinary Sanctions Against Prosecutors for Brady Violations: A
Paper Tiger, 65 N.C. L. REV. 693, 697 (1987) (stating that there are “enough reported cases
containing strong evidence of intentional prosecutorial withholding of exculpatory evidence and presentation of false evidence to demonstrate that this kind of misconduct
occurs frequently enough”); Joseph R. Weeks, No Wrong Without a Remedy: The Effective
Enforcement of the Duty of Prosecutors to Disclose Exculpatory Evidence, 22 OKLA. CITY U. L. REV.
833 (1997) (addressing the inadequacy of remedies for prosecutorial violations of disclosure obligations).
30 See Candice D. Tobin, Misconduct During Closing Arguments in Civil and Criminal
Cases: Florida Case Law, 24 NOVA L. REV. 35 (1999) (discussing misconduct that occurs during closing arguments); Tara J. Tobin, Note, Miscarriage of Justice During Closing Arguments
by an Overzealous Prosecutor and a Timid Supreme Court in State v. Smith, 45 S.D. L. REV. 186,
199–200 (2000) (“In the criminal justice system, no where is this overzealous mentality
more readily apparent than in the prosecutor’s closing argument to the jury.” (citing Rosemary Nidiry, Note, Restraining Adversarial Excess in Closing Argument, 96 COLUM. L. REV.
1299, 1307–08 (1996))).
31 See Albert W. Alschuler, Courtroom Misconduct by Prosecutors and Trial Judges, 50 TEX.
L. REV. 629 (1972); see also Bennett L. Gershman, Why Prosecutors Misbehave, 22 CRIM. L.
BULL. 131 (1986).
32 See, e.g., Edward M. Genson & Marc W. Martin, The Epidemic of Prosecutorial Courtroom
Misconduct in Illinois: Is It Time to Start Prosecuting the Prosecutors?, 19 LOY. U. CHI. L.J. 39
(1987) (discussing misconduct in Illinois courtrooms).
33 See Charles L. Cantrell, Prosecutorial Misconduct: Closing Argument in Oklahoma, 31
OKLA. CITY U. L. REV. 379, 379 (2006) (“This problem continues because of built-in pressures of the legal system that allow and even encourage it.”); Kevin C. McMunigal, Are
Prosecutorial Ethics Standards Different?, 68 FORDHAM L. REV. 1453, 1462–68 (2000) (stating
that disclosure rules for prosecutors permit prosecutors to take a more adversarial stance
than civil litigators).
34 See Ken Armstrong & Maurice Possley, Part 1: The Verdict: Dishonor, CHI. TRIB. (Jan.
11, 1999), http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/watchdog/chi-020103trial1-story.html.
35 See, e.g., Kevin C. McMunigal, Prosecutorial Disclosure Violations: Punishment vs. Treatment, 64 MERCER L. REV. 711, 712 (2013) (discussing claims that discovery violations are the

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ignored or dismissed by mainstream government and media institutions.
Organizations such as the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
(NACDL) assisted lawyers around the country who alleged prosecutorial misconduct, but these efforts were mostly unrecognized on a broader scale.36
At the same time, prosecutors and their defenders insisted that instances
of prosecutorial misconduct were in fact isolated and disconnected, not systematic.37 This position relied on a conception of prosecutorial misconduct
that is narrow in two respects.
First, the rhetoric in defense of prosecutors has focused on intentional
wrongdoing, not negligent or inadvertent wrongdoing. The prosecutorial
view has been that prosecutorial misconduct should mean willful misconduct—a departure from how the term is used in judicial decisions in criminal
cases. Courts use “prosecutorial misconduct” as a term of art to cover violations of law, particularly discovery law, whether or not the violation is intentional, since the question of whether a discovery violation occurred does not
turn on the prosecutor’s state of mind.38 Ostensibly to spare prosecutors
embarrassment, and to reinforce distinctions between the individual’s intentional and negligent conduct, prosecutors have urged courts to use the term
“error” in referring to prosecutors’ inadvertent or negligent violation of discovery provisions or other laws.39
Second, prosecutors have sought to focus the discussion of prosecutorial
misconduct on violations of enforceable legal standards. This excludes
abuses of prosecutorial discretion that are not judicially remedial.40 For
example, prosecutors might be said to abuse their discretion in making arbi“tip of the iceberg”); see also Sheri Lynn Johnson, Racial Imagery in Criminal Cases, 67 TUL.
L. REV. 1739, 1762 (1993); Saul M. Kassin, False Confessions, 73 ALB. L. REV. 1227, 1228
(2010); Barry Tarlow, RICO Report, 22 CHAMPION 47, 55 (1998); Craig M. Bradley, Texas
‘Justice’, TRIAL, Aug. 2003, at 64, 65.
36 See Examples of Prosecutorial Misconduct, NAT’L ASS’N OF CRIMINAL DEF. LAWYERS,
https://www.nacdl.org/criminaldefense.aspx?id=19574&terms=%22prosecutorial+miscon
duct (last visited Aug. 28, 2016).
37 See, e.g., Richard L. Braun, Ethics in Criminal Cases: A Response, 55 GEO. L.J. 1048
(1967) (responding to criticisms of a lack of ethical practices or policies of prosecutors).
38 See, e.g., State v. Maluia, 108 P.3d 974, 979 (Haw. 2005) (observing that
“‘prosecutorial misconduct’ is a legal term of art that refers to any improper action committed by a prosecutor, however harmless or unintentional”).
39 See, e.g., Memorandum from John Kingrey to the Minn. Cty. Attorneys. (Apr. 25,
2007) (on file with Notre Dame Law Review). Without necessarily agreeing that intentional
misconduct is aberrational, the American Bar Association has supported prosecutors’
efforts to persuade judges to use the term “error” rather than “misconduct” in reference to
prosecutors’ unintentional violations of law. ABA, Recommendation 100B Adopted by the
House of Delegates (Aug. 9–10, 2010), http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/
migrated/leadership/2010/annual/pdfs/100b.authcheckdam.pdf.
40 The public might regard a prosecutor’s misuse of charging power—e.g., overcharging where criminal conduct was relatively insignificant—as an abuse of discretion. But
because this conduct is not subject to judicial review or disciplinary oversight, prosecutors
would not concede that abuses of discretion might be a species of misconduct (assuming
they even conceded that discretion was subject to abuse and that abuses occurred).

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trary decisions about charging and plea bargaining, but courts have limited
authority to review these decisions and identify and remedy abuses.41 Prosecutors’ narrow construction of misconduct also excludes other individual
conduct that might be criticized but is not susceptible to discipline or other
legal or judicial recourse because of the underdevelopment of legal and disciplinary standards governing prosecutors’ professional conduct. For example, in the disciplinary system, prosecutors are not accountable for the use of
jailhouse informants’ and accomplice witnesses’ false testimony or unreliable
forensic evidence unless they know the evidence to be false.42
This narrow conception of prosecutorial misconduct has institutional
implications for prosecutors’ offices. In this conception, the buck stops with
the line prosecutor who personally transgressed, whether or not intentionally, and ignores the possibility that the office is blameworthy in failing to
train, supervise, and establish internal processes and systems to prevent unintentional error. It ignores an examination of office culture that may promote aggressive interpretation of and indifference to ethical obligations.43
Prosecutors’ conception of misconduct—as solely “legal wrongs”—is significant given both courts’ traditional deference to prosecutorial self-regulation and prosecutors’ influence on how judges and the public perceive
prosecutors’ conduct. Consistently, prosecutors have dismissed many failings
as involving misjudgments, excused most discovery violations, improper closing arguments, and other legal wrongs as unintentional, and, at least until
recently, persuaded the public and the judiciary that intentional
“prosecutorial misconduct” is either police misconduct or mere prosecutorial
error44 and that actual misconduct by prosecutors that is significant and
intentional is exceedingly rare.45 They have described prosecutorial miscon41 See, e.g., United States v. Redondo-Lemos, 955 F.2d 1296, 1299–1300 (9th Cir. 1992)
(observing that courts lack authority to remedy prosecutors’ arbitrary or capricious charging and plea bargaining decisions).
42 Ethics rules governing the presentation of false testimony hold prosecutors to the
same requirement as lawyers for private litigants: a duty to refrain from offering evidence
they “know” to be false. MODEL RULES OF PROF’L CONDUCT r. 3.3(a)(3) (AM. BAR. ASS’N
2013). Although the ABA has published non-enforceable guidelines recognizing that prosecutors should not offer evidence that they do not “reasonably believe to be true,” ABA,
STANDARDS OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE: PROSECUTION FUNCTION § 3-1.4(b) (4th ed. 2015), http://
www.americanbar.org/groups/criminal_justice/standards/ProsecutionFunctionFourthEdi
tion.html, no enforceable rule establishes prosecutors’ gatekeeping duty as ministers of
justice to take care to avoid the use of unreliable evidence and testimony.
43 See Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., The Conscience and Culture of a Prosecutor, 50 AM. CRIM. L. REV.
629, 633–34 (2013).
44 See, e.g., Steve Weinburg, A Question of Integrity: Prosecutors Dispute the Significance of
‘Prosecutorial Misconduct’, CTR. FOR PUB. INTEGRITY (June 26, 2003), http://www.publicintegrity.org/2003/06/26/5525/question-integrity.
45 See, e.g., TEX. DIST. & CTY. ATTORNEYS ASS’N, SETTING THE RECORD STRAIGHT ON
PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT (2012), http://www.tdcaa.com/sites/default/files/page/Setting%20the%20Record%20Straight%20on%20Prosecutorial%20Misconduct.pdf.

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duct as “more episodic than epidemic”46 and evoked the image of the
“rogue” prosecutor to convey that wrongdoing is not endemic, but instead
occurs despite good prosecutorial cultures, training, oversight, and regulation.47 When critics suggest that an instance of prosecutorial misconduct was
symptomatic, prosecutors typically dismiss the criticism as exaggerated or
based on over-generalization.48
Academics’ and defense lawyers’ more sweeping challenges could not
easily gain traction. Until recently, if the press looked into prosecutorial misconduct, it typically examined individual cases. It would have been labor
intensive to aggregate information about a large sample size of prosecutorial
conduct, even if the conduct could be gleaned from courthouse files. The
first significant national news study of prosecutorial misconduct was not published until 1999, when the Chicago Tribune produced a groundbreaking
series on homicide prosecutions, which analyzed “thousands of court
records, appellate rulings and lawyer disciplinary records from across the
United States.”49 Based on its painstaking review, the newspaper concluded
that to win convictions, prosecutors throughout the country had “committ[ed] the worst kinds of deception,” such as hiding exculpatory evidence
“in the most serious of cases.”50 Occasionally, legislatures inquired into pos-

46 Laura Parker, Court Cases Raise Conduct Concerns, USA TODAY (June 26, 2003), http:/
/usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/nation/2003-06-25-prosecute-usat_x.htm (quoting Oregon District Attorney Joshua Marquis, a board member of the National District Attorneys
Association); see also Cole Statement, supra note 3.
47 See, e.g., Gershman, supra note 9 (“Prosecutors claim that reports of misconduct are
exaggerated, and that misconduct is the work of a few bad apples, or a handful of rogue
prosecutors.”).
48 See, e.g., Andrea Elliott & Benjamin Weiser, When Prosecutors Err, Others Pay the Price,
N.Y. TIMES, Mar. 21, 2004, at N25 (quoting Bronx District Attorney Robert T. Johnson:
“The term ‘prosecutorial misconduct’ is very broad . . . and could run the gamut from an
inadvertent error to an intentional abuse, and rarely have we seen a flagrant abuse which
would be subject to appropriate administrative action.”); Jack Leonard, Report Urges Justice
Reform, L.A. TIMES (Oct. 5, 2010), http://www.pressreader.com/usa/los-angeles-times/
20101005/285855844437709 (reporting that the chief executive of the California District
Attorneys Association criticized an innocence project’s report on prosecutorial misconduct
“for exaggerating the scale and severity of prosecutorial misconduct”).
49 Armstrong & Possley, supra note 34.
50 Id. This was followed by a series highlighting prosecutorial misconduct in Illinois
homicide cases, see Maurice Possley & Ken Armstrong, Part 3: Prosecution on Trial in DuPage,
CHI. TRIB. (Jan. 12, 1999), http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/watchdog/chi-020103tri
al3-story.html, that led the governor to commute all Illinois death sentences. See Steve
Weinburg, A Short History of Exposing Misconduct: An Unlikely Cast of Characters Has Shone a
Spotlight on Bad Prosecutors, and on Occasion, Sparked Reform, CTR. FOR PUB. INTEGRITY (June
26, 2003), https://www.publicintegrity.org/2003/06/26/5528/short-history-exposing-mis
conduct. Noting the significance of the Chicago Tribune articles, one commentator
observed, “In addition to changing perceptions, they happened to change public policy.”
Id.

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sible patterns of prosecutorial misconduct,51 but they, too, typically focused
on individual cases.52
The defense bar had limited ability to lobby for reform. Defense lawyers
might know about their own cases and perhaps those of colleagues, but there
was no easy way to access and aggregate additional information. Although
criminal defense lawyers undoubtedly groused within their local communities and in national meetings, there was little sustained attention to these
issues outside of criminal defense organizations and, consequently, reform
efforts were relatively ineffectual.
Initially, the academic and professional writings on the inadequacies of
prosecutorial regulation reached only a narrow audience of professors and
like-minded lawyers. Occasionally, news media called regulatory failings to
broader public attention. For example, the Chicago Tribune’s 1999 series concluded that prosecutors who engaged in serious misconduct expected to go
unpunished.53 But public concern, if aroused, never lasted long. Consequently, lawmakers, regulators, and prosecutors themselves faced minimal
pressure to respond to the problem.
B.

The Regulatory Tradition

Before the Internet age, those concerned with prosecutorial accountability focused on the punishment of individual wrongdoers in order to deter
misconduct by rogue prosecutors. But even as to individual proven malefactors, the conventional wisdom of academics and the defense bar was that the
rules and law were under-enforced.54 The theme of the early professional
literature was that rogue prosecutors were not being meaningfully held
accountable for their misconduct because no potential regulatory mechanism was being effectively employed to deter or sanction prosecutors’ wrongdoing. In effect, judicial sanction, civil liability, professional discipline, and
internal discipline added up to very little.55
51 See, e.g., H.R. REP. NO. 101-986 (1990).
52 See, e.g., id. at 24–25.
53 See Armstrong & Possley, supra note 34.
54 See Alschuler, supra note 31, at 670–71 (discussing a 1954 study which found that
only one prosecutor in the country had ever been publicly disciplined for courtroom misconduct); Bennett L. Gershman, The New Prosecutors, 53 U. PITT. L. REV. 393, 445 (1992)
(“[D]espite the recognized frequency of misconduct by prosecutors in argument to the
jury, . . . only one decision” was found in which such conduct resulted in discipline.);
Margaret Z. Johns, Reconsidering Absolute Prosecutorial Immunity, 2005 BYU L. REV. 53, 61
(2005); see also Bruce A. Green, The Criminal Regulation of Lawyers, 67 FORDHAM L. REV. 327,
345, 389 (1998). The only federal criminal prosecutor who was indicted for alleged professional misconduct was ultimately acquitted. Philip Shenon, Ex-Prosecutor Acquitted of Misconduct in 9/11 Case, N.Y TIMES (Nov. 1, 2007), http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/01/us/01
detroit.html.
55 See, e.g., Bruce A. Green, Policing Federal Prosecutors: Do Too Many Regulators Produce
Too Little Enforcement?, 8 ST. THOMAS L. REV. 69, 72 (1995); Walter W. Steele, Jr., Unethical
Prosecutors and Inadequate Discipline, 38 SW. L.J. 965, 979–82 (1984); Barry Tarlow, RICO
Report: Only in California, 19 CHAMPION 25, 26 (1995) (“While sanctions such as referral of

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One might have expected judges presiding over cases to take the lead in
holding prosecutors accountable for misconduct in those matters, since
judges have the authority to sanction lawyers who commit misconduct in litigation,56 initiate contempt findings,57 recommend the institution of formal
disciplinary proceedings,58 and afford remedies for harms caused by some
professional misconduct.59 Furthermore, some have suggested that naming
prosecutors in judicial opinions would lead to greater accountability.60 Howrogue prosecutors to the OPR, federal civil rights actions, and the exercise of courts’ contempt powers, should be pursued where appropriate, in practice they do little to curb
prosecutorial misconduct.”). This remains the prevailing wisdom. See, e.g., Shelby A.D.
Moore, Who Is Keeping the Gate? What Do We Do When Prosecutors Breach the Ethical Responsibilities They Have Sworn to Uphold?, 47 S. TEX. L. REV. 801, 807 (2006); Joel B. Rudin, The
Supreme Court Assumes Errant Prosecutors Will Be Disciplined by Their Offices or the Bar: Three Case
Studies That Prove That Assumption Wrong, 80 FORDHAM L. REV. 537, 539 (2011); Ellen
Yaroshefsky, Wrongful Convictions: It Is Time to Take Prosecution Discipline Seriously, 8 U. D.C.
L. REV. 275, 276–77 (2004); Fred C. Zacharias, The Professional Discipline of Prosecutors, 79
N.C. L. REV. 721, 722–23 (2001).
56 See generally Fred C. Zacharias & Bruce A. Green, Federal Court Authority to Regulate
Lawyers: A Practice in Search of a Theory, 56 VAND. L. REV. 1303 (2003).
57 See, e.g., United States v. Eisenberg, 711 F.2d 959, 965 (11th Cir. 1983).
58 See, e.g., D. MINN. LOCAL R. 83.6; see generally Green, supra note 54, at 345, 389;
Rosen, supra note 29, at 697.
59 See Peter J. Henning, Prosecutorial Misconduct and Constitutional Remedies, 77 WASH. U.
L.Q. 713, 828–31 (1999); Kelly Gier, Note, Prosecuting Injustice: Consequences of Misconduct,
33 AM. J. CRIM. L. 191, 205–12 (2006). Many scholars have argued that current remedies
are insufficient. See, e.g., Sonja B. Starr, Sentence Reduction as a Remedy for Prosecutorial Misconduct, 97 GEO. L.J. 1509 (2009). Nevertheless, courts are highly reluctant to dismiss
indictments, overturn convictions, or suppress evidence as a remedy for prosecutorial misconduct. See, e.g., United States v. Griffith, 756 F.2d 1244, 1249 (6th Cir. 1985) (“[A] court
may not order dismissal of an indictment under its supervisory power unless the defendant
demonstrates that ‘prosecutorial misconduct is a long-standing or common problem in
grand jury proceedings in [the] district.’” (alteration in original) (quoting United States v.
Nembhard, 676 F.2d 193, 200 (6th Cir. 1982), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 801 (1983))); United
States v. Campagnuolo, 592 F.2d 852, 865 (5th Cir. 1979) (district courts are permitted “to
impose the extreme sanction of dismissal of an indictment with prejudice only in
extraordinary situations” (citing United States v. Baskes, 433 F. Supp. 799, 804–07 (N.D. Ill.
1977))); United States v. Owen, 580 F.2d 365, 367 (9th Cir. 1978) (“[U]nder the better
view, which we adopt, other courts have demanded that there be some prejudice to the
accused by virtue of the alleged acts of misconduct.”). But see United States v. McCord, 509
F.2d 334, 349 (D.C. Cir. 1974) (“[S]erious prosecutorial misconduct may so pollute a criminal prosecution as to require dismissal of the indictment . . . without regard to prejudice
to the accused.”).
60 See, e.g., Adam M. Gershowitz, Prosecutorial Shaming: Naming Attorneys to Reduce
Prosecutorial Misconduct, 42 U.C. DAVIS L. REV. 1059, 1064 (2009). Judges have been reluctant to name the prosecutors who engaged in misconduct. See James S. Liebman, The
Overproduction of Death, 100 COLUM. L. REV. 2030, 2126 (2000) (“[E]ven in the face of egregious behavior, orders announcing these reversals rarely single out anyone by name to
bear the blame . . . .”); Daniel S. Medwed, The Zeal Deal: Prosecutorial Resistance to PostConviction Claims of Innocence, 84 B.U. L. REV. 125, 173 (2004) (“[I]n the rare incidences of
reversal, the appellate court opinions invariably neglect to identify the prosecutor by
name . . . .”). For example, in United States v. Ramming, 915 F. Supp. 854, 857 (S.D. Tex.

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ever, the courts were unable or unwilling to serve this regulatory function.
Much of the misconduct was not called to judges’ attention, because it
occurred outside the courtroom and was not raised by the defense; in some
cases, extrajudicial misconduct was invisible to the defense as well. But even
when the defense was on notice, there was a perception that no judicial remedy would be available or that any benefit from complaining would be outweighed by the harm to clients in incurring the prosecution’s wrath.
This perception was reinforced by many courts’ indifference when prosecutors’ misconduct occurred in the court’s presence and on the record.
The prime example was courts’ response to prosecutors’ improper closing
arguments, which was the focus of much of the early academic writing and
many of the judicial opinions on prosecutorial misconduct. Often, trial
judges entirely ignored improper summations,61 perhaps because they did
not notice improprieties as they occurred or assumed that prosecutors
respected the applicable limits. Many judges were former prosecutors who
understood prosecutors’ zealousness and therefore were indisposed to hold
the prosecutor accountable.62 Appellate courts sometimes admonished the
prosecution63 but they almost universally refused to overturn convictions
unless the improper argument was prejudicial and evidence of guilt was
thin.64 In general, courts assumed that prosecutorial misconduct was primarily the province of internal office regulation or perhaps of attorney disciplinary agencies.65
1996), the court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss and acquit, finding that the AUSA
engaged in prosecutorial misconduct for, among other things, failing to disclose Brady
materials. While Judge Hoyt stated, “Only a person blinded by ambition or ignorance of
the law and ethics would have proceeded down this dangerous path,” the prosecutor was
not personally named. Id. at 867–68. See generally Ramming v. United States, 281 F.3d 158
(5th Cir. 2001) (per curiam) (failing to name the prosecutor throughout the opinion).
While “appellate courts have generally been reluctant to name the individual prosecutors
whose comments have been found improper,” Judge Kozinski is an exception. United
States v. Modica, 663 F.2d 1173, 1185 n.7 (2d Cir. 1981) (per curiam). In United States v.
Kojayan, the court named the prosecutor more than forty times in the initial opinion but
withdrew the naming in the final opinion. 8 F.3d 1315 (9th Cir. 1993). To date, however,
there has not been a systematic analysis of this phenomenon.
61 See, e.g., United States v. Richardson, 161 F.3d 728, 737 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (holding
that it was plain error for district court to allow prosecutor’s improper statement).
62 See, e.g., Stephen B. Bright & Patrick J. Keenan, Judges and the Politics of Death: Deciding Between the Bill of Rights and the Next Election in Capital Cases, 75 B.U. L. REV. 759, 781
(1995) (“One of the most frequently traveled routes to the state trial bench is through
prosecutors’ offices.”).
63 See, e.g., People v. Shazier, 151 Cal. Rptr. 3d 215, 222–23, 229 (Cal. Ct. App. 2012);
Bell v. State, 723 So. 2d 896, 897 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1998).
64 See Modica, 663 F.2d at 1181–82. Given the vast deference that appellate courts
grant to trial verdicts, the harmless error doctrine treats most prosecutorial trial errors as
irrelevant. See also H. Mitchell Caldwell, The Prosecutor Prince: Misconduct, Accountability, and
a Modest Proposal, 63 CATH. U. L. REV. 51, 86 (2013) (describing harmless error doctrine in
relation to prosecutorial misconduct).
65 See generally Rudin, supra note 55; Yaroshefsky, supra note 55; Zacharias, supra note
55.

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Prosecutors’ interest in defending convictions regardless of the questionable propriety of their office’s conduct has both rhetorical and regulatory
significance. First, because courts generally do not overturn convictions
unless the improprieties had a significant effect upon the trial outcome, prosecutors have an incentive to downplay the significance of their alleged
wrongdoing. Second, instead of acknowledging improprieties, prosecutors
typically defend questionable conduct whenever there is a plausible basis to
do so. This means publicly adopting a conception of prosecutorial conduct
that tests the outer limits of propriety. This also implicitly conveys to line
prosecutors that it is unnecessary to proceed cautiously, regardless of what
official policy says on the question, because their aggressive conduct will be
defended rather than punished internally.66
In theory, prosecutors might alternatively be held accountable for certain misconduct through civil rights actions filed by wronged individuals. In
practice, however, civil liability is rarely a viable remedy, in part because the
doctrines of absolute and qualified immunity severely limit the circumstances
in which prosecutorial misconduct establishes a civil rights claim.67 In its
leading case regarding prosecutors’ civil immunity, the Supreme Court was
less concerned with compensating victims of prosecutorial abuse and deterring future wrongdoing than with protecting “honest prosecutor[s]” from
the “substantial danger of liability.”68 The caselaw makes it hard to hold
prosecutors’ offices accountable for individual prosecutors’ misdeeds, even
when they are attributable to institutional failings of training and supervision.
In a closely divided 2011 decision, the Court majority was emphatic that prosecutors’ offices would not be civilly liable for discovery violations attributable
to inadequate training because, as lawyers, prosecutors ordinarily should be
able to master their professional responsibilities on their own and to otherwise regulate their own professional conduct.69 As for punishing and deter-

66 See generally Bruce A. Green, Beyond Training Prosecutors About Their Disclosure Obligations: Can Prosecutors’ Offices Learn from Their Lawyers’ Mistakes?, 31 CARDOZO L. REV. 2161
(2010).
67 See Van de Kamp v. Goldstein, 555 U.S. 335, 348–49 (2009) (holding that district
attorney supervisors were entitled to absolute immunity from allegations that they failed to
ensure prosecutors were aware, and therefore able to disclose to the defendant, that jailhouse informant was receiving benefits in return for his testimony); Buckley v. Fitzsimmons, 509 U.S. 259, 273, 278 (1993) (finding qualified immunity for statements about
defendants to the press and for allegedly fabricating evidence); Burns v. Reed, 500 U.S.
478, 495–97 (1991) (holding that a prosecutor has absolute immunity for eliciting false
statements in a judicial hearing, but only qualified immunity for giving legal advice to
police officers); Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. 409, 424 (1976); Doe v. Phillips, 81 F.3d
1204, 1211 (2d Cir. 1996) (stating that qualified immunity is lost only when prosecutors
should know that their conduct violates clearly established constitutional or statutory
rights).
68 Imbler, 424 U.S. at 425.
69 See Connick v. Thompson, 563 U.S. 51, 64, 71–72 (2011).

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ring abuse, the Court regarded professional discipline as an adequate
alternative.70
Professional discipline was far from robust, however. At least until
recently, prosecutors were rarely disciplined for misconduct, and if so, not
very seriously.71 Courts have acknowledged as much.72 Although professional conduct rules subject prosecutors to discipline for violating legal as
well as ethical obligations, and judges who know of serious prosecutorial misconduct are obligated to refer the prosecutor to the disciplinary authorities,
neither judges nor defense lawyers ordinarily alerted disciplinary agencies
when prosecutors acted wrongly.73 Of course, disciplinary authorities could
read judicial decisions involving prosecutorial misconduct and initiate inquiries on their own. However, disciplinary agencies and the courts overseeing
them largely gave prosecutors a pass, perhaps hoping that prosecutors’
offices would clean up their own messes.74
Internal discipline was generally considered equally ineffective.75 At the
state and local level in the pre-Internet era, few prosecutors’ offices had any
formal mechanism to address prosecutorial misconduct comparable to the
federal Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR), the office within the U.S.
Department of Justice charged with investigating and sanctioning misconduct by federal prosecutors.76 OPR itself was too secretive to promote public
70 See id. at 66 (“An attorney who violates his or her ethical obligations is subject to
professional discipline, including sanctions, suspension, and disbarment.”); see also Imbler,
424 U.S. at 429 (“[A] prosecutor stands perhaps unique, among officials whose acts could
deprive persons of constitutional rights, in his amenability to professional discipline by an
association of his peers.” (citing MODEL CODE OF PROF’L RESPONSIBILITY § EC 7-13 (Am. Bar
Ass’n 1980))).
71 See, e.g., Neil Gordon, Misconduct and Punishment: State Disciplinary Authorities Investigate Prosecutors Accused of Misconduct, CTR. FOR PUB. INTEGRITY (June 26, 2003), http://www
.publicintegrity.org/2003/06/26/5532/misconduct-and-punishment; see generally Harmful
Error: Investigating America’s Local Prosecutors, CTR. FOR PUB. INTEGRITY, https://www.publicintegrity.org/accountability/harmful-error (last visited Aug. 23, 2016) (containing links
to various articles regarding instances of prosecutorial misconduct).
72 See, e.g., State ex rel. Okla. Bar Ass’n v. Miller, 309 P.3d 108, 120 (Okla. 2013)
(“Instances of prosecutorial misconduct from previous decades, such as withholding evidence, were often met with nothing more than a reprimand or a short suspension. Some
scholars writing during that time theorized that discipline was imposed so rarely and so
lightly that it was not effective in deterring misconduct.” (footnote omitted)).
73 See generally Symposium, New Perspectives on Brady and Other Disclosure Obligations:
Report of the Working Groups on Best Practices, 31 CARDOZO L. REV. 1961 (2010) [hereinafter
Cardozo Symposium]; KATHLEEN RIDOLFI & MAURICE POSSLEY, N. CAL. INNOCENCE PROJECT,
PREVENTABLE ERROR: A REPORT ON PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT IN CALIFORNIA 1997–2009
(2010), http://digitalcommons.law.scu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1001&context=
ncippubs.
74 See State ex rel. Okla. Bar Ass’n, 309 P.3d. 108.
75 See Caldwell, supra note 64, at 98; Rudin, supra note 55, at 542–43.
76 About the Office and OPR Policies and Procedures, U.S. DEP’T OF JUSTICE (Aug. 16,
2016), https://www.justice.gov/opr/about-office-and-opr-policies-and-procedures.

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confidence in its work.77 There was no greater cause for confidence that
prosecutors’ offices maintained adequate informal mechanisms for promoting accountability. The operation of prosecutors’ offices was so opaque that
the public could only take it on faith that prosecutors were adequately
trained, supervised, and sanctioned for wrongdoing.78
Finally, in theory, political accountability might substitute for professional accountability. Particularly in jurisdictions with elected prosecutors,
constituencies might punish chief prosecutors by replacing them when their
offices engaged in misconduct. However, the electorate has not been an
effective regulator of prosecutorial misconduct.79 Holding elected prosecutors and their subordinates to legal and professional standards has not been a
high public priority. Many voters tolerated prosecutorial improprieties if
prosecutors were apparently effective in convicting lawbreakers.80 Further,
absent effective media scrutiny of prosecutors’ conduct, interested voters
could not make informed assessments of an office’s professional practices.
Other public officials might be better positioned to inquire effectively, but
prosecutorial oversight was not a legislative or executive branch priority.
II. PROSECUTORIAL ACCOUNTABILITY 2.0
In recent years, public discourse about prosecutorial misconduct has
been changing. Increasingly, credence is given to the idea that visible misconduct is the tip of the iceberg and that prosecutors’ institutions, not just
deviant individuals, deserve some of the blame. As one vivid example of the
rhetorical shift characterizing “Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0,” this Article
offers the popularization of the idea of an “epidemic” of discovery violations.
As this Article then describes, the premise that prosecutorial misconduct is a
widespread, systemic problem has coincided with a regulatory shift toward
judicial proactivity and systemic reform. This Article’s point is not that the
rhetorical shift has influenced the regulatory shift, or vice versa, but that
77 See generally Letter from Richard M. Stana, Dir., Justice Issues, U.S. Gen. Accounting
Office, to Rep. Henry J. Hyde & Rep. William D. Delahunt (Jan. 19, 2001), http://www.gao
.gov/assets/100/90644.pdf (regarding follow-up information on the operations of the
Department of Justice’s OPR).
78 Critics charged that internal disciplinary processes, lacking objectivity, were too disposed to excuse misconduct as unintentional. See generally David Keenan et al., The Myth of
Prosecutorial Accountability After Connick v. Thompson: Why Existing Professional Responsibility
Measures Cannot Protect Against Prosecutorial Misconduct, 121 YALE L.J. FORUM F. 203, 205
(2011) (“Our findings, based on an investigation into the professional conduct rules and
attorney discipline procedures of all fifty states, suggest that disciplinary systems as they are
currently constituted do a poor job of policing prosecutors.”).
79 See Ronald F. Wright, How Prosecutor Elections Fail Us, 6 OHIO ST. J. CRIM. L. 581, 582
(2009).
80 The election of prosecutors arguably promotes undesirable conduct, such as overly
aggressive prosecutions. See, e.g., Andrew Novak, It’s Too Dangerous to Elect Prosecutors, DAILY
BEAST (Aug. 24, 2015), http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/08/24/it-s-too-dangerous-to-elect-prosecutors.html.

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these are concurrent developments that jointly comprise a shift in public,
judicial, and legislative attitudes toward prosecutorial accountability.
A.
1.

The Rhetorical Shifts

The Idea of Systemic Misconduct

In the Internet era, the NACDL, other criminal defense organizations,
and not-for-profit organizations have published reports online alleging
prosecutorial misconduct and calling for reform.81 In September 2013, a
recently-formed not-for-profit reform group, the Center for Prosecutor Integrity, titled its white paper on the subject, “An Epidemic of Prosecutor Misconduct.”82 The paper quoted academics and practitioners who had called
prosecutorial wrongdoing “rampant,” “pervasive,” “common,” “ingrained,”
and “endemic,” although it provided no independent empirical support for
its claim that prosecutorial misconduct was an epidemic.83 The organization
posted its paper on the Internet and later added an Internet “Registry of
Prosecutorial Misconduct.”84
In an earlier decade, prosecutors and many objective observers would
have dismissed this rhetoric as hyperbolic and partisan. But in December
2013, the same claim was adopted in a dissenting opinion by then-Chief
Judge Kozinski in a federal criminal case, United States v. Olsen.85 A threejudge appellate panel had earlier upheld Olsen’s criminal conviction despite
the trial prosecutor’s suppression of exculpatory information.86 The panel
opinion was written by a visiting district judge, Paul Friedman, who is generally known for the liberality of his views on prosecutorial disclosure.87
The panel concluded that the prosecution did not violate Brady v. Maryland because the withheld evidence was not “material.”88 Dissenting from
81 See, e.g., INNOCENCE PROJECT, PROSECUTORIAL OVERSIGHT, A NATIONAL DIALOGUE IN
WAKE OF CONNICK V. THOMPSON (2016), http://kzqb-2dp8.accessdomain.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/IP-Prosecutorial-Oversight-Report_09.pdf; KATHLEEN RIDOLFI ET
AL., NAT’L ASS’N OF CRIMINAL DEF. LAWYERS, MATERIAL INDIFFERENCE: HOW COURTS ARE
IMPEDING FAIR DISCLOSURE IN CRIMINAL CASES (2014), http://www.nacdl.org/report/
materialindifference/pdf/; RIDOLFI & POSSLEY, supra note 73; NAT’L ASS’N OF CRIMINAL
DEF. LAWYERS, The Human Cost of Brady Violations: The Need for Meaningful Discovery Reform,
https://www.nacdl.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=23715&libID=23684 (last visited Oct. 14, 2016).
82 CTR. FOR PROSECUTOR INTEGRITY, AN EPIDEMIC OF PROSECUTOR MISCONDUCT (2013),
http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/wp-content/uploads/EpidemicofProsecutorMisconduct.pdf.
83 Id. at 4–5.
84 See Registry Database, CTR. FOR PROSECUTOR INTEGRITY, http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/registry/database/ (last visited Oct. 18, 2016).
85 737 F.3d 625 (9th Cir. 2013) (Kozinski, C.J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en
banc).
86 United States v. Olsen, 704 F.3d 1172, 1185 (9th Cir. 2013).
87 See, e.g., United States v. Safavian, 233 F.R.D. 12, 14–17 (D.D.C. 2005) (Friedman, J.)
(discussing the government’s disclosure obligations under Rule 16 and Brady).
88 Olsen, 704 F.3d at 1184–85.
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the full court’s refusal to reconsider the panel’s decision and joined by four
colleagues, Judge Kozinski argued that the evidence might have led the jury
to acquit.89
Having written a significant opinion on prosecutorial misconduct two
decades earlier90 and having recently written the foreword to a book on federal prosecutorial misconduct,91 Judge Kozinski saw the federal prosecutor’s
suppression of evidence as a piece of a bigger picture. He began by asserting
that “[t]here is an epidemic of Brady violations abroad in the land. Only
judges can put a stop to it.”92 After describing the prosecutor’s conduct and
explaining the importance of the suppressed evidence,93 the opinion
returned to its opening theme, ruefully observing:
I wish I could say that the prosecutor’s unprofessionalism here is the
exception, that his propensity for shortcuts and indifference to his ethical
and legal responsibilities is a rare blemish and source of embarrassment to
an otherwise diligent and scrupulous corps of attorneys staffing prosecutors’
offices across the country. But it wouldn’t be true. Brady violations have
reached epidemic proportions in recent years, and the federal and state
reporters bear testament to this unsettling trend.94

The opinion then cited twenty-eight federal and state court decisions issued
between 1998 and 2013 that found that prosecutors in other jurisdictions had
previously violated disclosure obligations.95
Judge Kozinski’s opinion did not carry the day in the Ninth Circuit, but
his disparagement of prosecutors fared better in the court of public opinion.
His pronouncement that prosecutorial discovery abuse is “epidemic” was
endorsed by the Cato Institute’s National Police Misconduct Reporting Project96 and quoted on the blogs of innocence projects97 and others.98 It made
news.99 It caught editorialists’ attention: a New York Times editorial titled
89
90
91

Id. at 626–28 (Kozinski, C.J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc).
See United States v. Kojayan, 8 F.3d 1315 (9th Cir. 1993) (Kozinski, J.).
See SIDNEY POWELL, LICENSED TO LIE: EXPOSING CORRUPTION IN THE DEPARTMENT OF
JUSTICE xi–xvii (2014). Judge Kozinski also recently published an article addressing
prosecutorial conduct, among other criminal justice issues. See Kozinski, supra note 6.
92 Olsen, 737 F.3d at 626 (Kozinski, C.J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc).
93 See id. at 628–30.
94 Id. at 631.
95 Id. (citing cases).
96 See, e.g., Tim Lynch, An ‘Epidemic’ of Prosecutorial Misconduct, CATO INST. (Dec. 12,
2013, 12:08 PM), http://www.policemisconduct.net/epidemic-prosecutorial-misconduct/.
97 See, e.g., Judge Says There’s an Epidemic of Prosecutorial Misconduct, INNOCENCE PROJECT
(Dec. 16, 2013, 5:45 PM), http://www.innocenceproject.org/judge-says-theres-an-epidemic-of-prosecutorial-misconduct/.
98 See, e.g., Carrie Johnson, Lawyers Use High Court Petition To Highlight Prosecutorial Misconduct, NPR: THE TWO-WAY (Apr. 14, 2014, 11:05 AM), http://www.npr.org/blogs/
thetwo-way/2014/04/24/306443521/lawyers-use-high-court-petition-to-highlight-prosecu
torial-misconduct.
99 See, e.g., Radley Balko, Chief Judge for 9th Circuit Cites ‘Epidemic’ of Prosecutor Misconduct, HUFFINGTON POST (Dec. 11, 2013, 1:11 PM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/
12/11/blistering-9th-circuit-di_n_4426802.html.

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Rampant Prosecutorial Misconduct quoted Judge Kozinski, endorsed his claim,
and called on prosecutors to “adopt a standard ‘open file’ policy” to address
the prosecution’s “systemic failure” to comply with disclosure obligations.100
Since then, the idea of an “epidemic” of discovery abuse has continued to
linger in the popular, professional, and judicial consciousness.101
The federal appellate opinion’s gratuitous swipe at prosecutors nationwide102 gave currency to the trope that prosecutors’ wrongdoing was “epidemic,” which entered briefs and other judicial opinions.103 In an earlier
day, Judge Kozinski’s opinion would likely have escaped notice. But by the
end of 2015, a state court justice invoked what she referred to as Judge Kozinski’s “famous[ ]” observation in her own dissenting opinion maintaining that
the prosecution had violated its discovery obligation.104
Most notable about this rhetorical turn is the foundation on which it is
built. The dissent’s claim rested on precisely the same sort of data that has
long given prosecutors comfort that intentional prosecutorial discovery abuse
is aberrational. As Department of Justice officials belatedly noted, Judge
Kozinski cited only a handful of cases from around the country, on average
fewer than two per year over a fifteen-year period, in which convictions had
been reversed for discovery violations.105 That is, of course, out of the tens
of thousands of prosecutions annually.106 And because courts overturn con100 Editorial, Rampant Prosecutorial Misconduct, N.Y. TIMES (Jan. 4, 2014), http://www
.nytimes.com/2014/01/05/opinion/sunday/rampant-prosecutorial-misconduct.html.
101 See, e.g., Andrew Cohen, Obama’s Final 500 Days, MARSHALL PROJECT, (Sept. 3, 2015),
https://www.themarshallproject.org/2015/09/03/obama-s-final-500-days?refHP-3-111
(quoting Cato Institute’s Project on Criminal Justice Director Tim Lynch, referring to
Judge Kozinski’s observation with approval); see also supra notes 99, 100.
102 There was no need to publish an opinion objecting to the denial of en banc review.
Nor was there need to address the frequency of discovery abuse. The question was whether
information withheld by the prosecutor in the particular case was material, and whether en
banc reconsideration was therefore warranted to correct the panel’s mistake. Given the
panel’s unanimous conclusion that there was no Brady violation because the withheld
information was immaterial, the case was not itself symptomatic of the asserted epidemic.
103 See, e.g., United States v. Hack, No. 2:12-cr-00063, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 84273, at
*4–5 (D. Nev. June 20, 2014) (defendant made discovery request based on the Kozinski
quote); see also People v. Alvarez, 176 Cal. Rptr. 3d 890, 905 (Cal. Ct. App. 2014) (quoting
Kozinski with approval).
104 State v. Root, 359 P.3d 1088, 1095 (Mont. 2015) (Cotter, J., dissenting).
105 Letter from Assoc. Deputy Attorney Gen., Andrew D. Goldsmith and U.S. Attorney
John F. Walsh, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, to the Editors of Georgetown Law Journal 2 (Nov. 4,
2015), http://georgetownlawjournal.org/files/2015/11/DOJ-Response-to-Kozinski.pdf.
106 Of course, courts rarely reverse convictions when discovery violations precede guilty
pleas. Since upwards of ninety percent of cases result in guilty pleas, the appropriate
numerical comparison is the number of trial cases with reversals due to discovery violations
and not the total number of cases filed yearly. LINDSEY DEVERS, U.S. DEP’T OF JUSTICE, PLEA
AND CHARGE BARGAINING: RESEARCH SUMMARY 1 (2011) (documenting about ninety to
ninety-five percent of state and federal cases result in guilty pleas). But see, e.g., Buffey v.
Ballard, 782 S.E.2d 204 (W. Va. 2015) (remanding to permit defendant to withdraw guilty
plea because of prosecutorial failure to disclose exculpatory DNA prior to entry of the
guilty plea).

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victions for discovery violations without regard to fault, it was unclear that
Judge Kozinski envisioned the epidemic as one involving exclusively willful
prosecutorial wrongdoing or also sweeping in prosecutors’ negligence and
inadvertence. Nor was it clear that Judge Kozinski was excluding cases where
the blame lay entirely with the police, not the prosecutor. While those who
took up Judge Kozinski’s charge likely assumed that he was targeting an epidemic of intentional prosecutorial discovery abuse, it is uncertain that he
meant to convey that, and evident that, in either case, the asserted “epidemic” was an article of faith, borne of experience. It could not be an empirically established fact because prosecutorial misconduct is often hidden,
leaving Judge Kozinski’s charge open to challenge as hyperbole.
2.

Expanding Concepts of Prosecutorial Misconduct

With the increased public skepticism about prosecutors has come an
expanded concept of prosecutorial misconduct beyond intentional, judicially
remedial violations of law and disciplinary rules.
First, those seeking to hold prosecutors accountable increasingly question the significance of the distinction between prosecutors’ intentional and
negligent wrongdoing. These critics assert that prosecutors must take reasonable measures to comply with legal obligations, and therefore negligent
wrongdoing is also blameworthy.107 In other words, censure should not be
reserved solely for the “bad apples” and “rogue prosecutors.” Further, prosecutors’ offices have duties to train and supervise individual prosecutors to
promote compliance with legal obligations and may be institutionally blameworthy in many cases of negligent legal violations.108 Consequently, critics
increasingly push blame up the ladder in the prosecutors’ office, perceiving
low-level prosecutorial wrongdoing as symptomatic of bad culture, bad leadership, bad compliance systems, or other systemic inadequacies for which
supervisors and chief prosecutors should be held responsible.109
107 See, e.g., Rudin, supra note 55, at 569–70; see also Giglio v. United States, 405 U.S.
150, 154 (1972) (“[W]hether the nondisclosure was a result of negligence or design, it is
the responsibility of the prosecutor. The prosecutor’s office is an entity and as such it is
the spokesman for the Government. . . . To the extent this places a burden on the large
prosecution offices, procedures and regulations can be established to carry that burden
and to insure communication of all relevant information on each case to every lawyer who
deals with it.”).
108 See generally Rachel E. Barkow, Organizational Guidelines for the Prosecutor’s Office, 31
CARDOZO L. REV. 2089 (2010).
109 For example, Alafair Burke has challenged the “language of fault” that dominates
discussion of prosecutorial decisionmaking and suggested the need for an alternative discourse beyond language of “blame” to change culture. See generally Alafair S. Burke, Talking About Prosecutors, 31 CARDOZO L. REV. 2119 (2010); see also Jerry P. Coleman & Jordan
Lockey, Brady “Epidemic” Misdiagnosis: Claims of Prosecutorial Misconduct and the Sanctions to
Deter It, 50 U.S.F. L. REV. 199, 200 (2016) (examining Brady violations in California cases
and arguing that “vigorous ethical training and universal adoption of best practices may
well be the best defense against critics”).

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Second, the public perception is growing that misconduct is not limited
to unlawful conduct. In particular, the public and the media are coming to
understand that prosecutors’ decisions about whom to charge, what plea bargains to offer, or what sentences to pursue may be not simply unwise, but
abusive, reflecting wrongdoing in an ordinary, if not legal, sense.110 A notable example is how the prosecution of Aaron Swartz provoked skepticism
about federal prosecutors’ use of their charging power. Swartz, the brilliant
young computer prodigy and information activist who had surreptitiously
entered MIT’s computers and installed a program to download academic
journals, was charged with fourteen counts for the alleged computer
crimes.111 Unable to withstand the pressure of the prosecution, he committed suicide.112 His family characterized the prosecution as “the product of a
criminal justice system rife with intimidation and prosecutorial overreach.”113 Many scholars, political leaders, and media commentators
agreed.114 Attorney General Holder’s defense of the prosecution before a
congressional committee encountered stinging criticism.115 Prosecutorial
110 See, e.g., Daniel S. Medwed, Emotionally Charged: The Prosecutorial Charging Decision
and the Innocence Revolution, 31 CARDOZO L. REV. 2187 (2010); see also Fred C. Zacharias &
Bruce A. Green, The Duty to Avoid Wrongful Convictions: A Thought Experiment in the Regulation of Prosecutors, 89 B.U. L. REV. 1 (2009).
111 Douglas Galbi, Systemic Injustice of the U.S. Criminal Justice System, PURPLE MOTES (Jan.
20, 2013), http://purplemotes.net/2013/01/20/injustice-criminal-justice-system/.
112 Michael Martinez, Internet Prodigy, Activist Aaron Swartz Commits Suicide, CNN (Mar.
7, 2013), http://www.cnn.com/2013/01/12/us/new-york-reddit-founder-suicide/.
113 Galbi, supra note 111.
114 Zach Carter, Al Franken Sends Eric Holder Letter Over ‘Remarkably Aggressive’ Aaron
Swartz Prosecution, HUFFINGTON POST (Mar. 22, 2013, 3:55 PM), www.huffingtonpost.com/
2013/03/22/al-franken-eric-holder_n_2934627.html; Alex Stamos, The Truth About Aaron
Swartz’s “Crime”, UNHANDLED EXCEPTION (Jan. 12, 2013), http://unhandled.com/2013/01/
12/the-truth-about-aaron-swartzs-crime/ (asserting that Aaron Swartz was “massively overcharge[d],” since his “downloading of journal articles from an unlocked closet [was] not
an offense worth 35 years in jail”); see also Lincoln Caplan, Aaron Swartz and Prosecutorial
Discretion, N.Y. TIMES: TAKING NOTE (Jan. 18, 2013, 10:06 AM), http://takingnote.blogs.ny
times.com/2013/01/18/aaron-swartz-and-prosecutorial-discretion/ (stating that federal
prosecutors “go after defendants tooth and nail, overcharging them from the abundance
of criminal laws with sentences so severe and out of proportion to the crime that, as now
happens in 95 percent of criminal cases, the prudent choice is to cop a plea”); Stephen L.
Carter, The Overzealous Prosecution of Aaron Swartz, BLOOMBERG VIEW (Jan. 17, 2013), http://
www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-01-17/the-overzealous-prosecution-of-aaron-swartz.html;
Lawrence Lessig, Opinion, Prosecutor as Bully, HUFFINGTON POST (Mar. 15, 2015, 10:02
AM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/lawrence-lessig/aaron-swartz-suicide_b_2467079
.html (observing that “the question this government needs to answer is why it was so necessary that Aaron Swartz be labeled a ‘felon.’ For in the 18 months of negotiations, that was
what he was not willing to accept . . . .”).
115 Concerns about abuses of discretion were accompanied by other claims of impropriety, including that the prosecutor “instructed the Secret Service to seize and hold evidence
without a warrant, . . . lied to the judge about that fact in written briefs, . . . [a]nd withheld
exculpatory evidence . . . for over a year . . . .” Mike Masnick, Aaron Swartz’s Partner Accuses
DOJ of Lying, Seizing Evidence Without A Warrant & Withholding Exculpatory Evidence, TECHDIRT

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overreaching, abuse of power, and lack of proportionality became the
buzzwords about the case on the Internet and social media.116
More recently, prosecutors’ failure to obtain grand jury indictments in
cases involving police killings of unarmed civilians in Ferguson, Missouri, and
Staten Island, New York, provoked public pressure to hold the prosecutors
accountable for perceived misconduct.117 The sentiment was that prosecutors abused their investigative and charging discretion by treating the police
officers more leniently than similarly situated low-income people, presumably because of racial bias or sympathy to the police.118 Critics also claim that
in the Ferguson case, prosecutors overseeing the grand jury investigation
introduced false testimony that could have influenced the grand jury not to
issue an indictment.119
B.

The Regulatory Shift

Accompanying the increased public skepticism about prosecutors and
the broadening concept of prosecutorial impropriety has been a movement
to expand judicial, legislative, and disciplinary regulation. While some of this
is aimed at individual wrongdoing, much has been aimed at perceived systemic or institutional problems. While the Department of Justice and many
(Mar. 8, 2013, 11:18 AM), https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20130308/01330322250/
aaron-swartzs-partner-accuses-doj-lying-seizing-evidence-without-warrant-withholding-excul
patory-evidence.shtml.
116 See, e.g., Emily Bazelon, When the Law Is Worse Than the Crime, SLATE (Jan. 14, 2013),
http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technology/2013/01/aaron_swartz_suicide_
prosecutors_have_too_much_power_to_charge_and_intimidate.html; Glen Greenwald,
Carmen Ortiz and Stephen Heymann: Accountability for Prosecutorial Abuse, GUARDIAN (Jan. 16,
2013), http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/jan/16/ortiz-heymann-swartzaccountability-abuse.
117 The Ethics Project filed a complaint with the disciplinary authorities against Ferguson prosecutor Robert McCulloch and two of his deputies relating to their investigation of
the police shooting of Michael Brown. See Nadia Prupis, Ferguson Prosecutor Hit with Ethics
Complaint, COMMON DREAMS (Jan. 6, 2015), http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/
01/06/ferguson-prosecutor-hit-ethics-complaint. The NAACP brought an action against
the disciplinary authority seeking to compel it to bring ethics charges against Staten Island
prosecutor Daniel Donovan based on alleged misconduct in the investigation of the police
killing of Eric Garner. See Josh Saul, NAACP Suit Seeks Probe of Staten Island DA in Eric Garner
Case, N.Y. POST (Mar. 21, 2015) http://nypost.com/2015/03/21/naacp-suit-seeks-probeof-staten-island-da-in-eric-garner-case/.
118 See, e.g., Kate Levine, Who Shouldn’t Prosecute the Police, 101 IOWA L. REV. 1447, 1447
(2016) (arguing that “a structural conflict of interest arises when local prosecutors are
given the discretion and responsibility to investigate and lead cases against the police”);
Mustapha Ndanusa, Punishing Impunity and Judging Discretion: Michael Brown & Eric Garner,
MR. REFINED, http://mrrefined.com/punishing-impunity-judging-discretion-michaelbrown-eric-garner/ (last visited Aug. 24, 2016); see also Affidavit of Professor Bennett L.
Gershman, Missouri ex inf. Simmons v. McCulloch, Civ. No. 15SL-CC00177 (Mo. Ct. App.
2015).
119 See Josh Levs, One Challenge for Ferguson Grand Jury: Some Witnesses’ Credibility, CNN
(Dec. 14, 2014), http://www.cnn.com/2014/12/14/justice/ferguson-witnesses-credibility/

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local prosecutors continue to argue publicly that wrongdoing is rare, some
have, at the same time, sought to implement more effective self-regulatory
measures.
1.

Judicial Skepticism

Judge Kozinski is not alone in criticizing prosecutors. Although many
judges continue to profess confidence in the good faith of prosecutors and
their institutions, many more than in the past are disposed to identify misconduct, to infer that the misconduct was willful, and to blame prosecutors
publicly, including by name.120 For example, a federal judge recently excoriated an experienced Florida prosecutor who handled the prosecution of
more than fifty Colombian defendants for significant drug smuggling.121
After the judge found that the prosecutor intentionally withheld key evidence from the defense, articles labeled her a “serial offender” who has
“problems staying within the bounds of the law.”122
Further, some judges have initiated inquiries into prosecutorial wrongdoing, exploring whether their institutions are partly blameworthy. Most
notably, in 2009, Judge Emmet Sullivan made national headlines when he
observed that in all his years on the bench he had “never seen mishandling
and misconduct like what I have seen” by the Justice Department prosecutors
who tried U.S. Senator Ted Stevens.123 In an earlier time, the trial judge
might have left it to the Department of Justice to decide whether internal
discipline or reform was warranted. Instead, Judge Sullivan appointed members of the private bar, Henry Schuelke III and William Shields, as special
prosecutors to examine the prosecutors’ conduct and recommend whether
the court should initiate contempt proceedings.124
Schuelke and Shields’ comprehensive report concluded that “[t]he
investigation and prosecution of U.S. Senator Ted Stevens were permeated
by the systematic concealment of significant exculpatory evidence which
would have independently corroborated Senator Stevens’s defense and his
testimony, and seriously damaged the testimony and credibility of the govern120 Cf. Gershowitz, supra note 60, at 1086–87 (discussing judges’ reasons for refusing to
shame prosecutors guilty of misconduct). But due to increased pressure for transparency,
in recent police shootings, some prosecutors do not utilize grand juries. Susanne Posel,
Tending: Prosecutors Nixing Grand Juries from Police Shooting Cases, NSNBC INT’L (Mar. 17,
2016), http://nsnbc.me/2016/03/17/tending-prosecutors-nixing-grand-juries-frompolice-shooting-cases/ (discussing Minneapolis prosecutor’s decision against the use of the
grand jury in the Jamar Clark killing and California’s recent law prohibiting the use of the
grand jury in these cases).
121 Clarence Walker, Serial Offender: Miami Fed. Prosecutor Called on Misconduct in Drug
Cases, STOPTHEDRUGWAR.ORG (Aug. 8, 2013, 11:20 AM), http://stopthedrugwar.org/chron
icle/2013/aug/08/serial_offender_miami_fed_prosec.
122 Id.
123 Neil A. Lewis, Tables Turned on Prosecution in Stevens Case, N.Y. TIMES (Apr. 7, 2009),
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/08/us/politics/08stevens.html.
124 Id.

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ment’s key witness.”125 Although Judge Sullivan ultimately settled for referring the prosecutors to the Justice Department’s internal disciplinary
process,126 the exercise marked courts’ increased receptivity to asserting regulatory authority over prosecutors. Another notable example is District
Judge Mark Wolf’s criticism of federal prosecutors for discovery failures, followed by an order to show cause as to why sanctions should not be
imposed.127 Similarly, in October 2015, Judge Raymond Dearie ordered the
federal prosecutor’s office to produce a report to explain the office’s issuance of a subpoena unlawfully directing the witness to keep the subpoena’s
existence confidential.128
In California, in particular, judicial concern has grown regarding
prosecutorial misconduct. A trial judge recently disqualified the entire prosecutor’s office in Orange County, California, in a death penalty case because
of ongoing misconduct involving the use of jailhouse informants, including a
cover up and “‘chronic failure’ to comply with orders to turn over evidence
to the defense . . . at the expense of . . . constitutional and statutory obligations.”129 In other cases, federal courts have targeted state prosecutors’ misconduct and called upon Attorney General Kamala Harris to respond.130
Although discovery abuse has substantially driven the regulatory shift,
judges have scrutinized broader aspects of prosecutors’ conduct, even those
125 Jason Ryan, Sen. Ted Stevens Prosecutors Hid Evidence, Report Concludes, ABC NEWS
(Mar. 16, 2012), http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/03/sen-ted-stevens-prosecutors-hid-evidence-report-concludes/.
126 Id.; Del Quentin Wilber & Sari Horwitz, Prosecutors Concealed Evidence in Ted Stevens
Case, Report Finds, WASH. POST (Mar. 15, 2012), https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/
crime/prosecutors-concealed-evidence-in-ted-stevens-case-report-finds/2012/03/15/gIQA
J5GNFSstory.html.
127 See United States v. Jones, 620 F. Supp. 2d 163 (D. Mass. 2009).
128 James C. McKinley, Jr., Judge Finds Fault With Gag Order in U.S. Attorney’s Subpoena,
N.Y. TIMES (Oct. 8, 2015), http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/09/nyregion/judge-findsfault-with-gag-order-in-us-attorneys-subpoena.html?_r=0.
129 Christopher Goffard, Orange County D.A. Is Removed from Scott Dekraai Murder Trial,
L.A. TIMES (Mar. 12, 2015), http://www.latimes.com/local/orangecounty/la-me-jailhousesnitch-20150313-story.html; see Eve, CA: Judge Removes DA’s Office in Orange County Murder
Case Because Office Will Not Comply with Constitution, OPEN FILE (Mar. 12, 2015), http://www
.prosecutorialaccountability.com/2015/03/12/ca-judge-removes-das-office-in-orange-coun
ty-murder-case-because-office-will-not-comply-with-constitution/.
130 Maura Dolan, U.S. Judges See ‘Epidemic’ of Prosecutorial Misconduct in State, L.A. TIMES
(Jan. 31, 2015), http://www.latimes.com/local/politics/la-me-lying-prosecutors-20150201story.html (Magistrate Judge Patrick J. Walsh stated, “Sadly, this informant’s lies were bolstered by a Deputy District Attorney, who also lied . . . . What is obvious . . . is that the
Riverside County District Attorney’s Office turned a blind eye to fundamental principles of
justice to obtain a conviction.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Dolan’s article discusses Baca v. Adams, 777 F.3d 1035 (9th Cir. 2015), where the court called upon the
California attorney general to respond to charges of prosecutorial misconduct that did not
result in discipline. See Dolan, supra; see also Lara Bazelon, For Shame, SLATE (Apr. 7, 2016),
http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2016/04/alex_kozinski_
and_the_ninth_circuit_s_crusade_against_prosecutorial_misconduct.html (discussing the
Ninth Circuit’s attention to prosecutorial misconduct, notably in Baca v. Adams).

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that are not susceptible to formal judicial oversight. For example, in a recent
article, Judge Jed Rakoff asserted that federal prosecutors’ charging and plea
bargaining practices pressured innocent people to plead guilty.131 He advocated judicial oversight of plea bargaining, which current federal procedure
rules foreclose.132 Elsewhere, in a sweeping critique, Judge Emmet Sullivan
criticized federal prosecutors for offering deferred prosecution agreements
to corporations but not to individuals accused of non-white collar crimes.133
Most recently, West Virginia’s supreme court issued a landmark decision recognizing prosecutors’ constitutional obligation to disclose exculpatory evidence during plea bargaining—a stage when prosecutorial power is relatively
unchecked.134 And, in a groundbreaking sentencing decision, Judge Block
rendered a non-incarceratory sentence over the objection of prosecutors due
to the collateral consequences of conviction.135
2.

Legislative Reform and Other Forms of Political Accountability

The shifting public rhetoric about prosecutorial misconduct has influenced state legislatures to consider amending criminal procedure rules to
impose greater demands or restraints on prosecutors, particularly with
regard to discovery. Even some federal legislators have been receptive, notwithstanding the power of the Department of Justice. In the most notable
instances, high-profile cases of prosecutorial misconduct have spurred legislative movement. The demands for reform presupposed that these cases could
not be dismissed as wholly exceptional, but exemplified deeper, systemic
deficiencies.136 On the state level, the most notable reforms owe much to
131 Jed S. Rakoff, Why Innocent People Plead Guilty, N.Y. REV. BOOKS (Nov. 20, 2014),
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/archives/2014/nov/20/why-innocent-people-pleadguilty.
132 Id. at 8.
133 See Matt Apuzzo, Criminals Should Get Same Leniency as Corporations, Judge Says, N.Y.
TIMES (Oct. 23, 2015), http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/24/us/politics/criminalsshould-get-same-leniency-as-corporations-judge-says.html?smprod=nytcore-iphone&smid=
nytcore-iphone-share. Other recent judicial critiques of exercises of prosecutorial discretion include United States v. HSBC Bank USA, N.A., No. 12-CR-763, 2013 WL 3306161, at *1,
*4–7 (E.D.N.Y. July 1, 2013) (holding that, despite the government’s claim, its deferred
prosecution agreement is subject to judicial oversight), and United States v. Stein, 435 F.
Supp. 2d 330, 362–65, 382 (S.D.N.Y. 2006) (finding that the prosecution denied defendants a fair trial by implementing a corporate prosecution policy that pressured their
employer not to fund their defense).
134 Buffey v. Ballard, 782 S.E.2d 204, 221 (W. Va. 2015) (overturning conviction predicated on guilty plea where prosecutors suppressed favorable DNA test results).
135 United States v. Nesbeth, No. 15-CR-18, 2016 WL 3022073, at *1 (E.D.N.Y. May 24,
2016).
136 In contrast, courts acting in their rulemaking capacity have been reluctant to
advance reform. For example, in November 2015, the Virginia Supreme Court inexplicably rejected changes to pretrial disclosure rules proposed by a broadly representative committee following almost a year of study. See, e.g., Frank Green, Justices Reject
Recommendations on Pretrial Discovery in Criminal Cases, RICHMOND TIMES-DISPATCH (Nov. 26,
2015), http://www.richmond.com/news/article_a7518ce0-3e7c-5696-8cc2-0dda708dd9b1

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the concern about the association between prosecutorial discovery abuse and
the prosecutions and convictions of innocent individuals. Most recently, California adopted legislation making it a felony for prosecutors to intentionally
withhold or alter evidence.137 In North Carolina, legislation providing for
more open discovery followed the unraveling of prosecutor Michael Nifong’s
prosecution of members of the Duke University lacrosse team on sexual
assault charges in 2006.138 Amid extensive national and international news
coverage, the charges were dropped, and the following year, Nifong was
brought up on disciplinary charges.139 He was ultimately disbarred for,
among other things, withholding exculpatory DNA evidence, dishonesty, and
making improper public comments.140 In the wake of this case, North Carolina liberalized its disclosure rules, reducing the extent to which criminal
defendants must rely on prosecutors’ good faith evaluations of the significance of evidence.141 It also created an Innocence Inquiry Commission to
investigate and evaluate post-conviction claims of innocence.142
In Texas, similar reform followed the highly publicized exoneration of
Michael Morton, who spent twenty-five years in prison for killing his wife
before evidence suppressed by the prosecutor led to his exoneration.143 In
an unusual procedure, a Texas court ordered a judicial inquiry into the con.html. Likewise, for over a decade, the federal judiciary has rejected proposals to expand
prosecutorial disclosure under federal procedure rules. See United States v. Jones, 620 F.
Supp. 2d 163, 171–73 (D. Mass. 2009) (discussing proposed amendments).
137 Lorelei Laird, California Makes It a Felony for Prosecutors to Withhold or Alter Exculpatory
Evidence, ABA J. (Oct. 5, 2016), http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/california_
makes_it_a_felony_for_prosecutors_to_withhold_or_alter_exculpato.
138 See Robert P. Mosteller, Exculpatory Evidence, Ethics, and the Road to the Disbarment of
Mike Nifong: The Critical Importance of Full Open-File Discovery, 15 GEO. MASON L. REV. 257, 274
(2008).
139 Lara Setrakian & Chris Francescani, Former Duke Prosecutor Nifong Disbarred, ABC
NEWS (June 16, 2007), http://abcnews.go.com/TheLaw/story?id=3285862&page=1.
140 Duff Wilson, Prosecutor in Duke Case Is Disbarred for Ethics Breaches, N.Y. TIMES (June
16, 2007), http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/16/us/16cnd-nifong.html; see also Mosteller, supra note 138, at 306.
141 See N.C. GEN. STAT. § 15A-903 (2011). The North Carolina statute requires the prosecutor to provide the complete investigative files to the defense before trial, including
investigators’ notes, the required recordation of all oral statements, and any other information obtained during the investigation. Id. § 15A-903(a)(1). A study of the statute’s implementation found that open-file discovery increases the “fairness, finality, and efficiency of
criminal adjudications.” Janet Moore, Democracy and Criminal Discovery Reform After Connick
and Garcetti, 77 BROOK. L. REV. 1329, 1332 (2012).
142 N.C. GEN. STAT. §§ 15A-1460–75 (2008). North Carolina was the first and only state
in the country to establish such an Innocence Inquiry Commission. See About Us, N.C.
INNOCENCE INQUIRY COMM’N, http://www.innocencecommission-nc.gov/about.html (last
visited Oct. 18, 2016). The Commission model was established in England. See generally
Bruce A. Green & Ellen Yaroshefsky, Prosecutorial Discretion and Post-Conviction Evidence of
Innocence, 6 OHIO ST. J. CRIM. L. 467 (2009).
143 Molly Hennessy-Fiske, Inquiry Sought for Texas Prosecutor over Wrongful Conviction, L.A.
TIMES (Dec. 20, 2011), http://articles.latimes.com/2011/dec/20/nation/la-na-texas-prose
cutor-20111220.

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duct of the prosecutor, who by then was a sitting state judge.144 The former
prosecutor was jailed and disbarred after a finding that he had engaged in
serious, willful misconduct.145 In turn, the Texas legislature, without organized opposition or complaint from state and local prosecutors,146 liberalized
state criminal procedure rules governing prosecutors’ disclosure. The
Michael Morton Act significantly expands discovery both pretrial and postconviction.147
Although the federal defense bar has not achieved similar success, members of Congress contemplated discovery reform following the aborted Ted
Stevens prosecution. Senator Murkowski’s bill, drawing significantly on the
work of a coalition of reform groups, proposed broadening both prosecutors’
discovery obligations and the range of judicial sanctions for noncompliance.148 In response, the Department of Justice employed its traditional
rhetoric of minimizing the problem, and avowed that the Department was
capable of handling it internally.149 The bill did not go far, but the very fact
that the Department was called to account in this case, as in the Swartz case,
suggests that even on the federal congressional level, there is some movement to expand external oversight of prosecutors individually and
institutionally.
Although most proposed legislative reform has addressed discovery,
some is farther reaching. Notably, in 2014, New York legislators from both
parties proposed establishing a state Commission on Prosecutorial Conduct,
modeled on the state’s judicial ethics commission, to investigate and sanction
state prosecutors who engage in a broader range of wrongdoing.150 A representative of the prosecution quickly derided the bill, asserting that it was proposed in retaliation for an independent investigation of the state
legislature.151 But proponents of the Commission collected examples of
prosecutorial wrongdoing in New York and nationally to illustrate the need
144 Id.
145 Editorial, A Prosecutor Is Punished, N.Y. TIMES (Nov. 8, 2013), http://www.nytimes
.com/2013/11/09/opinion/a-prosecutor-is-punished.html.
146 See, e.g., Randall Sims, The Dawn of New Discovery Rules, 43 PROSECUTOR, no. 4,
July–Aug. 2013, http://www.tdcaa.com/journal/dawn-new-discovery-rules. Some individual prosecutors did grouse both before and after the law was enacted. See, e.g., Terry
Breen, New Discovery Statute SB 1611, TEX. DIST. & CTY. ATTORNEYS ASS’N (May 23, 2013,
4:32 PM), http://tdcaa.infopop.net/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/157098965/m/7457055016.
147 See Michael Morton Act, S.B. 1611, 2013 Tex. Gen. Laws 106–08 (amending TEX.
CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 39.14 (West 2014)); see also Jeremy Rosenthal, How the Michael
Morton Act Overhauls the Texas Criminal Discovery Process, CRIM. DEF. LAWYER: DWI, DRUG,
THEFT & ASSAULT CHARGES (May 17, 2013), https://roselawtx.wordpress.com/2013/05/.
148 Green, supra note 3, at 641–42.
149 See id. at 655.
150 S.B. 6286A, 237th Reg. Sess. (N.Y. 2014), http://open.nysenate.gov/legislation/
bill/S6286-2013.
151 Letter from Frank A. Sedita, III, President, Dist. Attorneys Ass’n of the State of N.Y.,
to Sen. John Flanagan, N.Y. State Sen. (June 4, 2015), http://www.daasny.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/Senator-Flanagan-Letter-Re-CPC-6-4-15.pdf; Teri Weaver, DA Fitzpatrick: N.Y. Legislature’s Prosecutor Conduct Proposal Retaliation for Moreland Commission,

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for it,152 demonstrators rallied outside a state courthouse in support of the
bill,153 and not-for-profit groups, in addition to representatives of the criminal defense bar, joined in support.154
Political accountability for prosecutorial misconduct has taken other
forms as well. For example, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo’s recent
appointment of the state attorney general to handle cases of police shootings
of civilians responded to public concerns about biases in the exercise of
prosecutorial discretion.155 The elections of District Attorneys Craig Watkins
in Dallas and Ken Thompson in Brooklyn also appeared to respond to complaints about ongoing prosecutorial misconduct. The 2007 Dallas election
focused on the need to change the “conviction-at-all-costs mentality” after
Dallas had thirteen exonerations of defendants who were, in many cases, victims of prosecutorial misconduct.156 The Brooklyn primary election focused
on the alleged professional misconduct of the incumbent’s office, including
its reliance on perjurious police testimony and favoritism to certain portions
of the community.157
3.

Disciplinary Oversight

Perhaps most dramatically, the institutions that play a significant role in
professional regulation—state supreme courts, disciplinary agencies, and the
organized bar—have slowly begun to expand their role in overseeing proseSYRACUSE.COM (May 12, 2014), http://www.syracuse.com/news/index.ssf/2014/05/fitzpatrick_ny_legislatures_prosecutor_conduct_commission_retaliation_for_morela.html.
152 See Bennett Gershman, How to Hold Bad Prosecutors Accountable: The Case for a Commission on Prosecutorial Conduct, DAILY BEAST (Aug. 31, 2015), http://www.thedailybeast.com/
articles/2015/08/31/how-to-hold-bad-prosecutors-accountable-the-case-for-a-commissionon-prosecutorial-conduct.html; Sophie, Proposed Prosecutor Misconduct Commission Has Much
to Offer, OPEN FILE (May 15, 2014), http://www.prosecutorialaccountability.com/proposedprosecutor-conduct-commission-has- much-to-offer.
153 Will Bredderman, Supporters Rally for State Commission on Prosecutorial Conduct Bill,
OBSERVER (June 5, 2015), http://observer.com/2015/06/supporters-rally-for- state-commission-on-prosecutorial-conduct-bill.
154 Gershman, supra note 152. The bill did not become law in the 2016 legislative session. Joel Stashenko, Measure Targeting Misconduct by DAs Fails for a Third Time, N.Y. L.J.
(June 22, 2016), http://www.newyorklawjournal.com/id=1202760601883/Measure-Targeting-Misconduct-by-DAs-Fails-for-Third-Time.
155 N.Y. Exec. Order No. 147 (July 8, 2015), https://www.governor.ny.gov/sites/governor.ny.gov/files/atoms/files/EO147.pdf; see Noah Remnick, Cuomo to Appoint Special Prosecutor for Killings by Police, N.Y. TIMES (July 7, 2015), http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/08/
nyregion/cuomo-to-appoint-special-prosecutor-for-killings-by-police.html?_r=0.
156 Ralph Blumenthal, For Dallas, New Prosecutor Means an End to the Old Ways, N.Y. TIMES
(June 3, 2007), http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/03/us/03dallas.html?_r=0.
157 Vivian Yee, Thompson Defeats Hynes, Again, for Brooklyn District Attorney, N.Y. TIMES
(Nov. 5, 2013), http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/06/nyregion/thompson-claims-victoryover-hynes-again-for-brooklyn-district-attorney.html (“[Hynes was criticized for the] Police
Department’s stop-and-frisk tactics, that affected young minorities. Mr. Hynes was also
dogged by negative publicity surrounding his political ties to ultra-Orthodox Jewish leaders, and by possible wrongful murder convictions during his tenure.”).

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cutors. The disciplinary regulatory shift has taken two forms—first, the
expansion of jurisdiction over prosecutorial conduct through the adoption
of new rules and the interpretations of existing rules, and second, the
increase in disciplinary scrutiny of prosecutors’ conduct.
When the ABA last undertook a comprehensive review of its Model Rules
of Professional Conduct, its drafters proposed no changes to Rule 3.8, the rule
on prosecutorial conduct, fearing opposition from prosecutors, and especially the Department of Justice.158 But the ABA has grown less timid in
recent years, beginning in 2009 when, in the wake of the burgeoning innocence movement, it added provisions (g) and (h) to address prosecutors’
post-conviction responsibilities when they discover new exculpatory information. Rules 3.8(g) and (h) require prosecutors to investigate new exculpatory
evidence that is material and credible and to attempt to seek a remedy when
the new evidence convincingly establishes the defendant’s innocence.159
More than a dozen state courts have adopted versions of these provisions and
others are considering whether to do so.160
The various discussions surrounding the amendment of the Model Rule
and its state adoptions illustrate another feature of Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0. Prosecutors’ traditional reaction to proposed restrictions on their
professional conduct has been to push back, and many have done so in
response to the proposed post-conviction measures. But importantly, many
prosecutors supported the basic concept as consistent with their duty to seek
justice, took part in fashioning the ABA rule or a state counterpart, and ultimately supported its adoption. In the ABA, only the Department of Justice,
not state prosecutors’ offices, was essentially unsupportive.161 In Tennessee
and Wisconsin, institutional representatives of state prosecutors affirmatively
endorsed the courts’ adoption of state versions of the new provisions.162
One can only speculate whether this reflects a revised prosecutorial view of
the import of ethics rules, whether it reflects that some prosecutors regard it
as politically expedient—in the current political atmosphere—to attempt to
shape proposed reforms rather than oppose them outright, whether prosecu158 See generally Bruce A. Green, Prosecution Ethics as Usual, U. ILL. L. REV. 1573 (2003);
Niki Kuckes, The State of Rule 3.8: Prosecution Ethics Reform Since Ethics 2000, 22 GEO. J. LEGAL
ETHICS 427 (2009).
159 MODEL RULES OF PROF’L CONDUCT r. 3.8(g)–(h) (AM. BAR. ASS’N 2013) (“When a
prosecutor knows of new, credible and material evidence creating a reasonable likelihood
that a convicted defendant did not commit an offense of which the defendant was convicted,” the prosecutor has an obligation to follow up to disclose the evidence and to investigate, and if the prosecutor knows by clear and convincing evidence that the defendant
did not commit the offense, the prosecutor shall seek to remedy it.).
160 So far, at least fourteen states have adopted Rules 3.8(g) and (h) either verbatim or
with modification. ABA CPR POLICY IMPLEMENTATION COMM., VARIATIONS OF THE MODEL
RULES OF PROF’L CONDUCT (Aug. 15, 2016), http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/
aba/administrative/professional_responsibility/mrpc_3_8_g_h.authcheckdam.pdf.
161 Green, supra note 4, at 889–93 (discussing history of provisions).
162 Id.

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tors regard a more conciliatory image as useful in response to portrayals of
prosecutorial overreaching, or whether the approach has other explanations.
At around the same time, bar association ethics committees began to
focus renewed attention on how existing rules applied to prosecutors.163 Following notable cases in which prosecutors suppressed exculpatory evidence,
the ABA issued Formal Opinion 09-454, which reminded the profession that
almost every state court had adopted a disciplinary rule, based on Model
Rule 3.8(d), that, its plain language made clear, augmented prosecutors’
constitutional disclosure obligations by requiring broader and earlier disclosure of information helpful to the defense.164 The opinion has proven controversial, as some federal and state prosecutors have challenged the ABA’s
interpretation, sometimes successfully.165
163 The ABA House of Delegates passed a series of resolutions to clarify disclosure obligations, see ABA, Resolution 102D Adopted by the House of Delegates (Feb. 8–9, 2010),
http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/migrated/leadership/2010/midyear/
daily_jourmal/102D.authcheckdam.pdf, to improve the discovery process by suggesting
the use of checklists, see ABA, Resolution 104A Adopted by the House of Delegates (Feb.
14, 2011), http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/migrated/2011_build/house_
of_delegates/104a_2011_my.authcheckdam.pdf, and to clearly identify prosecutorial misconduct as distinct from prosecutorial error, see ABA, Resolution 100B Adopted by the
House of Delegates (Aug. 9–10, 2010), http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/
migrated/leadership/2010/annual/pdfs/100b.authcheckdam.pdf.
164 ABA Comm. on Ethics & Prof’l Responsibility, Formal Op. 09-454 (2009) [hereinafter Formal Op. 09-454], http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/events/profes
sional_responsibility/2015/May/Conference/Materials/aba_formal_opnion_09_454.auth
checkdam.pdf. Model Rule 3.8(d) requires a prosecutor to “make timely disclosure to the
defense of all evidence or information known to the prosecutor that tends to negate the
guilt of the accused or mitigates the offense, and, in connection with sentencing, disclose
to the defense and to the tribunal all unprivileged mitigating information known to the
prosecutor . . . .” MODEL RULES OF PROF’L CONDUCT r. 3.8(d). In the opinion, the committee concluded that Rule 3.8(d) requires disclosure of favorable evidence and information
without regard to its materiality, unlike the constitutional standard on appellate review.
Formal Op. 09-454, supra, at 2. The committee also concluded that Rule 3.8(d) has no “de
minimis” exception that would excuse disclosure of favorable evidence or information if a
prosecutor believes the material would have only a minimal tendency to negate the defendant’s guilt or that the information is unreliable. Id. at 5. Instead, prosecutors should
“give the defense the opportunity to decide whether the evidence can be put to effective
use.” Id. The opinion also addressed the timing of disclosure, stating that disclosure must
be made early enough so that defense counsel may use the evidence and information effectively. Id. at 6.
165 Compare Disciplinary Counsel v. Kellogg-Martin, 923 N.E.2d 125 (Ohio 2010) (holding that materiality is required under disciplinary rule) and State ex rel. Okla. Bar Ass’n v.
Ward, 353 P.3d 509 (Okla. 2015) (same), with In re Kline, 113 A.3d 202 (D.C. 2015) (adopting ABA interpretation), In re Disciplinary Action Against Feland, 820 N.W.2d 672 (N.D.
2012) (same), and In re Larsen, No. 20140535, 2016 WL 3369545 (Utah 2016) (same).
Some former prosecutors and senior Department of Justice officials, including former
Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey, have agreed that there is an ethical or professional
obligation of disclosure that goes farther than the constitutional obligation. See Brief of
Amici Curiae Former Federal Prosecutors & Former Senior Justice Department & Government Officials Michael B. Mukasey et al. in Support of Petitioner, United States v.

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Five years later, the ABA’s ethics committee issued another opinion on
prosecutors, this time calling attention to the managerial and supervisory
responsibility of prosecutors’ offices to ensure that the lawyers and non-lawyers in their offices conform to the professional conduct rules.166 The opinion discussed the responsibility of prosecutors with managerial authority to
adopt reasonable policies and procedures to ensure that lawyers and nonlawyers in the office comply with the disciplinary rules. It specifically cited
examples of prosecutorial misconduct in New Orleans and Oklahoma to justify examining the obligations of managerial and supervising prosecutors and
then noted that:
[T]he frequency of prosecutorial misconduct nationwide documented by,
inter alia, opinions in criminal cases and disciplinary proceedings reported
in the last fifteen years, also underscores this need. These decisions reveal
numerous violations of Brady in criminal cases . . . and show other examples
of misconduct, e.g., prosecutors using false evidence or failing to correct
false statements to the court; prosecutors engaging in other improper courtroom conduct; and prosecutors engaging in conduct that would violate
[other rules].167

State bar ethics committees have also targeted prosecutorial conduct.
Most notably, a Kentucky bar committee joined various other ethics committees in concluding that it is ethically improper for prosecutors to make it a
condition of a plea bargain that the defendant waive future ineffective assistance of counsel claims.168 The committee’s opinion reasoned that doing so
is prejudicial to the administration of justice, because a defense lawyer cannot give disinterested advice to the defendant regarding whether to accept
the plea offer.169 The Department of Justice secured judicial review of the
bar opinion, but when the Kentucky Supreme Court confirmed the opin-

Georgiou, 773 F.3d 125 (3d Cir. 2015), cert. denied, 136 S. Ct. 401 (2015) (No. 14-1535); see
also Brief of the ABA as Amicus Curiae in Support of Petitioner at 1, Smith v. Cain, 132 S.
Ct. 627 (2012) (No. 10-8145) (arguing that the Court should distinguish between prosecutor’s Brady obligation and its broader pretrial ethical obligation).
166 See ABA Comm. on Ethics & Prof’l Responsibility, Formal Op. 467, at 9–10 (2014),
http://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/administrative/professional_responsibili
ty/aba_formal_opinion_467.authcheckdam.pdf. The opinion suggested that when courts
criticize the conduct of a lawyer or non-lawyer in the prosecution office, supervising prosecutors should conduct trainings to prevent recurrences.
167 Id. at 7 (footnotes omitted).
168 KY. BAR ASS’N, Ethics Op. KBA E-435 (2012) [hereinafter Ethics Op. KBA E-435],
https://c.ymcdn.com/sites/www.kybar.org/resource/resmgr/Ethics_Opinions_(Part_2)
_/kba_e-435.pdf (citing opinions of various states and the NACDL). In 2014, the ABA
adopted a resolution opposing the prosecutorial practice of requiring waivers of ineffective
assistance of counsel as a condition of entering into a guilty plea agreement. ABA, Resolution 113E Adopted as Revised by the House of Delegates (2014), http://www.americanbar
.org/content/dam/aba/images/news/PDF/113E.pdf.
169 Ethics Op. KBA E-435, supra note 168.

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ion,170 the Department decided to stop seeking ineffective assistance of
counsel waivers.171
Just as significant, disciplinary enforcement has begun to expand in at
least some jurisdictions in recent years.172 Highly publicized examples
include Michael Nifong’s disbarment in connection with the Duke Lacrosse
case173 and the disbarment and jailing of Judge Ken Anderson in the
Michael Morton case.174 Other notable examples similarly involved prosecutors’ alleged suppression of evidence: disciplinary proceedings were instituted against federal prosecutors Andrew Kline in Washington, D.C.,175 and
Jeffrey Auerhahn in Boston,176 both for alleged discovery violations. Former
Texas prosecutor Charles Sebesta, Jr. was disbarred for suppressing exculpatory evidence and offering false testimony in a capital case of an innocent
man, Charles Graves.177 Other disciplinary cases against prosecutors have
involved abuses of the criminal process, including those leading to the disbarment of the elected Maricopa County prosecutor and two of his deputies,178 to the disbarment of the Kansas attorney general,179 to the
suspension of the Pennsylvania attorney general180 and to the suspension of
the Delaware deputy attorney general.181
170 United States ex rel. U.S. Attorneys for the E. & W. Dists. of Ky. v. Ky. Bar Ass’n, 439
S.W.3d 136, 157–58 (Ky. 2014).
171 Memorandum from James M. Cole, Deputy Attorney Gen., U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
Department Policy on Waivers of Claims of Ineffective Assistance of Counsel (Oct. 14,
2014), http://pdfserver.amlaw.com/nlj/DOJ_Ineffective_Assistance_Counsel.pdf.
172 See generally Bruce A. Green & Samuel J. Levine, Disciplinary Regulation of Prosecutors
as a Remedy for Abuses of Prosecutorial Discretion: A Descriptive and Normative Analysis, 14 OHIO
ST. J. CRIM. L. (forthcoming 2016).
173 See supra notes 138–40 and accompanying text.
174 Ken Anderson, a former prosecutor and sitting state judge in Texas, was jailed after
a Court of Inquiry found that he engaged in serious acts of misconduct by intentionally
withholding key evidence in prosecuting Michael Morton for the murder of his wife in
their home. Morton was innocent but spent twenty-five years in prison. His case was highlighted on CBS’s 60 Minutes. 60 Minutes: Evidence of Innocence: The Case of Michael Morton,
CBS NEWS (June 23, 2015), http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/evidence-of-innocence-thecase-of-michael-morton/.
175 In re Kline, 113 A.3d 202 (D.C. 2015).
176 In re Auerhahn, 724 F.3d 103 (1st Cir. 2013).
177 See Martha Neil, Ex-Prosecutor Is Disbarred for His Role in Capital Murder Conviction of
Innocent Man, A.B.A. J. (June 12, 2015), http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/ex_pros
ecutor_disbarred_for_his_role_in_capital_murder_conviction_of_innoce.
178 In re Members of the State Bar of Ariz. v. Thomas, No. PDJ-2011-9002 (Ariz. Apr. 10,
2012), http://archive.azcentral.com/ic/news/0410Thomas-Aubuchon.pdf.
179 In re Kline, 311 P.3d 321 (Kan. 2013).
180 See Office of Disciplinary Counsel v. Kane, No. C3-15-558, 2202 Disciplinary Docket
No. 3 (Pa. Sept. 21, 2015) (per curiam), http://www.pacourts.us/assets/opinions/Sup
reme/out/2202DD3%20-%201023669815398023.pdf?cb=1&cb=53210; Petition for Emergency Temp. Suspension, Office of Disciplinary Counsel v. Kane, No.C3-15-558, 2202 Disciplinary Docket. No. 3, (Pa. Aug. 25, 2015), http://www.pacourts.us/assets/files/setting4359/file-4699.pdf?cb=5263db.
181 In re Favata, 119 A.3d 1283 (Del. 2015) (per curiam).

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Furthermore, the Indiana Supreme Court’s reprimand of a prosecutor
for “surrendering her prosecutorial discretion in plea negotiations entirely to
the pecuniary demands of the victim”182 reflected a court’s willingness to
oversee an area, the exercise of plea bargaining discretion, which was traditionally off limits to judicial oversight.
In at least one state, some attention was given to reforming the disciplinary process to better address prosecutorial misconduct. A judicial commission in New York specifically acknowledged concerns about redressing
prosecutorial abuse and reviewed proposals to encourage judicial reporting
of prosecutorial misconduct, compile data about complaints against prosecutors, and better publicize decisions regarding prosecutorial conduct.183
4.

Prosecutorial Self-Regulation

In recent years, the U.S. Department of Justice has responded to regulatory reform efforts through the exercise of self-restraint in various areas. To
blunt reform efforts following the Ted Stevens case, the Department revised
internal policy on discovery and appointed an official responsible for training and self-regulation specifically with respect to this subject.184 Additionally, when bar associations and allied organizations challenged federal
prosecutors’ practice of pressuring corporations to disclose attorney-client
privileged information to obtain prosecutorial leniency in cases of corporate
wrongdoing and legislators contemplated curtailing prosecutorial authority,
the Department responded by revising its policy to restrict the practice.185
Most recently, as noted, the Department responded to an adverse state court
182 In re Flatt-Moore, 959 N.E.2d 241, 242 (Ind. 2012) (per curiam).
183 The Commission was established in response to various perceived deficiencies in
the state disciplinary process. See Debra Cassens Weiss, Lawyer Ethics Violations in New York
Are Punished Too Slowly and Inconsistently Handled, Study Finds, A.B.A. J. (Apr. 17, 2014),
http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/lawyer_ethics_violations_in_new_york_are_pun
ished_too_slowly_and_inconsiste/.
184 In 2010, the Department issued the “Ogden Memorandum,” providing guidance for
prosecutors on criminal discovery. See Memorandum from David W. Ogden, Deputy Attorney Gen., U.S. Dep’t of Justice, to Dep’t Prosecutors, Guidance for Prosecutors Regarding
Criminal Discovery (Jan. 4, 2010), http://www.justice.gov/dag/memorandum-departmentprosecutors. About the same time, Attorney General Holder appointed a National Criminal Discovery Coordinator to oversee training initiatives and resources relating to criminal
discovery. See Press Release, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Andrew Goldsmith Appointed as
National Coordinator of Criminal Discovery Initiatives (Jan. 15, 2010), https://www.justice
.gov/opa/pr/andrew-goldsmith-appointed-national-coordinator-criminal-discovery-initia
tives.
185 Compare Memorandum from Paul J. McNulty, Deputy U.S. Attorney, U.S. Dep’t of
Justice, to Heads of Dep’t Components, U.S. Attorneys, Principles of Federal Prosecution
of Business Organizations 8–11 (Dec. 2006), http://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/
dag/legacy/2007/07/05/mcnulty_memo.pdf, with Memorandum from Mark Filip, Deputy
U.S. Attorney, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, to Heads of Dep’t Components, U.S. Attorneys, Principles of Federal Prosecution of Business Organizations 8–9 (Aug. 28, 2008), http://www
.justice.gov/sites/default/files/dag/legacy/2008/11/03/dag-memo-08282008.pdf. See generally Julie R. O’Sullivan, Does DOJ’s Privilege Waiver Policy Threaten the Rationales Underlying

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opinion by resolving not to seek ineffective assistance of counsel waivers anywhere in the country.186
State and local prosecutors similarly have responded to regulatory pressures by adopting self-restraint,187 or even by accepting or supporting external restraint.188 Some state prosecutors’ offices have adopted best practices
manuals and enhanced discovery training.189 It appears that some are
acknowledging the need to strengthen internal discipline.190
Perhaps the most significant internal prosecutorial reform at the state
level, responding in part to the shifting attitudes toward prosecutorial
accountability, is the advent of conviction integrity units (CIUs) and the
direction of their efforts at preventing, not merely correcting, wrongful convictions.191 The first unit, established in Dallas, Texas, by District Attorney
Craig Watkins, was a highly publicized success story.192 As of March 2015,
eighteen jurisdictions had followed suit.193 At least in Manhattan, the CIU is
not limited to reviewing past convictions but also examines causes of, and
the Attorney-Client Privilege and Work Product Doctrine? A Preliminary “No”, 45 AM. CRIM. L. REV.
1237 (2008).
186 See supra note 171 and accompanying text. Previously, in response to proposed disciplinary restrictions, the Department voluntarily restricted federal prosecutors’ issuance of
federal grand jury subpoenas to attorneys. See Rory K. Little, Who Should Regulate the Ethics
of Federal Prosecutors?, 65 FORDHAM L. REV. 355, 361 (1996).
187 Some have adopted voluntary open-file discovery policies. See Daniel S. Medwed,
The Prosecutor as Minister of Justice: Preaching to the Unconverted from the Post-Conviction Pulpit,
84 WASH. L. REV. 35, 45–51 (2009) (discussing voluntary open-file discovery).
188 Texas prosecutors did not vigorously oppose the Michael Morton Act. See supra
note 147. And some prosecutors affirmatively supported the adoption of state disciplinary
provisions based on Model Rules 3.8(g) and (h). See supra note 162 and accompanying
text.
189 See, e.g., DIST. ATTORNEY’S ASS’N OF THE STATE OF N.Y., “THE RIGHT THING”: ETHICAL
GUIDELINES FOR PROSECUTORS (2016), http://www.daasny.com/wp-content/uploads/
2016/02/2016-Ethics-Handbook.pdf.
190 Id. at 6–7 (outlining possible consequences of misconduct, which include censure,
being fired, being formally reprimanded, demoted, criminally prosecuted, or civilly sued
for damages); see supra note 78.
191 See JOHN HOLLWAY, QUATTRONE CTR. FOR FAIR ADMIN. OF JUSTICE, CONVICTION
REVIEW UNITS: A NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE (2016), https://www.law.upenn.edu/live/files/
5522-cru-final; Denis Hamill, Brooklyn Reviews Possible Wrong Convictions, N.Y. DAILY NEWS
(Mar. 25, 2013), http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/hamill-b-klyn-reviews-wrong-convictions-article-1.1298934.
192 See generally Mike Ware, Dallas County Conviction Integrity Unit and the Importance of
Getting It Right the First Time, 56 N.Y. L. SCH. L. REV. 1033 (2011); Molly Hennessy-Fiske,
Dallas County District Attorney a Hero to the Wrongfully Convicted, L.A. TIMES (May 8, 2012),
http://articles.latimes.com/2012/may/08/nation/la-na-dallas-district-attorney-20120509;
Conviction Integrity Unit Reviews Possible Wrongful Convictions, INNOCENCE PROJECT (Mar. 26,
2013), http://www.innocenceproject.org/news-events-exonerations/conviction-integrityunit-reviews-possible-wrongful-convictions.
193 CTR. FOR PROSECUTOR INTEGRITY, CONVICTION INTEGRITY UNITS: VANGUARD OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM 2 (2014), http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/wp- content/uploads/
2014/12/Conviction-Integrity-Units.pdf (finding sixteen as of 2014); HOLLWAY, supra note
191; Phil Locke, Conviction Integrity Units—A Skeptic’s Perspective, WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS

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remedies for, wrongful convictions.194 Others have the similar potential to
develop robust practices and procedures to prevent wrongful convictions.195
The effectiveness of CIUs is still an open question, but in establishing them,
and particularly in assigning them to develop internal procedures to make
prosecutions more reliable, prosecutors implicitly acknowledge the need to
address aspects of prosecutorial conduct systemically.
III. FIVE SOCIAL CONDITIONS, AND ONE CATALYTIC MEDIUM,
PROSECUTORIAL ACCOUNTABILITY

FOR THE

NEW

There is probably no single reason why public and judicial attitudes
toward prosecutors’ conduct are evolving. But we suggest that five interrelated social conditions help account for the changes, sparked by a catalyst:
information technology. The first Section in this Part discusses the relevant
social conditions and their relative importance, while the following Section
describes the significance of information technology as the medium that
broadened public understanding and facilitated a reform movement
directed at prosecutorial accountability.
A.

Five Conditions for the Evolution of Prosecutorial Accountability

The persistence of prosecutorial misconduct is a sine qua non for the new
prosecutorial accountability, but we do not agree with those who posit that
there is greater public and judicial concern because there is more
prosecutorial wrongdoing. We identify four additional sets of conditions that
help explain the rhetorical and regulatory shifts: the broader public awakening to injustices in the criminal justice system; understandings, in particular,
regarding wrongful convictions, including the responsibility of prosecutors’
conduct; expanded academic attention to prosecutors’ conduct, drawing particularly on social science insights into systemic deficiencies; and, most
importantly, a burgeoning criminal justice reform movement that has
included prosecutorial misconduct on its agenda.
1.

Prosecutorial Misconduct and Its Perceived Increase

The most fundamental condition for the evolution of prosecutorial
accountability is the persistence of prosecutorial misconduct—actual and
perceived. Without misconduct, there would be no need for prosecutorial
accountability. And at least occasional misconduct is inevitable, no matter
BLOG (Mar. 4, 2015, 11:25 AM), http://wrongfulconvictionsblog.org/2015/03/04/a-skeptics-perspective-on-conviction- integrity-units/ (noting units across the country).
194 See Manhattan District Attorney Hails Conviction Integrity Unit, INNOCENCE PROJECT
(June 22, 2012), http://www.innocenceproject.org/news-events-exonerations/manhattandistrict-attorney- hails-conviction-integrity-unit.
195 See generally HOLLWAY, supra note 191 (identifying essential characteristics of effective conviction integrity units); Barry Scheck, Professional and Conviction Integrity Programs:
Why We Need Them, Why They Will Work, and Models for Creating Them, 31 CARDOZO L. REV.
2215 (2010).

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how narrowly the concept is defined, because prosecutors are human and
imperfect. While one might wish that all prosecutors had impeccable character, the selection process is imperfect and character is variable. Plus, if one
defines misconduct broadly, it will occur even among those prosecutors with
renowned integrity.
Some scholars and commentators might speculate that there is now
more discussion of prosecutorial misconduct simply because there is more
misconduct. Bennett Gershman, for one, attributed “[t]he increasing incidence of misconduct by prosecutors . . . to the post-9/11 legal and political
culture of fear, secrecy and repression in which the power of law enforcement, especially of prosecutors, has become much more dominant and
aggressive.”196
For several reasons, we join those who doubt that prosecutorial misconduct is on the rise.197 First, even before 2001, some argued that
prosecutorial misconduct was pervasive and that misconduct that came to
light was the tip of the iceberg.198 We see no evidence that misconduct was
less frequent then. Second, the cultures of individual prosecutors’ offices, of
which there are many, are slow and difficult to change and so it seems
unlikely that there was a sea change in prosecutorial cultures on the local,
state, and federal levels following the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.
Third, it appears that, insofar as some prosecutors have made conscious
efforts to change office cultures, the contemporary movement has been
toward promoting greater compliance with professional and legal
standards.199
It may be true that prosecutors’ aggressive conduct or perceived aggressiveness has increased since the early 1990s as a consequence of changes in
criminal law, procedure, policy, and practice, such as the targeting of drug
crimes and terrorism, the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, pretrial asset forfeitures, grand jury subpoenas to attorneys, or the Anti-Terrorism Effective
Death Penalty Act (AEDPA).200 Nevertheless, there is little data to suggest
that there has been increasing prosecutorial misconduct because of these or
196

Bennett L. Gershman, New Commission to Regulate Prosecutorial Misconduct, HUFPOST: THE BLOG (May 20, 2014, 12:09 PM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bennett-l-gershman/new-commission-to-prosecutorial- misconduct_b_5353570.html.
197 See, e.g., Michael Volkov, Is Prosecutorial Misconduct on the Rise?, CORP. COMPLIANCE
INSIGHTS (Aug. 17, 2012), http://corporatecomplianceinsights.com/is- prosecutorial-misconduct-on-the-rise.
198 See supra notes 32–35 and accompanying text (discussing the likely extent of
prosecutorial misconduct, before 2001 and beyond).
199 See generally Patrick J. Fitzgerald, Thoughts on the Ethical Culture of a Prosecutor’s Office,
84 WASH. L. REV. 11 (2009) (discussing various internal methods, such as careful hiring
and proper supervision, to ensure ethical compliance within a prosecutor’s office).
Whether such compliance programs are effective depends on a range of factors including
leadership and office culture. Ellen Yaroshefsky & Bruce A. Green, Prosecutors’ Ethics in
Context: Influences on Prosecutorial Disclosure, in LAWYERS IN PRACTICE: ETHICAL DECISION MAKING IN PRACTICE 269 (Leslie C. Levin & Lynn Mather eds., 2012).
200 See, e.g., Editorial, supra note 100.

FINGTON

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other laws and practices.201 More likely, as others have noted with regard to
police shootings,202 it is not that there are more instances of prosecutorial
misconduct; it is that there is more media coverage of it.
Finally, even if prosecutorial misconduct were on the rise, this alone
would not account for the increasing public and judicial concern. Although
some of the concern is directed at the prevalence of misconduct—as in the
depiction of an “epidemic” of discovery violations—much is directed more
broadly at the exercise of discretion in prosecution. In the grand jury investigations of police killings in Ferguson and Staten Island, the prosecution was
criticized because prosecutors treated law enforcement suspects differently
than other citizens.203 These cases were not troubling because they were representative of how prosecutors behave, but just the opposite: they were portrayed as departures from how prosecutors ordinarily decide whether to
initiate charges.204 Thus, public scrutiny reflects a broader conception of
prosecutorial misconduct.
2.

The Great Criminal Justice Awakening

The shifting public and judicial perceptions of prosecutors’ conduct and
the changes in prosecutorial regulation are taking place against the background of, and as part of, a broader public disenchantment with the criminal
process. The public awakening crosses the political spectrum.205
Perhaps in part because of decreasing crime rates, there is less preoccupation with fighting wars on crime and greater interest in how crime is
201 Data about misconduct is notoriously difficult to obtain because most prosecutorial
action is hidden from public view. See id. (“Brady violations are, by their nature, hard to
detect . . . .” (emphasis added)).
202 See Kimberly Kindy & Kimbriell Kelly, Thousands Dead, Few Prosecuted, WASH. POST
(Apr. 11, 2015), http://www.washingtonpost.com/sf/investigative/2015/04/11/thous
ands-dead-few-prosecuted/ (discussing thousands killed by police since 2005); Eliott C.
McLaughlin, There Aren’t More Police Shootings, Just More Coverage, CNN (Apr. 21, 2015),
http://www.cnn.com/2015/04/20/us/police-brutality-video- social-media-attitudes/.
203 See supra note 117 and accompanying text.
204 In the Aaron Swartz case, in contrast, the prosecution was publicly criticized for its
harsh charging and plea bargaining decisions. See supra notes 111–15 and accompanying
text. More broadly, the perceived disparity between how prosecutors charge white-collar
defendants as compared with those accused of street crimes has drawn criticism, most notably from Judge Emmet Sullivan. See supra note 133 (citing opinion critical of prosecution).
205 In the past five years, there has been a dramatic and bipartisan explosion of concern
about deeper and fundamental problems in the criminal justice system. The Heritage
Foundation, Charles Koch, and other political conservatives have joined forces with liberal
organizations like the NACDL to pressure Congress to reduce over-criminalization as a
result of prosecutorial overcharging. See, e.g., BRIAN W. WALSH & TIFFANY M. JOSLYN, HERITAGE FOUND. & NAT’L ASS’N OF CRIMINAL DEF. LAWYERS, WITHOUT INTENT: HOW CONGRESS
IS ERODING THE CRIMINAL INTENT REQUIREMENT IN FEDERAL LAW, at vi–vii (2010); Charles G.
Koch & Mark V. Holden, Opinion, The Overcriminalization of America, POLITICO (Jan. 7,
2015), http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/01/overcriminalization-of-ameri
ca-113991.

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fought.206 Particularly in the last five years, public opinion has changed dramatically as a result of an understanding of fault lines in the criminal justice
system, including racial disparities in policing,207 police violence,208 overcriminalization,209 the reduction of judicial sentencing discretion,210 collat206 In 2015, there was pushback from those who blamed a slight increase in homicides
and other violent crimes on police reluctance to use force even where legally justified. See,
e.g., Editorial, Political Lies About Police Brutality, N.Y. TIMES (Oct. 27, 2015), http://www
.nytimes.com/2015/10/27/opinion/political-lies-about-police-brutality.html; Michael S.
Schmidt & Matt Apuzzo, F.B.I. Chief Links Scrutiny of Police with Rise in Violent Crime, N.Y.
TIMES (Oct. 23, 2015), http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/24/us/politics/fbi-chief-linksscrutiny-of-police-with-rise-in-violent-crime.html. There has been increased pushback in
2016 as a result of data demonstrating a rise in homicide rates in numerous cities in the
United States, see Eric Lichtbau & Monica Davey, Homicide Rates Jump in Many U.S. Cities,
Data Shows, N.Y. TIMES (May 13, 2016), http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/14/us/murderrates-cities-fbi.html?_r=0, and in response to Donald Trump’s presidential campaign
emphasizing “law-and-order,” David Dagin et al., Donald Trump’s Law-and-Order Approach
Won’t Make Us Safer, WASH. POST (Sept. 19, 2016), https://www.washingtonpost.com/post
everything/wp/2016/09/19/donald-trumps-law-and-order-approach-wont-make-us-safer/
?utm_term=.
207 E.g., Floyd v. City of New York, 959 F. Supp. 2d 540 (S.D.N.Y. 2013) (illustrating that
in New York, stop-and-frisk police practices, often in the headlines, resulted in litigation);
see also Daniels v. City of New York, No. 03 Civ. 0809, 2003 WL 22510379 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 5,
2003) (predecessor case to Floyd); Melissa Healy, Blacks Are More Likely to Be Killed by Police,
but That’s Because They Are More Likely to Be Stopped, Study Says, L.A. TIMES (July 25, 2016),
http://www.latimes.com/science/sciencenow/la-sci-sn-cops-race-injury-20160725-snapstory.html.
208 Rodney King’s beating by Los Angeles police was the precursor to the era of cell
phones capturing police action. See, e.g., Cydney Adams, March 3, 1991: Rodney King Beating Caught on Video, CBS NEWS (Mar. 3, 2016), http://www.cbsnews.com/news/march-3rd1991-rodney-king-lapd-beating-caught-on-video/. Today, cell phones and the increased
availability of surveillance in multiple locations have been instrumental in capturing police
violence, notably against black men. See Kimberly Kindy et al., Fatal Shootings by Police Are
Up in the First Six Months of 2016, WASH. POST (July 7, 2016), https://www.washingtonpost
.com/national/fatal-shootings-by-police-surpass-2015s-rate/2016/07/07/81b708f2-3d4211e6-84e8-1580c7db5275_story.html; Azi Paybarah, At Sharpton’s Rally, Talk of Garner, Gurely
and “Fergusonism”, POLITICO (Nov. 29, 2014), http://www.politico.com/states/new-york/
city-hall/story/2014/11/at-sharptons-rally-talk-of-garner-gurley-and-fergusonism-017775;
Matt Taibbi, Are Cell Phones Changing the Narrative on Police Shootings?, ROLLING STONE (Apr.
9, 2015), http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/are-cell-phones-changing-the-narrative-on-police-shootings-20150409; US Police Shootings: How Many Die Each Year?, BBC NEWS
(July 18, 2016), http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-36826297; Fatal Force, WASH. POST,
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/national/police-shootings-2016/ (last visited
Oct. 19, 2016) (tallying police shootings over two-year period).
209 See, e.g., Koch & Holden, supra note 205; John G. Malcolm & Norman L. Reimer,
Opinion, Over-Criminalization Undermines Respect for Legal System, WASH. TIMES (Dec. 11,
2013), http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/dec/11/malcolmreimer-overcriminalization-undermines-resp; Ellen Podgor, Opinion, Laws Have Overcriminalized Business Behavior, N.Y. TIMES (Nov. 10, 2013), http://www.nytimes.com/roomfordebate/2013/
11/10/prosecuting-executives-not-companies- for-wall-street-crime/laws-have-overcriminalized-business-behavior; Carrie Severino, A Rare Bipartisan Consensus in Favor of Overcriminal-

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eral consequences of criminal convictions,211 and mass incarceration.212
Remarkably, in his second term, President Obama and the Justice Department took up the charge of criminal justice reform.213
Also noteworthy is the public demand for prosecutorial accountability in
cases of police shootings. The killings of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Eric
Garner in Staten Island, Freddie Gray in Baltimore, Walter Scott in South
Carolina, Philando Castile in Minneapolis, and Alton Sterling in Baton
Rouge challenge not only racially discriminatory policing, but also perceived
unfair and unequal treatment by prosecutors in investigating police vioization Reform, NAT’L REV. (Jan. 4, 2015), http://www.nationalreview.com/bench-memos/
395660/rare-bipartisan-consensus-favor-overcriminalization-reform-carrie-severino.
210 Sentencing Guidelines have effectively shifted sentencing discretion from judges to
prosecutors. See, e.g., Jeffrey Standen, Plea Bargaining in the Shadow of the Guidelines, 81 CAL.
L. REV. 1471, 1475 (1993) (explaining how the combination of plea bargaining and the
Sentencing Guidelines has “eliminated the discretion of federal judges,” but afforded prosecutors unduly broad and unchecked discretion to determine outcomes prior to the outset
of litigation); John Nichols, Judge Resigns over Congressional Meddling, NATION (June 25,
2003), https://www.thenation.com/article/judge-resigns-over-congressional-meddling/
(describing how Federal District Judge John Martin left the bench in 2003, attributing his
decision to the constraints on sentencing discretion imposed by the Sentencing
Guidelines).
211 See, e.g., United States v. Nesbeth, No. 15-CR-18, 2016 WL 3022073, at *1 (E.D.N.Y.
May 24, 2016) (rendering a non-incarceratory sentence because of collateral consequences); see also Padilla v. Kentucky, 559 U.S. 356, 366–67 (2010) (requiring non-citizen
client to be informed of immigration consequences before entering a guilty plea); MARGARET COLGATE LOVE ET AL., COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES OF CRIMINAL CONVICTIONS: LAW,
POLICY & PRACTICE, Westlaw (database updated Feb. 2016); RAM SUBRAMANIAN ET AL., VERA
INST. OF JUSTICE, RELIEF IN SIGHT? STATES RETHINK THE CONSEQUENCES OF COLLATERAL CONVICTION, 2009–2014 (2014), http://www.vera.org/sites/default/files/resources/down
loads/states-rethink-collateral-consequences-report-v3.pdf; Michael Pinard, An Integrated
Perspective on the Collateral Consequences of Criminal Convictions and Reentry Issues Faced by Formerly Incarcerated Individuals, 86 B.U. L. REV. 623 (2006).
212 See MICHELLE ALEXANDER, THE NEW JIM CROW: MASS INCARCERATION IN THE AGE OF
COLORBLINDNESS (New Press rev. ed. 2013) (popularized the term “mass incarceration”);
Angela J. Davis, The Prosecutor’s Ethical Duty to End Mass Incarceration, 44 HOFSTRA L. REV.
1063 (2016); Erik Eckholm, How to Cut the Prison Population (See for Yourself), N.Y. TIMES
(Aug. 11, 2015), http://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/12/upshot/how-to-cut-the-prison-pop
ulation-see-for-yourself.html; Editorial, End Mass Incarceration Now, N.Y. TIMES (May 24,
2014), http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/25/opinion/sunday/end-mass-incarcerationnow.html.
213 See, e.g., Editorial, President Obama Takes on the Prison Crisis, N.Y. TIMES (July 16,
2015), http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/17/opinion/president-obama-takes-on-theprison-crisis.html; see also Gardiner Harris, Obama Pushing Criminal Justice Reform Defends
“Black Lives Matter”, N.Y. TIMES (Oct. 22, 2015), http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/23/us/
politics/obama-in-call-for-reform-defends-the-black-lives-matter-movement.html; Eric
Holder, U.S. Attorney Gen., Remarks at the ABA Annual Meeting (Aug. 12, 2013), http://
www.justice.gov/opa/speech/attorney-general-eric-holder-delivers-remarks-annual-meeting-american-bar-associations (Attorney General Holder focused particularly on the disproportionate arrest, conviction, and jail and prison terms of young men of color).

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lence.214 As noted, a popular sentiment has been that prosecutors in the
Brown and Garner cases improperly exercised charging discretion by treating
the police officers more leniently than similarly situated low-income and
minority individuals, presumably because of bias.215 By contrast, the indictment of police officers in Baltimore has been characterized as a bold step
forward.216 Growing public indignation led to the “Black Lives Matter”
movement in 2014.217 That movement not only focuses upon police shootings of unarmed black men, but also encompasses all of the ways in which the
criminal justice system fails and disproportionately punishes communities of
color.218
Although prosecutors are not directly responsible for all the perceived
problems of the criminal justice system, their conduct is implicated in
most.219 For example, over-incarceration is largely attributable to prosecu214 See, e.g., Bill Chappell, St. Louis Grand Jury Heard Witnesses Who Lied, Prosecutor Says,
NPR: THE TWO-WAY (Dec. 19, 2014, 3:53 PM), http://www.npr.org/sections/the two-way/
2014/12/19/371940004/st-louis-grand-jury-heard-witnesses-who-lied-prosecutor-says;
Andrew Siff et al., Grand Jury Declines to Indict NYPD Officer in Eric Garner Chokehold Death,
NBC N.Y. (Dec. 3, 2014), http://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/local/Grand-Jury-DecisionEric-Garner-Staten-Island-Chokehold-Death-NYPD-284595921.html; see also Richard Fausset et al., Alton Sterling Shooting in Baton Rouge Prompts Justice Department Investigation, N.Y.
TIMES (July 6, 2016), http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/06/us/alton-sterling-batonrouge-shooting.html?_r=0; Matt Furber & Richard Pérez-Peña, After Philando Castile’s Killing, Obama Calls Police Shooting ‘an American Issue’, N.Y. TIMES (July 7, 2016), http://www
.nytimes.com/2016/07/08/us/philando-castile-falcon-heights-shooting.html; Levs, supra
note 119.
215 See supra notes 117–19 and accompanying text.
216 See, e.g., A Step Toward Justice for Freddie Gray, BALT. SUN (May 1, 2015), http://www
.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/editorial/bs-ed-freddie-gray-indictments-20150501story.html; Ronald S. Sullivan, Harvard Law Professor: Criticism of Mosby over Gray Trials Is
‘Wholly Unfounded,’ BALT. SUN (July 25, 2016), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bs-ed-mosby-defense-20160725-story.html. But see Kevin Rector, Activist Law Professor Calls for Mosby Disbarment Over Prosecution in Freddie Gray Case, BALT. SUN (June 26,
2016), http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/freddie-gray/bs-md-ci-mosby-attorney-grievance-20160629-story.html (Professor John Banzhaf charges Baltimore prosecutor
with overcharging and unethical practices in the prosecutions of six police officers); see also
Tom Jackman, Baltimore Prosecutor Now Must Weigh Giving Up on Freddie Gray Case, WASH.
POST (June 23, 2016), https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/true-crime/wp/2016/06/
23/baltimore-prosecutors-now-must-weigh-giving-up-on-freddie-gray-case/ (first two
officers were acquitted in judge trials).
217 See NAZGOL GHANDNOOSH, SENTENCING PROJECT, BLACK LIVES MATTER: ELIMINATING
RACIAL INEQUITY IN THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM 3 (2015), http://sentencingproject.org/
doc/publications/11/Black-Lives-Matter.pdf.
218 See id.; see also Michael Barbaro & Yamiche Alcindor, Black Lives Matter Was Gaining
Ground. Then a Sniper Opened Fire, N.Y. TIMES (July 9, 2016), http://www.nytimes.com/
2016/07/10/us/black-lives-matter-reaction.html; Black Lives Matter Protests Worldwide, N.Y.
TIMES (July 10, 2016), http://www.nytimes.com/video/us/100000004522034/black-livesmatter-protests-worldwide.html.
219 Prosecutors’ conduct matters to some issues less than others. For example, prosecutors are not directly to blame for brutal prison conditions, such as the use of solitary confinement and the inadequacy of medical and mental health care. On the other hand,

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tors’ advocacy for harsher sentencing legislation, to their charging and plea
bargaining policies, and to their individual charging and plea bargaining
decisions.220 Particularly in the federal system, prosecutors’ charging decisions significantly narrow judges’ sentencing discretion. In 1997, the Department of Justice implemented a policy requiring federal prosecutors to charge
the “most serious, readily provable offense or offenses consistent with the
defendant’s conduct.”221 The resulting harsh sentences, especially for drug
offenses, elicited judicial and public criticism.222
Prosecutors’ discretionary decisions also contribute to racial disparities
in criminal prosecutions. Recent studies, in which progressive prosecutors’
offices voluntarily participated, demonstrated the impact of implicit racial
bias in charging and other prosecutorial action.223 Insofar as prosecutors
exploit evidence achieved through the implementation of discriminatory
investigative practices, such as racially biased stops and frisks, they encourage
the perpetuation of these practices. In the rare instances in which prosecutors have stopped bringing charges arising out of racially discriminatory
police practices, they have reduced police incentives to engage in such
practices.224
prosecutors’ collective charging decisions and sentencing recommendations might in part
be blamed for long prison sentences and prison overcrowding, which exacerbate bad
conditions.
220 See John F. Pfaff, Escaping from the Standard Story: Why the Conventional Wisdom on
Prison Growth is Wrong, and Where We Can Go from Here, 26 FED. SENT’G REP. 265 (2014).
State and federal prosecutors’ associations have long advocated for tougher sentencing
laws, including mandatory minimum sentences. The National Association of Assistant
United States Attorneys opposes federal reform legislation that would reduce some federal
sentences. See NAT’L ASS’N OF ASSISTANT U.S. ATTORNEYS, THE DANGEROUS MYTHS OF DRUG
SENTENCING “REFORM” (2015), https://www.naausa.org/2013/images/docs/DangerousMyths-of-Drug-Sentencing-Reform.pdf.
221 U.S. DEP’T OF JUSTICE, UNITED STATES ATTORNEYS’ MANUAL § 9-27.300 (1997),
https://www.justice.gov/usam/usam-9-27000-principles-federal-prosecution#9-27.300.
222 See, e.g., Ian Urbina, New York’s Federal Judges Protest Sentencing Procedures, N.Y. TIMES
(Dec. 8, 2003), http://www.nytimes.com/2003/12/08/nyregion/08JUDG.html?pagewant
ed=all.
223 See VERA INST. OF JUSTICE, A PROSECUTOR’S GUIDE FOR ADVANCING RACIAL EQUITY
(2014), https://cdpsdocs.state.co.us/ccjj/Resources/Ref/prosecutors-advancing-racialequity_Nov2014.pdf; Jeffrey Toobin, The Milwaukee Experiment, NEW YORKER, May 11, 2015.
224 See, e.g., Joseph Goldstein, Loitering Rules in Projects Are Too Vague, Judge Says, N.Y.
TIMES (Oct. 4, 2012), http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/05/nyregion/federal-judge-saysobscure-loitering-rules-are-unconstitutional.html (discussing how in Bronx County, New
York, for example, two months before a district judge held New York City police stop-andfrisk practices unconstitutional, the elected district attorney announced that his office
would limit the circumstances in which it would prosecute cases arising out of stops for
trespassing at housing projects); see also Kristine Hamann & Rebecca Brown, Best Practices
for Prosecutors: A Nationwide Movement, 31 CRIM. JUST. 27, 27 (2016) (noting that the prosecutor’s role “has changed. . . beyond . . . [exclusive focus] on the investigation and prosecution of crimes, . . . [and] broadened to include proactive, innovative solutions to
challenges facing the criminal justice system” and suggesting best practices).

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The exercise of prosecutorial discretion is now seen to significantly
affect individuals and communities. Prosecutorial charging and plea bargaining decisions, even in misdemeanor cases, have potential implications
for immigration, housing, and employment.225 There is a call for fundamental changes to the prosecutor’s processing of misdemeanors, which according
to an analysis of eleven states, comprised approximately seventy-nine percent
of all those states’ criminal cases.226 Critiques abound of the “plea mill” and
prosecutorial bail recommendations that often determine whether a person
pleads guilty, even when he or she is not culpable, to avoid lengthy time in
jail awaiting trial.227 Forfeiture of assets, penalties, and fines often result in
serious negative consequences for those involved with the criminal justice
system.228 Increasingly, prosecutors are urged to ameliorate these harsh consequences by referring individuals to diversion programs in lieu of filing
criminal charges,229 considering immigration and other consequences in
225 See generally United States v. Nesbeth, No. 15-CR-18, 2016 WL 3022073 (E.D.N.Y.
May 24, 2016); LOVE ET AL., supra note 211; Sarah B. Berson, Beyond the Sentence—Understanding Collateral Consequences, 272 NAT’L INST. JUST. J. 24 (2013), https://www.ncjrs.gov/
pdffiles1/nij/241924.pdf.
226 See, e.g., Jenny M. Roberts, Why Misdemeanors Matter: Defining Effective Advocacy in the
Lower Criminal Courts, 45 U.C. DAVIS L. REV. 277, 281 (“A 2008 analysis of eleven state
courts revealed that misdemeanors comprised 79% of the total caseload in those courts.”
(citing ROBERT C. LAFOUNTAIN ET AL., COURT STATISTICS PROJECT, EXAMINING THE WORK OF
STATE COURTS: AN ANALYSIS OF 2008 STATE COURT CASELOADS 47 (2010))); see also ROBERT
C. BORUCHOWITZ ET AL., NAT’L ASS’N OF CRIMINAL DEF. LAWYERS, MINOR CRIMES, MASSIVE
WASTE: THE TERRIBLE TOLL OF AMERICA’S BROKEN MISDEMEANOR COURTS 30–38 (2009),
https://www.nacdl.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=20808; Alexandra Natapoff,
Misdemeanor Decriminalization, 68 VAND. L. REV. 1055 (2015); Jenny M. Roberts, Crashing the
Misdemeanor System, 70 WASH. & LEE L. REV. 1089 (2013); Steve Zeidman, Whither the Criminal Court: Confronting Stops-and-Frisks, 76 ALB. L. REV. 1187, 1201 n.92 (2012) (“In 2011,
there were 338,314 total arrests throughout New York City, 249,211 of which were for misdemeanor offenses.” (citing N.Y. STATE DIV. OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE SERVS., ADULT ARRESTS:
2002–2011 (2012), http:// www.criminaljustice.ny.gov/crimnet/ojsa/arrests/NewYorkCity
.pdf)).
227 See, e.g., John L. Barkai, Accuracy Inquiries for All Felony and Misdemeanor Pleas: Voluntary Pleas But Innocent Defendants?, 126 U. PA. L. REV. 88 (1977); William Glaberson, In
Misdemeanor Cases, Long Waits for Elusive Trials, N.Y. TIMES (Apr. 30, 2013), http://www
.nytimes.com/2013/05/01/nyregion/justice-denied-for-misdemeanor-cases-trials-are-elusive.html?pagewanted=all.
228 See generally Bridget McCormack, Economic Incarceration, 25 WINDSOR Y.B. ACCESS TO
JUST. 223 (2007); Radley Balko, Opinion, New Frontiers in Asset Forfeiture, WASH. POST (June
8, 2016), https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2016/06/08/new-frontiers-in-asset-forfeiture/; Joseph Shapiro, As Court Fees Rise, The Poor Are Paying the Price,
NPR (May 19, 2014), http://www.npr.org/2014/05/19/312158516/increasing-court-feespunish-the-poor; Carl Takei, Courts Should Stop Jailing People for Being Poor, ACLU: SPEAK
FREELY (July 3, 2012, 3:00 PM), https://www.aclu.org/blog/courts-should-stop-jailing-people-being-poor.
229 See, e.g., CTR. FOR HEALTH AND JUSTICE AT TASC, NO ENTRY: A NATIONAL SURVEY OF
CRIMINAL JUSTICE DIVERSION PROGRAMS AND INITIATIVES (2013), http://www2.centerfor
healthandjustice.org/sites/www2.centerforhealthandjustice.org/files/publications/CHJ%
20Diversion%20Report_web.pdf; OFFICE OF THE INSPECTOR GEN., U.S. DEP’T OF JUSTICE,

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charging decisions, minimizing bail and other pretrial restrictions, and recommending more lenient sentences.230 Some prosecutors work with policy
organizations to understand the extent to which race affects prosecutorial
discretion in practice231 and have explored “community prosecut[ing]”—
that is, working with community leaders to “solve problems, improve public
safety and enhance the quality of life of community members”—as an
adjunct to the traditional approach.232 Scholars have envisioned an even
broader prosecutorial role to include a responsibility to address systemic
problems such as excessive sentences and mass incarceration.233
This is not to say that contemporary concerns about criminal justice fully
explain the changes in how prosecutors are regarded and regulated. After
all, in earlier periods, such as leading up to the Warren Court reforms, when
police practices were far more brutal and discriminatory and criminal procedures were less protective of the accused,234 similar arguments could have
been made about the centrality of prosecutors’ discretionary decisions, and
yet prosecutors were not a focal point of public and judicial criticism. But
the general public awakening to the problems of the criminal justice system,
if not a complete explanation, is a significant factor contributing to the skeptical shift in public and judicial attitudes toward prosecutors and their work.
3.

Understandings Regarding Wrongful Convictions

When it comes to prosecutors’ accountability, the most significant deficiency in the criminal justice system to which the public has awakened is the
problem of wrongful convictions—that is, convictions of innocent individuAUDIT OF THE DEPARTMENT’S USE OF PRETRIAL DIVERSION AND DIVERSION-BASED COURT PROGRAMS AS ALTERNATIVES TO INCARCERATION (2016), https://oig.justice.gov/reports/2016/
a1619.pdf; see generally Missouri v. Frye, 132 S. Ct. 1399, 1407 (2012) (acknowledging our
criminal justice system is a plea-bargaining system); Gerard E. Lynch, Our Administrative
System of Criminal Justice, 66 FORDHAM L. REV. 2117 (1998) (noting that underlying many of
these new approaches to criminal justice policy is a recognition that state and federal criminal justice systems do not operate on the traditional adversary model).
230 See, e.g., Decision Points: Pursuing Innovation in Prosecution, ASS’N OF PROSECUTING
ATTORNEYS, http://www.apainc.org/decision-points-pursuing-innovation-in-prosecution
(last visited Oct. 19, 2016); Ending the American Money Bail System, EQUAL JUSTICE UNDER
LAW, http://equaljusticeunderlaw.org/wp/current-cases/ending-the-american-money-bailsystem/ (last visited Oct. 19, 2016) (documenting litigation challenging bail conditions).
231 BESIKI KUTATELADZE ET AL., VERA INST. OF JUSTICE, RACE AND PROSECUTION IN MANHATTAN (2014), http://www.vera.org/sites/default/files/resources/downloads/race-andprosecution-manhattan-summary.pdf.
232 NAT’L DIST. ATTORNEYS ASS’N, National Center for Community Prosecution, http://www
.ndaa.org/nccp_home.html (last visited July 26, 2016).
233 See, e.g., R. Michael Cassidy, (Ad)ministering Justice: A Prosecutor’s Ethical Duty to Support
Sentencing Reform, 45 LOY. U. CHI. L.J. 981 (2014); Davis, supra note 212; Bruce A. Green,
Access to Criminal Justice: Where Are the Prosecutors?, 3 TEX. A&M L. REV. 515 (2016).
234 See generally, A. Kenneth Pye, The Warren Court and Criminal Procedure, 67 MICH. L.
REV. 249 (1968).

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als.235 The public awareness of this problem has been integral in shifting
perceptions of prosecutorial conduct. Widespread public and professional
recognition of the reality of wrongful convictions, including in death-penalty
cases, began with the cases in which DNA evidence was used to exonerate
convicted defendants.236 Even for those who previously accepted the reality
of wrongful convictions as an abstract proposition, the cases inspired empathy and indignation by putting human faces and stories to the problem.
The innocence cases, spearheaded by lawyers associated with the Innocence Project237 and others, have demonstrated that prosecutorial misconduct matters. Prosecutors in criminal litigation frequently assert that
discovery violations and other misconduct were harmless. The impression
given is that misconduct usually does not affect verdicts, and even when it
does, a finding of prejudicial misconduct does not mean that the unfairly
convicted defendant was innocent and undeserving of punishment. Innocence cases challenge this premise by showing that the criminal justice system
is fallible, notwithstanding constitutional safeguards.
In particular, the innocence cases have shown that wrongful convictions
are not random and unavoidable but, in many cases, the product of systemic
unfairness. As the number of exonerations mounted, Innocence Project lawyers, followed by scholars, inquired into the root causes of wrongful convictions and how to avert them. The studies showed that wrongful convictions
were often built on erroneous eyewitness identifications, false confessions,
unreliable forensic evidence, and other procedural irregularities. Further,
studies showed that the risk of employing unreliable evidence of this nature

235 See Richard A. Leo, What Innocence Means Today and Why It Matters (Univ. of S.F. Law
Research Paper No. 2016-08, 2015), http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2682824; Barry C.
Scheck, The David H. Bodiker Lecture on Criminal Justice 2014: Conviction Integrity ReVisited: Developing Best Practices, Learning From Error, and Recognizing Ethical and
Constitutional Obligations to Correct Wrongful Convictions (Oct. 24, 2014), http://moritzlaw.osu.edu/briefing-room/multimedia/2014-bodiker-lecture-featuring-barry-scheck/.
236 See McKithen v. Brown, 481 F.3d 89 (2d Cir. 2007). As Judge Calabresi noted, there
was a time when no less a jurist than Learned Hand dismissed the risk of wrongful convictions as unrealistic, but “the advance of forensic DNA technology” has proven “the reality
of wrongful convictions.” Id. at 92. “Judge Learned Hand observed that ‘[o]ur procedure
has been always haunted by the ghost of the innocent man convicted,’ but posited, optimistically, that ‘[i]t is an unreal dream.’” Id. at 91–92 (alteration in original) (quoting United
States v. Garsson, 291 F. 646, 649 (S.D.N.Y. 1923)).
237 By 2000, there were ten innocence organizations or programs, primarily in law
school clinics, that met to hold the first Innocence Network Conference. See About the
Innocence Network, INNOCENCE NETWORK, http://innocencenetwork.org/about (last visited
Oct. 19, 2016); see also INNOCENCE PROJECT, http://www.innocenceproject.org/ (last visited
Oct. 19, 2016) (the Innocence Project has handled or assisted in the exoneration of more
than 340 people); NAT’L REGISTRY OF EXONERATIONS, http://www.law.umich.edu/special/
exoneration/Pages/about.aspx (last visited Oct. 19, 2016) (overall in the United States
approximately 350 people have been exonerated by DNA out of more than 1300 exonerations since 1989).

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could be reduced, including through careful prosecutorial conduct.238 Additionally, the innocence cases have shown that police and prosecutorial misconduct can result in convicting the innocent. Approximately forty-five
percent of the initially documented wrongful convictions have been attributed to government misconduct.239
Insights from wrongful conviction cases deserve significant credit for
broadening the concept of prosecutorial misconduct to address prosecutors’
gatekeeping function. Prior to DNA exonerations, the public—and many
lawyers and judges—could not imagine that systems of eyewitness identifications could be so wrong, that innocent people are pressured to falsely confess
to crimes, or that forensic sciences were unreliable. The revelation of these
evidentiary deficiencies leads to the question of prosecutors’ responsibilities.
One’s instinct is that even if no specific law or rule requires prosecutors to
avoid exploiting unreliable testimony and evidence, prosecutors deserve public and professional opprobrium, if not legal sanction, when they fail to take
reasonable precautions against wrongful convictions.240 Indeed, when the
ABA responded to the innocence cases by amending Rule 3.8 to address
prosecutors’ post-conviction obligations, it also expanded its general description of prosecutors’ responsibilities as “minister[s] of justice” to include an
obligation to take “special precautions . . . to prevent and to rectify the conviction of innocent persons.”241

238

See, e.g., BRANDON L. GARRETT, CONVICTING THE INNOCENT: WHERE CRIMINAL PROSEGO WRONG (2011); DANIEL S. MEDWED, PROSECUTION COMPLEX: AMERICA’S RACE
TO CONVICT AND ITS IMPACT ON THE INNOCENT (2012); BARRY SCHECK ET AL., ACTUAL INNOCENCE: WHEN JUSTICE GOES WRONG AND HOW TO MAKE IT RIGHT (2003); Cardozo Symposium, supra note 73; Bennett L. Gershman, The Prosecutor’s Duty to Truth, 14 GEO. J. LEGAL
ETHICS 309 (2001) (discussing prosecutors’ obligations in light of the fact of wrongful convictions); Lissa Griffin, The Correction of Wrongful Convictions: A Comparative Perspective, 16
AM. U. INT’L L. REV. 1241 (2001); Rudin, supra note 55 (describing cases of wrongful conviction). Prosecutors were loath to believe that people falsely confess. See Mark Hansen,
Untrue Confessions, A.B.A. J., July 1999, at 51, 52 (quoting Joshua Marquis, District Attorney
for Clatsop County, Oregon.); cf. Richard A. Leo & Richard J. Ofshe, The Consequences of
False Confessions: Deprivations of Liberty and Miscarriages of Justice in the Age of Psychological
Interrogations, 88 J. CRIM. L. & CRIMINOLOGY 429, 444–66 (1998) (documenting sixty cases
of false confessions).
239 See GARRETT, supra note 238; SCHECK ET AL., supra note 238, at 318 (citing government misconduct as a contributing factor in approximately forty-five percent of cases); see
also Government Misconduct, INNOCENCE PROJECT, http://www.innocenceproject.org/
causes/government-misconduct/ (last visited Oct. 19, 2016) (noting that suppression of
exculpatory evidence has been the most common government misconduct in DNA exoneration cases).
240 See generally Zacharias & Green, supra note 110 (analyzing the use of the attorney
competence rule as a tool for disciplining prosecutors, and ultimately recommending alternative regulatory processes).
241 MODEL RULES OF PROF’L CONDUCT r. 3.8, cmt. 1 (AM. BAR. ASS’N 2013).
CUTIONS

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Expanded Academic Attention to Systemic Causes and Cures

Recent years have seen expanded academic interest in prosecutorial
conduct. At one time, criminal procedure scholarship focused almost
entirely on police investigative conduct and on judicial doctrine. Legal scholarship focused on prosecutors only infrequently.242 In part, this may be
because of the difficulty in studying prosecutors’ conduct outside the courtroom, particularly prosecutorial decisionmaking, so little of which is exposed
to the public. Much of the earlier work was by those who could draw on their
former experience as prosecutors, such as Bennett Gershman243 and H.
Richard Uviller.244 The amount of writing on various aspects of prosecutors’
work is burgeoning, and much of it is contributed by later generations of
former prosecutors such as Stephanos Bibas,245 Michael Cassidy,246 Kevin
McMunigal,247 Laurie Levenson,248 Daniel Richman,249 and Paul Butler.250
Former criminal defense lawyers and others have also focused on aspects of
prosecutors’ work.251
242 Perhaps the most prominent contrary example is Bennett L. Gershman’s treatise,
PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT, supra note 27, first published in 1985.
243 See, e.g., Bennett L. Gershman, Prosecutorial Misconduct in Presenting Evidence:
“Backdooring” Hearsay, 31 CRIM. L. BULL. 99 (1995); Bennett L. Gershman, Correcting
Prosecutorial Misconduct and Judicial Error in Louisiana, HUFFINGTON POST (May 20, 2016,
2:21 PM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/bennett-l-gershman/correcting-prosecutorial_b_10065774.html. Bennett Gershman is a frequent contributor to the Huffington Post
about prosecutorial conduct.
244 See, e.g., H. Richard Uviller, The Virtuous Prosecutor in Quest of an Ethical Standard:
Guidance from the ABA, 71 MICH. L. REV. 1145 (1973).
245 See, e.g., Stephanos Bibas, Prosecutorial Regulation Versus Prosecutorial Accountability,
157 U. PA. L. REV. 959 (2009).
246 See, e.g., R. Michael Cassidy, The Prosecutor and the Press: Lessons (Not) Learned from the
Mike Nifong Debacle, 71 LAW & CONTEMP. PROBS. 67 (2008).
247 See, e.g., KEVIN C. MCMUNIGAL & PETER A. JOY, DO NO WRONG: ETHICS FOR PROSECUTORS AND DEFENSE LAWYERS (2009).
248 See, e.g., Laurie L. Levinson, Prosecutorial Sound Bites: When Do They Cross the Line?, 44
GA. L. REV. 1021 (2010).
249 See, e.g., Daniel C. Richman & William J. Stuntz, Al Capone’s Revenge: An Essay on the
Political Economy of Pretextual Prosecution, 105 COLUM. L. REV. 583 (2005).
250 See, e.g., PAUL BUTLER, LET’S GET FREE: A HIP-HOP THEORY OF JUSTICE (2010).
251 See, e.g., Rachel E. Barkow, Prosecutorial Administration: Prosecutor Bias and the Department of Justice, 99 VA. L. REV. 271 (2013); Josh Bowers, Plea Bargaining’s Baselines, 57 WM. &
MARY L. REV. 1083 (2016) (arguing that the court’s examination of coercion of guilty pleas
should expand beyond the legalistic inquiry of what a prosecutor is legally entitled to pursue); Kami Chavis, A New Frontier in Criminal Justice Reform, 6 WAKE FOREST J. L. & POL’Y 349
(2016) (summarizing scholarly articles discussing aspects of criminal justice with meaningful reforms requiring bold and innovative solutions at each stage of the criminal process,
beginning with policing); Davis, supra note 212; Angela J. Davis, Prosecution and Race: The
Power and Privilege of Discretion, 67 FORDHAM L. REV. 13 (1998); Jessica A. Roth, Informant
Witnesses and the Risk of Wrongful Convictions, 53 AM. CRIM. L. REV. 737 (2016) (discussing
the need for evidence-based criteria in prosecutors’ use of informants); Christopher
Slobogin, Plea Bargaining and the Substantive and Procedural Goals of Criminal Justice: From
Retribution and Adversarialism to Preventive Justice and Hybrid-Inquisitorialism, 57 WM. & MARY

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Among the most important academic insights underlying much of the
contemporary work on prosecutors’ conduct are those drawn from the social
sciences. Early writings by Uviller and others reflected the intuition that psychological and social dynamics were integral to understanding prosecutors’
behavior252—for example, that prosecutors have difficulty reviewing new evidence objectively once they settle on a suspect and that institutional incentives to win cases may influence prosecutors to overreach. More recent
writings on cognitive bias reinforce the intuition that even well intentioned
prosecutors may abuse their power because of unconscious forces.253 In
other words, misconduct is not just the province of bad apples. Other writings substantiate the assumption that organizational structures can be implemented to improve institutional cultures and develop systems to reduce the
risk of erroneous and wrongful conduct.254
The cognitive bias literature bears particularly on understandings of
prosecutorial discretion and its perceived abuses. A growing body of literature explains how cognitive biases, such as “confirmation bias”255 and “hindsight bias,”256 affect judgment and account for what is popularly known as
“tunnel vision”—the human tendency to evaluate evidence through the lens
of one’s preexisting expectations and conclusions.257
L. REV. 1505, 1508 (2016) (arguing that plea-bargaining should become an inquisitorial
system that is judicially monitored to have to provide a coherent mechanism to achieve
better results).
252 See, e.g., George T. Felkenes, The Prosecutor: A Look at Reality, 7 SW. U. L. REV. 98
(1975); Uviller, supra note 244, at 1167–68 (noting various social and psychological factors
that weigh on a prosecutor’s discretion).
253 See, e.g., Erin Morris, Cognitive Bias and the Evaluation of Forensic Evidence, 36 CHAMPION 12, 12 (2012) (“[Bias] is . . . a largely unconscious process, and cannot be overcome
by force of will, good intentions, or even training.”).
254 See, e.g., Yaroshefsky & Green, supra note 199.
255 This is the tendency to seek and interpret information in ways that support the
person’s existing beliefs, expectations, and ideas. See generally Keith A. Findley & Michael
S. Scott, The Multiple Dimensions of Tunnel Vision in Criminal Cases, 2006 WIS. L. REV. 291
(discussing individual and institutional sources and effects of tunnel vision and suggesting
systemic remedies); Itiel Dror, Biased Brains, 116 POLICE REV., June 6, 2008, at 21.
256 See Findley & Scott, supra note 255, at 319–22. Also called outcome bias, this is the
tendency to interpret the outcome as a confirmation that the result was inevitable or certainly more predictable than one would initially think—i.e., the tendency to say “I knew it
all along,” when one was actually unsure.
257 See Susan Bandes, Loyalty to One’s Convictions: The Prosecutor and Tunnel Vision, 49
HOW. L.J. 475, 479–80 (2006) (discussing prosecutors and tunnel vision); Alafair S. Burke,
Improving Prosecutorial Decision Making: Some Lessons of Cognitive Science, 47 WM & MARY L.
REV. 1587, 1590–91 (2006) (discussing how cognitive biases make prosecutors irrational
actors); Findley & Scott, supra note 255, at 307–08 (“Psychologists analyze tunnel vision as
the product of various cognitive ‘biases,’ such as confirmation bias, hindsight bias, and
outcome bias. These cognitive biases help explain how and why tunnel vision is so ubiquitous, even among well-meaning actors in the criminal justice system.” (footnote omitted));
Medwed, supra note 187, at 45–46; Michael Mello, Certain Blood for Uncertain Reasons: A Love
Letter to the Vermont Legislature on Not Reinstating Capital Punishment, 32 VT. L. REV. 765,

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Scholars have written about the impact of these biases on prosecutorial
as well as police decisionmaking,258 including in wrongful conviction cases
such as the well-known Central Park Jogger259 and the Duke Lacrosse
cases.260 Police often focus too quickly upon a particular suspect to the
exclusion of others and prosecutors then do the same based on the police
investigation.261 These tendencies have an even greater impact following a
conviction, given the psychological difficulty of acknowledging one’s possible
835–36 (2008) (discussing law enforcement tunnel vision—“psychological inertia”—as a
cause of wrongful death penalty convictions).
258 See Kate Levine, Who Shouldn’t Prosecute the Police, 101 IOWA L. REV. 1447 (2016)
(arguing that a structural conflict of interest arises when local prosecutors are given the
discretion and responsibility to investigate and lead cases against the police); supra notes
33, 35, 250–57.
259 See McCray v. City of New York, No. 03 Civ. 9685, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 90875, at
*13–38 (S.D.N.Y. Dec. 11, 2007). The court recited the following history of prosecution
and aftermath, as recounted in civil rights complaint: after a brutal attack on a jogger who
was found unconscious in Central Park, the police focused upon young men whose behavior was suspicious because they had been engaged in criminal behavior elsewhere in the
park that night. After many hours of interrogation, the police obtained what were later
learned to be false confessions. The youths were convicted and not exonerated until years
later, when a serial rapist/killer, Matias Reyes, came forward to claim responsibility for the
Central Park Jogger assault, and subsequent DNA testing conclusively established his
responsibility. Although an investigation by a senior prosecutor established the original
defendants’ innocence to the satisfaction of the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, which
supported their motion to set aside their convictions, the police remained unconvinced.
See also MICHAEL F. ARMSTRONG ET AL., REPORT TO THE POLICE COMMISSIONER ON THE CENTRAL PARK JOGGER CASE 41 (2003), news.findlaw.com/hdocs/docs/cpjgr/nypd12703jgrrpt
.pdf (concluding “that it is more likely than not that the defendants participated in an
attack upon the jogger” after Reyes sexually assaulted her).
260 STUART TAYLOR, JR. & K.C. JOHNSON, UNTIL PROVEN INNOCENT: POLITICAL CORRECTNESS AND THE SHAMEFUL INJUSTICES OF THE DUKE LACROSSE RAPE CASE 55 (2007) (discussing
that, in their investigations, “[c]ops share the natural human tendency to bend new evidence to fit their preconceived beliefs rather than adjusting their beliefs to fit the new
evidence”).
261 Suggestions have been made about how to minimize the impact of cognitive biases
in the criminal process. Commentators have proposed: (1) training for prosecutors and
police about cognitive biases; (2) greater transparency of prosecutorial and police work;
(3) subjecting investigative techniques to reexamination and review; (4) improved management and supervision processes, and (5) reform of prosecutorial cultures. See, e.g.,
Stephanos Bibas, Transparency and Participation in Criminal Procedure, 81 N.Y.U. L. REV. 911,
917 (2006) (suggesting transparency and monitoring reforms as partial solutions to
improve the criminal justice process); Alafair S. Burke, Revisiting Prosecutorial Disclosure, 84
IND. L.J. 481, 495, 499 (2009); Alafair S. Burke, Neutralizing Cognitive Bias: An Invitation to
Prosecutors, 2 N.Y.U. J.L. & LIBERTY 512, 523–28 (2007) [hereinafter Burke, Invitation to
Prosecutors]; Burke, supra note 257, at 1613–31; Felkenes, supra note 252; Findley & Scott,
supra note 255, at 354–96; Joel D. Lieberman & Jamie Arndt, Understanding the Limits of
Limiting Instructions: Social Psychological Explanations for the Failures of Instructions to Disregard
Pretrial Publicity and Other Inadmissible Evidence, 6 PSYCHOL. PUB. POL’Y & L. 677, 703–05
(2000); Medwed, supra note 60, at 169–83; Medwed, supra note 187, at 45–51.

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role in convicting an innocent person.262 A prosecutor is likely to view a
conviction as a confirmation that the initial charging decision was correct
and then to discount new evidence of innocence.263 A 2013 report on
wrongful convictions recommended changes to criminal justice practices to
minimize the effect of prosecutors’ tunnel vision.264
More broadly, social science studies demonstrating deficiencies in the
evidence on which prosecutors customarily rely has drawn attention to the
importance of prosecutors’ gatekeeping role. For example, significant social
science studies have both demonstrated flaws in eyewitness testimony and
shown how to make it more reliable.265 Likewise, social scientists helped
expose the problem of false confessions.266 This literature contributes to the
262 Bandes, supra note 257, at 491 (“It is difficult to admit mistakes, and certainly difficult for a prosecutor to accept that her actions have led to the conviction of an innocent
person.”); Randolph N. Jonakait, The Ethical Prosecutor’s Misconduct, 23 CRIM. L. BULL. 550,
551 (1987) (“The honorable prosecutor simply cannot believe that he is prosecuting the
blameless.”); Medwed, supra note 60, at 142–43 (“When a jury verdict validates this form of
‘pre-conviction’ of the defendant, it may become extremely difficult ever to establish the
defendant’s innocence in the eyes of the prosecuting lawyer.”).
263 See Burke, Invitation to Prosecutors, supra note 261, at 519 (“[T]he vast majority of
cases end in conviction, either by trial or more often by guilty plea. Accordingly, prosecutors are likely to see the end results as validation of their initial theories of guilt.”); Findley
& Scott, supra note 255, at 316, 320, 330, 331–33 (discussing impact of cognitive biases;
defense lawyers do not necessarily counterbalance these tendencies because they are also
prone to tunnel vision, assuming their clients to be guilty and often, therefore, eschewing
vigorous investigation); F. Andrew Hessick III & Reshma M. Saujani, Plea Bargaining and
Convicting the Innocent: The Role of the Prosecutor, the Defense Counsel, and the Judge, 16 BYU J.
PUB. L. 189, 211 (2002).
264 Predicting and Preventing Wrongful Convictions, NAT’L INST. OF JUSTICE (Mar. 8, 2013),
http://nij.gov/topics/justice-system/wrongful-convictions/pages/predictingpreventing.aspx.
265 See NAT’L RESEARCH COUNSEL, IDENTIFYING THE CULPRIT: ASSESSING EYEWITNESS IDENTIFICATION (2014), http://www.nap.edu/read/18891/chapter/1; see also Saul M. Kassin &
Kimberly A. Barndollar, The Psychology of Eyewitness Testimony: A Comparison of Experts and
Prospective Jurors, 22 J. APPLIED SOC. PSYCHOL. 1241 (1992); National Academy of Sciences
Releases Landmark Report on Memory and Eyewitness Identification, Urges Reform of Police Identification Procedures, INNOCENCE PROJECT (Oct. 4, 2014), http://www.innocenceproject.org/
news-events-exonerations/national-academy-of-sciences-releases-landmark-report-on-memory-and-eyewitness-identification-urges-reform-of-police-identification-procedures. Social
science insight into deficiencies in eyewitness identifications resulted in two landmark decisions: State v. Henderson, 27 A.3d 872 (N.J. 2011), and State v. Lawson, 291 P.3d 673 (Or.
2012) (en banc), where the supreme courts of New Jersey and Oregon, respectively, overhauled their states’ tests for determining the admissibility and treatment of eyewitnessidentification evidence in criminal trials.
266 See, e.g., Corey J. Ayling, Comment, Corroborating Confessions: An Empirical Analysis of
Legal Safeguards Against False Confessions, 1984 WIS. L. REV. 1121; Saul M. Kassin, On the
Psychology of Confessions: Does Innocence Put Innocents at Risk?, 60 AM. PSYCHOL. 215, 216, 223
(2005); Saul M. Kassin & Katharine L. Kiechel, The Social Psychology of False Confessions:
Compliance, Internalization, and Confabulation, 7 PSYCHOL. SCI. 125 (1996); Richard J. Ofshe
& Richard A. Leo, The Decision to Confess Falsely: Rational Choice and Irrational Action, 74
DENV. U. L. REV. 979, 1119 (1997) (developing the concept of confession “contamina-

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understanding that prosecutorial misconduct can include the willful or negligent exploitation of unreliable evidence.
5.

Reform Organizations, Coalitions, and Movements

Perhaps the most essential social condition for the development of
Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0 has been the existence of traditional advocacy and reform organizations and the development of new ones, which have
given attention to prosecutorial misconduct. Although early interest in prosecutors’ conduct was largely incidental, some organizations have begun to
make prosecutorial reform an agenda item, if not a high priority.
Initially, reform groups turned their attention to prosecutorial misconduct in connection with discovery reform efforts. Representatives of the
criminal defense bar, such as the NACDL and the American College of Trial
Lawyers, directed efforts at criminal discovery reform as an aspect of their
general interest in improving criminal procedure.267 Their efforts did not
necessarily require spotlighting prosecutorial discovery violations, since one
could plausibly argue that constitutional and statutory disclosure obligations,
which are far narrower than disclosure obligations in civil litigation, are too
narrow to ensure fair trials even if prosecutors perfectly comply with their
current disclosure obligations.268 But these and other criminal justice
reform groups have increasingly argued that broader disclosure law is necessary in response to prosecutors’ failure to comply with existing obligations.
Institutional advocates have presented testimony and lobbied on behalf of
proposed federal discovery reform as well as the successful reform in North
Carolina and Texas.269 Reformers now spring into action when
prosecutorial misconduct comes to light, especially in high-profile cases such
as the Ted Stevens prosecution,270 and portray each new example as the lattion”). The DNA exonerations substantiated the problem and dispelled some skepticism
that anyone would falsely confess his or her own guilt. See Brandon L. Garrett, The Substance of False Confessions, 62 STAN. L. REV. 1051 (2010); Saul M. Kassin et al., Police Interviewing and Interrogation: A Self-Report Survey of Police Practices and Beliefs, 31 LAW & HUM. BEHAV.
381, 382 (2007) (“Largely as a result of recent DNA exonerations, many of which had
contained false confessions in evidence, a spotlight of scrutiny has been cast on the
processes of police interviewing and interrogation.”).
267 See generally Robert W. Tarun et al., Am. Coll. of Trial Lawyers, Proposed Codification
of Disclosure of Favorable Information Under Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure 11 and 16, 41 AM.
CRIM. L. REV. 93 (2004); Discovery Reform, NAT’L ASS’N OF CRIMINAL DEF. LAWYERS, http://
www.nacdl.org/discoveryreform/ (last visited Oct. 19, 2016) (“Many recent cases have
exposed the fact that federal prosecutors, whether through negligence or by design, all too
often fail to abide by their constitutional duty to disclose favorable information to the
defense. This is exacerbated by grossly inadequate state discovery statutes.”).
268 Green, supra note 3, at 681 (“If one looks at the criminal discovery regime using the
liberality of civil discovery as the baseline, in contrast, one might question the fairness of
the criminal process even if invariable compliance with Brady were assured.”).
269 See supra notes 136–47 and accompanying text.
270 See supra notes 123–25 and accompanying text.

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est in a string of similar prosecutorial misdeeds.271 Most recently, in the
wake of the Orange County prosecutor’s scandal,272 California reformers successfully obtained legislation authorizing courts to disqualify a prosecutor’s
office that deliberately withholds evidence, and then to report the errant
prosecutors to disciplinary authorities.273
Recent institutional advocacy and reform efforts have targeted aspects of
prosecutorial conduct in addition to discovery violations. Some have been
directed at correcting individual perceived injustices. For example, organizations seeking to set aside convictions of those believed to be innocent or to
have been punished too harshly sometimes make arguments based on perceived prosecutorial wrongdoing or excess.274 Recently, the NAACP Legal
Defense Fund (LDF) alleged prosecutorial misconduct in its open letter to
the judge overseeing the grand jury investigation of police officer Darren
Wilson for the shooting of Michael Brown, Jr. in Ferguson.275 On other
occasions, organizations have cited prosecutorial misconduct in seeking
broader criminal procedure reform. For example, death penalty opponents
have depicted prosecutorial overreaching as endemic in the capital process.276 The NACDL has targeted prosecutorial conduct as an aspect of
271 See, e.g., THE CONSTITUTION PROJECT, A CALL FOR CONGRESS TO REFORM FEDERAL
CRIMINAL DISCOVERY 1 (2012), http://www.constitutionproject.org/pdf/Brady_Stmt_0308
12.pdf (“In addition to the Stevens case, a string of recent cases has emerged in which the
defense eventually discovered undisclosed evidence that was constitutionally required to
have been disclosed.”).
272 See supra note 129 and accompanying text.
273 See A.B. 1328, 2015 Cal. Legis. Serv. Ch. 467 (West) (codified as amended at CAL.
BUS. & PROF. CODE § 6086.7 (West 2016); CAL. PENAL CODE § 1424.5 (West 2016)), https:/
/leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/billTextClient.xhtml?bill_id=201520160AB1328. The law
authorizes a court to find a violation based on clear and convincing evidence that the
prosecutor deliberately and intentionally withheld relevant or material exculpatory evidence or information in violation of law. In cases of the most serious misconduct, the law
also requires judges to report the prosecutor to the disciplinary authority and authorizes
the court to disqualify the blameworthy prosecutor or the entire office. See id.
274 See AMNESTY INT’L, USA: MODEL CRIMINAL JUSTICE? DEATH BY PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT AND A ‘STACKED’ JURY (2010), http://www.amnestyusa.org/sites/default/files/
pdfs/clemonsreport.pdf.
275 Letter from Sherrilyn A. Ifill, Dir.-Counsel, NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, to
Maura McShane, Presiding Judge, St. Louis Cty. Circuit Court (Jan. 5, 2015), http://www
.scribd.com/doc/251842888/NAACP-LDF-Open-Letter-to-Judge-Maura-McShane.
276 See, e.g., FAIR PUNISHMENT PROJECT, HARVARD LAW SCH., AMERICA’S TOP FIVE DEADLIEST PROSECUTORS: HOW OVERZEALOUS PERSONALITIES DRIVE THE DEATH PENALTY (2016),
http://fairpunishment.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/FPP-Top5Report_FINAL.pdf
(challenging “personality driven prosecutions” by five prosecutors who are responsible for
440 death sentences in the United States); Press Release, NAACP & Amnesty Int’l, On
One-Year Anniversary of Troy Davis Execution, Amnesty International and NAACP Urge
Attorney General Eric Holder to Investigate Misconduct in Death Penalty Cases (Sept. 20,
2012), http://www.amnestyusa.org/news/press-releases/on-one-year-anniversary-of-troydavis-execution-amnesty-international-and-naacp-urge-attorney-genera (“[T]he stain of
injustice continues to spread, with the death penalty used despite substantial concerns over
prosecutorial overreach, wrongful conviction or misapplication of the law.”).

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broader litigation, legislative, and grassroots strategies for reform of state and
federal sentencing, over-criminalization, grand juries, misdemeanor prosecutions, forensics, forfeiture, and problem-solving courts.277
Other reform advocacy has indirect significance for prosecutorial
reform insofar as it calls attention to deficiencies that prosecutors could help
ameliorate. The legislative and litigation reform efforts of the Innocence
Project have been important in this regard. As of this writing, the Innocence
Project and some affiliates’ websites acknowledged prosecutorial misconduct
as a concern278 and recently publicly made prosecutorial misconduct an
explicit subject of reform efforts.279
The Innocence Network’s current work on the deficiencies of the criminal justice system, especially the various ways in which unreliable evidence is
developed and used, calls attention to the possible role of prosecutors as
gatekeepers in promoting the reliability of the prosecution’s proof. Among
other things, the organization has encouraged prosecutors to develop conviction integrity units, not only to re-examine past cases that may involve wrongful convictions, but to develop internal processes to reduce the risk of future
miscarriages of justice.280
But in the end, reform organizations receive only partial credit for the
accountability movement. Significantly, no major national organization has
made prosecutorial accountability a central priority. One can speculate why.
Even defense organizations such as the NACDL and civil rights organizations
such as LDF target particular issues and cases. These organizations necessarily seek to maintain cooperative relations with prosecutors, their institutions
such as the Department of Justice, and their representative organizations.281
277 NAT’L ASS’N OF CRIM. DEF. LAWYERS, http://www.nacdl.org/ (last visited Oct. 19,
2016).
278 See e.g., Prosecutorial Misconduct, CAL. INNOCENCE PROJECT, http://californiainnocenceproject.org/issues-we-face/prosecutorial-misconduct (last visited Oct. 19, 2016).
279 For the Innocence Project’s recent efforts to reform the law through legislation and
litigation, see Improve the Law, INNOCENCE PROJECT, http://www.innocenceproject.org/freeinnocent/improve-the-law/legislative-reform (last visited Oct. 19, 2016), and Reform
Through the Courts, INNOCENCE PROJECT, http://www.innocenceproject.org/free-innocent/
reform-through-the-courts (last visited Oct. 19, 2016); see also INNOCENCE PROJECT, supra
note 81. In 2016, the efforts described were directed at increasing access to DNA evidence,
improving eyewitness identification practices, recording interrogations, challenging un-validated and unreliable forensic science, and improving systems to deter government
misconduct.
280 See Barry C. Scheck, Conviction Integrity Re-Visited: Developing Best Practices, Learning
from Error, and Recognizing Ethical and Constitutional Obligations to Correct Wrongful Convictions,
OHIO ST. L.J. (forthcoming 2017); Matthew McKnight, No Justice, No Peace, NEW YORKER
(Jan. 6, 2015), http://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/kenneth-thompson-conviction-review-unit-brooklyn (hailing Brooklyn’s Conviction Integrity Unit); Manhattan District
Attorney Hails Conviction Integrity Unit, INNOCENCE PROJECT (June 22, 2012), http://www
.innocenceproject.org/news-events-exonerations/manhattan-district-attorney-hails-conviction-integrity-unit; supra notes 191–95 and accompanying text.
281 For example, the NACDL has worked with the Department of Justice on its clemency project and on its efforts to support adequate funding for indigent defense. See Clem-

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Nothing would do more to poison relations than to confront prosecutors
head-on by spotlighting systemic wrongdoing.
B.

The Catalytic Role of Information Technology

Beginning in the early 1990s, information technology revolutionized
how information is gathered, processed, and disseminated, and it consequently has significantly changed public discourse,282 including about
prosecutorial accountability. The new medium made Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0 possible by raising public awareness of prosecutorial misconduct,
its connection to broader deficiencies in criminal justice, its connection in
particular to wrongful convictions, the academic understanding of the systemic and psychological conditions that contribute to misconduct, and the
institutional efforts toward reform. Information technology, as a new
medium, is essentially the “straw that stirs the drink.”283
First, it is now less laborious to collect information about prosecutorial
misconduct. Whereas public information in the form of court transcripts
and filings used to be accessible only by digging through court files, it is now
available in electronic databases. Consequently, news media can easily run
studies requiring the collection of massive information.284 So can not-forprofit reform groups.285
ency Project Overview and FAQs, NAT’L ASS’N OF CRIMINAL DEF. LAWYERS, http://www.nacdl
.org/clemencyproject/ (last visited Oct. 19, 2016). Innocence Projects have sought to collaborate with prosecutors’ offices on exoneration cases. See, e.g., Nancy Petro, Exoneration
and “Model for How Prosecution and Defense Can Collaborate”, WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS BLOG
(Nov. 22, 2013, 8:48 AM), http://wrongfulconvictionsblog.org/2013/11/22/exonerationand-model-for-how-prosecution-and-defense-can-collaborate/. It is not in the interest of
these or other law-reform organizations to develop antagonistic relations with prosecutors
generally.
282 See generally Manuel Castells, The Impact of the Internet on Society: A Global Perspective, in
CHANGE: 19 KEY ESSAYS ON HOW INTERNET IS CHANGING OUR LIVES 22 (2014), https://www
.bbvaopenmind.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/BBVA-OpenMind-Internet-ManuelCastells-The-Impact-of-the-Internet-on-Society-A-Global-Perspective.pdf (“[W]ithout the
Internet we would not have seen the large-scale development of networking as the fundamental mechanism of social structuring and social change in every domain of social life.”).
283 The phrase was attributed, perhaps erroneously, to New York Yankees outfielder
Reggie Jackson, who, according to a magazine article, used the phrase in reference to his
own role on the team. See, e.g., Chad Jennings, Reggie Jackson Denies “Straw That Stirs the
Drink” Comment, J. NEWS: LOHUD YANKEES BLOG (Oct. 12, 2013, 6:24 PM), http://yankees
.lhblogs.com/2013/10/12/reggie-jackson-denies-straw-that-stirs-the-drink-comment/.
284 See, e.g., Armstrong & Possley, supra note 34; Fatal Force, supra note 208; Brad Heath
& Kevin McCoy, Prosecutors’ Conduct Can Tip Justice Scales, USA TODAY (Sept. 23, 2010),
http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/washington/judicial/2010-09-22-federal-prosecutors-reform_N.htm (discussing a six-month investigation of 201 cases involving misconduct
by federal prosecutors that disclosed that only one of the prosecutors “was barred even
temporarily from practicing law for misconduct”).
285 See, e.g., RIDOLFI & POSSLEY, supra note 73 (concluding from a review of over 4000
California cases of alleged prosecutorial misconduct from 1997–2009 that there were
extensive and systemic failures of prosecutorial disclosure, judicial reporting of wrongdo-

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The easier availability of information has broadened the subjects of concern. Earlier writings focused disproportionately on visible misconduct, such
as prejudicial summations, and other misconduct that was the subject of judicial decisions, such as suppression of evidence.286 Today, more attention is
given to abuses of charging discretion, such as overcharging in order to
extract guilty pleas—dubious conduct that through the aggregation of information comes more readily to light.287 One law school has even made
prosecutorial misconduct a separate subject of academic study.288
Second, the relevant information and commentary is accessible universally and permanently. Much relevant legal academic writing, which was
once accessible only in law libraries and expensive databases, is permanently
available to the general public.289 This has a cumulative effect on reporting.
Whenever a new story about prosecutorial misconduct emerges, reporters
refer to earlier, similar misconduct and place new wrongdoing in a broader
context.290 At the same time, discussions of misconduct build on each other.
Reform groups’ reports build on news accounts as well as published judicial
decisions. News stories and editorials, in turn, draw on the reform groups’
reports and recommendations.291 As a result, it has become easier to make
arguments about the incidence of misconduct and to perceive patterns.
What once may have seemed like dots may now be connected.
ing, and professional discipline); Methodology, The Team for Harmful Error, CTR. FOR PUB.
INTEGRITY (last updated May 19, 2014), http://www.publicintegrity.org/2003/06/26/
5530/methodology-team-harmful-error (locating hundreds of prosecutorial misconduct
cases “by searching the Lexis and Westlaw legal databases for the phrase ‘prosecutorial
misconduct’”); see also PROJECT ON GOV’T OVERSIGHT, HUNDREDS OF JUSTICE DEPARTMENT
ATTORNEYS VIOLATED PROFESSIONAL RULES, LAWS, OR ETHICAL STANDARDS (2014), http://
www.pogo.org/our-work/reports/2014/hundreds-of-justice-attorneys-violated-standards
.html.
286 See, e.g., Armstrong & Possley, supra note 34; Weeks, supra note 29 (examining Brady
violations).
287 See, e.g., HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH, AN OFFER YOU CAN’T REFUSE: HOW US FEDERAL
PROSECUTORS FORCE DRUG DEFENDANTS TO PLEAD GUILTY (2013), https://www.hrw.org/
sites/default/files/reports/us1213_ForUpload_0_0_0.pdf.
288 See James R. Elkins, Course on Prosecutorial Misconduct, http://myweb.wvnet.edu/
~jelkins/adcrimlaw5/syllabus.html (last visited Oct. 19, 2016) (spring 2012 course syllabus); see also Lara A. Bazelon, Hard Lessons: The Role of Law Schools in Addressing Prosecutorial
Misconduct, 16 BERKELEY J. CRIM. L. 391 (2011) (maintaining that recent developments
have shed light on the scope and severity of prosecutorial misconduct and that law school
clinicians can teach law students to confront the problem).
289 See, e.g., Keenan et al., supra note 78.
290 See, e.g., Balko, supra note 99; Michael Powell, Misconduct by Prosecutors, Once Again,
N.Y. TIMES (Aug. 13, 2012), http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/14/nyregion/new-chargeof-prosecutorial-misconduct-in-queens.html.
291 See, e.g., John Terzano, Opinion, The Devastating Consequences of Prosecutorial Misconduct, HUFFINGTON POST (May 25, 2011, 1:00 PM), http://www.huffingtonpost.com/johnterzano/the-devastating-consequen_b_161049.html (discussing the Justice Project’s recommendations for comprehensive reform, and urging harsher punishment for prosecutorial
misconduct); Zoe Tillman, D.C. Judges Weigh Rule to Curb Prosecutor Misconduct, NAT’L L.J.,
Feb. 3, 2016 (proposal to spell out government’s disclosure obligations in criminal cases).

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This has led to rhetorical changes. Critics and news media are more
likely to view prosecutors’ misconduct as part of a pattern within the prosecutor’s office292 and to note similar misconduct in other jurisdictions.293 This
has increased acceptance of the idea that prosecutors are part of a national
prosecutorial corps with a common culture, not just members of isolated,
disconnected prosecutors’ offices on the federal, state, and local levels.
Despite vast differences among individual prosecutors and their offices, the
regulatory failures of one prosecutor in one county or district may be viewed
as characteristic of prosecutors elsewhere. In turn, there is greater receptivity
to descriptions of a “national epidemic” of Brady violations or other misconduct based on collected anecdotal evidence and to assertions that revealed
misconduct is “the tip of the iceberg,” whether or not these claims can be
proven.294
Third, the advent and subsequent popularization of blogs and social
media sites have made commentary more personal and accessible to the public. Reform-minded organizations and individuals have established blogs that
include commentary about prosecutors’ misconduct and links to stories on
this subject.295 Citizen journalism has allowed interested individuals to
employ press tools to inform one another.296 Any motivated individual with
a computer can publicly critique or criticize a prosecutor. As a result, there is
more discourse and there are more participants in the conversation. This
has broadened interest in prosecutorial misconduct from an academic elite
to a much more politically and socially diverse readership.
One practical effect of this is that stories about prosecutorial misconduct
in a given locale are more likely to go national and to remain longer in the
public eye. For example, there was sustained national interest in the miscon292 See, e.g., Radley Balko, Another Orleans Parish Man Freed Due to Prosecutor Misconduct,
WASH. POST (May 12, 2014), http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-watch/wp/2014/
05/12/another-orleans-parish-man-freed-due-to-prosecutor-misconduct (describing the
release of Reginald Adams, convicted because of the Orleans Parish prosecution’s “intentional prosecutorial misconduct,” which was a recurring problem under the former district
attorney’s leadership).
293 See, e.g., Radley Balko, The Untouchables: America’s Misbehaving Prosecutors, and the System That Protects Them, HUFFINGTON POST (Aug. 1, 2013, 2:18 PM), http://www.huffington
post.com/2013/08/01/prosecutorial-misconduct-new-orleans-louisiana_n_3529891.html
(examining the Orleans Parish prosecution’s suppression of evidence leading to the
wrongful conviction of John Thompson, describing other misconduct in the same office,
and referring to similar misconduct by other prosecutors’ offices).
294 See, e.g., Green, supra note 3, at 660–62.
295 See, e.g., Sophie, supra note 152; Police, Prosecutorial and Judicial Misconduct, TRUTH IN
JUSTICE, http://truthinjustice.org/p-pmisconduct.htm (last visited Oct. 19, 2016);
Prosecutorial Conduct (Good and Bad), WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS BLOG, http://wrongfulconvictionsblog.org/category/prosecutorial-conduct-good-and-bad (last visited Oct. 19, 2016);
see also Dolan, supra note 130.
296 See, e.g., Jay Rosen, A Most Useful Definition of Citizen Journalism, PRESSTHINK (July 14,
2008), http://archive.pressthink.org/2008/07/14/a_most_useful_d.html; see also Coalition
for YOU, IT COULD HAPPEN TO YOU!, http://www.itcouldhappen2you.org/coalition-newsfor-you/ (last visited Oct. 19, 2016).

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duct of the local North Carolina prosecutor, Michael Nifong in the Duke
Lacrosse case,297 and in the federal prosecutors’ discovery violations that
required overturning U.S. Senator Ted Stevens’s conviction.298 Information
technology, including blogs and Twitter, as well as websites, sustained
national attention in cases such as the disbarment of former prosecutor Ken
Anderson following the Morton case.299
The Black Lives Matter movement, which targeted prosecutorial unfairness in Ferguson and Staten Island, largely transmitted its ideas by YouTube,
blogs, Twitter, and other social media, all of which are accessible by videorecording-enabled cell phones. This movement has contributed to a fundamental shift in public attitudes about the fairness of the criminal justice system.300 Consequently, the idea that prosecutorial misconduct is pervasive
has become part of mainstream public conversation. Some in the mainstream media accept this premise as an established fact: news editorials have
claimed that rampant prosecutorial misconduct is a problem that needs solving.301 As importantly, jurists such as Judge Kozinski have echoed this concern.302 The conversation about prosecutorial misconduct has entered the
judicial professional literature.303 Although prosecutors continue to press

297 See supra notes 138–40 and accompanying text.
298 In the federal system, the highly publicized critique of government misconduct by
Department of Justice attorneys in Ted Stevens’s case was not unique. In United States v.
Jones, 620 F. Supp. 2d 163 (D. Mass. 2009), Judge Mark Wolf ordered the government to
show cause why sanctions should not be imposed upon finding that the government’s suppression of “plainly material exculpatory evidence” extended “a dismal history of intentional and inadvertent violations of the government’s duties to disclose in cases assigned to
this court.” Id. at 165 (quoting United States v. Jones, 609 F. Supp. 2d 113, 119 & n.2 (D.
Mass. 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted)). Other judges have expressed similar
concerns. See, e.g., United States v. Farinella, 558 F.3d 695, 700–02 (7th Cir. 2009) (criticizing harshly and naming the prosecutor for a range of issues including false and misleading
arguments and calls for the imposition of sanctions); United States v. Ye Gon, No. 07-181
(D.D.C. Aug. 28, 2009) (granting motion to dismiss and criticizing government for false
statements to the court and violation of Brady/Giglio obligation to provide information to
the defense); United States. v. Shaygan, 661 F. Supp. 2d 1289, 1315, 1325 (S.D. Fla. 2009)
(imposing $600,000 in sanctions against the government for its “‘win-at-all-cost’ behavior”), vacated and remanded, 652 F.3d 1297 (11th Cir. 2011).
299 See supra note 173 and accompanying text.
300 “Black Lives Matter” has spawned many blogs, websites, and social media entries.
See, e.g., Rich Juzwiak & Aleksander Chan, Unarmed People of Color Killed by Police,
1999–2014, GAWKER (Dec. 18, 2014, 2:15 PM), http://gawker.com/unarmed-people-ofcolor-killed-by-police-1999-2014-1666672349; see supra notes 207–13.
301 See supra notes 267–69, 286–94 and accompanying text (discussing reporting on
prosecutorial misconduct).
302 See United States v. Olsen, 737 F.3d 625, 631 (9th Cir. 2013) (Kozinski, C.J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc).
303 See, e.g., Barry Scheck, Four Reforms for the Twenty-First Century, 96 JUDICATURE 323
(2013); see also Kozinski, supra note 6.

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the point that misconduct is aberrational, their position is now met with
more skepticism.304
At the touch of a finger, one can now summon dozens of compilations,
reports, and in-depth articles chronicling prosecutors’ failure to disclose key
evidence, overcharging to obtain plea bargains, reliance on known faulty scientific evidence, and other misconduct. Some have been issued by nonprofit
reform groups such as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU),305
Human Rights Watch,306 and the Center for Prosecutorial Integrity.307
Others are generated by media outlets such as ProPublica,308 Slate,309 and
the Huffington Post,310 and publicized by groups such as the Marshall Project.311 Writings such as these are both a product of rhetorical and regulatory change and a driver of change—they both build on judicial writings and
influence future public and judicial opinion; they serve as products of reform
efforts and fuel ongoing reform efforts; they serve as an outlet for academic
insight and provide fodder for future academic scholarship.
IV. IMPLICATIONS: WHERE DO WE GO FROM HERE?
The description of prosecutorial accountability as evolutionary is meant
to convey more than that change comes slowly. More importantly, our point
is that change in the attitudes of those to whom prosecutors are accountable
is not simultaneous and uniform. There are thousands of prosecutors—
local, state, and federal—who appear in different courts of different jurisdictions before thousands of different judges who have opportunities to ignore
304 See, e.g., Johnson, supra note 98 (“Since [Olsen], the Justice Department has played
down incidents of misconduct by its prosecutors and agents. But a report last month by
the Project on Government Oversight found that hundreds of DOJ lawyers had violated
rules, laws or ethical standards.”).
305 See Prosecutorial Misconduct and Capital Punishment, ACLU, https://www.aclu.org/
issues/capital-punishment/prosecutorial-misconduct-and-capital-punishment (last visited
Oct. 19, 2016) (compiling resources related to prosecutorial misconduct and capital
punishment).
306 See HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH, supra note 287.
307 See CTR. FOR PROSECUTOR INTEGRITY, supra note 82, at app. B.
308 See Joaquin Sapien & Sergio Hernandez, Who Polices Prosecutors Who Abuse Their
Authority? Usually Nobody, PROPUBLICA (Apr. 3, 2013), http://www.propublica.org/article/
who-polices-prosecutors-who-abuse-their-authority-usually-nobody.
309 See Dahlia Lithwick, You’re All Out, SLATE (May 28, 2015), http://www.slate.com/
articles/news_and_politics/jurisprudence/2015/05/orange_county_prosecutor_miscon
duct_judge_goethals_takes_district_attorney.html.
310 See Balko, supra note 99.
311 See, e.g., Maurice Possley, Willingham Prosecutor Accused of Misconduct, MARSHALL PROJECT (Mar. 18, 2015), https://www.themarshallproject.org/2015/03/18/willingham-prosecutor-accused-of-misconduct; Prosecutors: A Curated Collection of Links, MARSHALL PROJECT,
https://www.themarshallproject.org/records/60-prosecutors#.k8BvU7qbQ (last updated
Oct. 19, 2016) (a compilation of scores of articles published by the Project about prosecutors); see also John Hollway, Reining in Prosecutorial Misconduct, WALL ST. J. (July 4, 2016),
http://www.wsj.com/article_email/reining-in-prosecutorial-misconduct-1467673202-lMyQj
AxMTA2ODAzNTUwNjU0Wj.

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or react to perceived misconduct. Prosecutors are subject to different state
disciplinary authorities, have different media representatives looking over
their shoulders, and answer to different constituencies. Different judges, disciplinary authorities, editors and reporters, and voters can have different attitudes toward prosecutors, their conduct, and their accountability.
Most important from a regulatory perspective are the judges—both
those who preside over or review criminal trials and those who oversee the
attorney disciplinary processes. No doubt, some share the assumptions
underlying the traditional, trusting, hands-off approach to accountability,
and others more fully embrace the assumptions underlying the more skeptical, proactive, Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0 approach. Our point is that
the assumptions and attitudes underlying the new approach are catching
hold among judges in increasing numbers. Information technology and
other conditions described in Part III help explain this shift.
The two approaches reflect both different empirical assumptions, primarily about prosecutorial regulation, and different philosophical premises.
Some judges will look at prosecutors through one prism, and other judges
will bring the contrasting perspective to bear.
The empirical question occasioning debate is whether prosecutorial misconduct, however conceived, is prevalent and systematic or whether it is unusual and isolated. Evolving judicial attitudes about this issue are inevitably
affected by ongoing public discourse about prosecutorial misconduct.
Another empirical question is how prosecutors’ future conduct will be
affected by judicial involvement, whether by way of investigations, informal
exhortations, personal sanctions, or reversals of convictions and other judicial remedies. For example, will a stronger judicial role encourage individual
prosecutors to be more careful and law-abiding and encourage their offices
to improve training and supervision? Will it simply be an ineffective use of
judicial resources; or worse, as some prosecutors argue, will it make prosecutors anxious and overly cautious to no good end?
The philosophical disagreements relate to prosecutors’ and judges’ relative roles. If one focuses on prosecutors’ role in a coordinate branch of government, one tends to favor political over regulatory accountability—the
judge’s role is to ensure fair trials and to apply the law; in general, judges
should not be telling prosecutors what to do, especially in areas of
prosecutorial discretion or when prosecutors’ questionable conduct does not
violate the law or affect the outcome of a trial. On the other hand, if one
focuses on prosecutors as lawyers who, along with other lawyers in the jurisdiction, are subject to judges’ disciplinary authority, judges might be
expected to take a more active supervisory role.312 Likewise, judges might
take a more active role if they believe they have responsibility for improving
legal processes by calling attention to deficiencies, including those relating to

312

See generally Zacharias & Green, supra note 56.

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prosecutors’ practices, rather than viewing the judiciary as a collection of
neutral umpires whose role is limited to calling balls and strikes.313
These two conflicting approaches to accountability can coexist even
among judges on the same court. One recent, somewhat enigmatic, example
is United States v. Adams,314 in which a three-judge Fourth Circuit panel overturned a district judge’s decision and filed most of its opinions under seal
“due to [its] sensitive nature,”315 with the exception of three opinions bearing on the question of the court’s role as informal regulator of the prosecutor’s office. Judge King’s opinion for the court reproduced a footnote from
the court’s sealed opinion expressing surprise that the government had not
confessed error on appeal. The footnote reminded the prosecution of the
injunctions in Berger that the federal prosecutor is obliged to see that justice
is done and to “strive to ensure fairness and justice.”316 Judge Agee, who
disagreed with the footnote, wrote a concurrence referring to prosecutors’
broad discretion and the expectation that they will prosecute earnestly and
vigorously. He expressed concern that if courts “too eagerly and too often
comment on the Government’s strategic choices, then the Government
could become a less zealous advocate—and our adversarial system of justice
would suffer for it.”317
Finally, Judge Davis published a concurring opinion defending the footnote and rejecting Judge Agee’s implication that the court was “operating
outside the bounds of [its] adjudicative responsibilities” by criticizing the
prosecution’s “manifestly irregular, if not illegal, ‘strategic choices.’”318
Judge Davis asserted that “judges need to say more, not less, to the political
branches about the serious deficits in our criminal justice system,”319 citing
several judges who had previously expressed similar views.320 He concluded:
“In an era of mass incarceration such as ours, any fear that restrained judicial
commentary on dicey prosecutorial practices or ‘strategic choices’ might
result in ‘the Government [ ] becom[ing] a less zealous advocate’ is most
charitably described as fanciful.”321
In essence, the two concurring judges expressed the opposing
approaches to prosecutorial accountability, sounding the competing themes
of these approaches. Judge Agee, representing the traditional approach,
stressed the importance of deference to prosecutors’ discretionary decisions
and the legitimacy of judicial passivity. Judge Davis placed his justification
313 See generally Bruce A. Green & Rebecca Roiphe, Regulating Discourtesy on the Bench: A
Study in the Evolution of Judicial Independence, 64 N.Y.U. ANN. SURV. AM. L. 497 (2009).
314 788 F.3d 115 (4th Cir. 2015).
315 Id. at 115.
316 Id. (citing Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935)).
317 Id. at 116 (Agee, J., concurring).
318 Id. at 116–17 (Davis, J., concurring).
319 Id. at 117.
320 Id. at 118 (first citing United States v. Ingram, 721 F.3d 35, 43 n.9 (2d Cir. 2013)
(Calabresi, J., concurring); then citing United States v. Bonner, 363 F.3d 213, 220 (3d Cir.
2004) (Smith, J., concurring); and then citing id. at 230 (McKee, J., dissenting)).
321 Id. at 118 (alterations in original) (citation omitted).

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for a more activist judicial role in response to prosecutorial misconduct,
broadly construed, against the backdrop of broader deficiencies in the criminal process.
The competing judicial approaches are depicted even more dramatically
in the district and appellate court decisions in United States v. McRae322 and
United States v. Bowen.323 These were federal prosecutions of New Orleans
police officers who shot civilians after Hurricane Katrina and covered up the
shootings. After guilty verdicts in the two cases, the defense challenged the
verdicts based on the discovery that federal prosecutors uninvolved in the
trials had anonymously posted inflammatory comments about the police on
the local newspaper’s website.
In McRae, the district judge summarily rejected the defense’s request for
a hearing into the details of the postings and other potential leaks, reasoning
that the prosecutors’ anonymous blogging, which added only incrementally
to other public discussion of the case, undermined neither the fairness of the
trial nor the integrity of the jury verdict.324 Reflecting the traditional
approach to accountability, which focuses on punishing individual rogue
prosecutors, the district judge noted that “there are other remedies available
that ‘allow the court to focus on the culpable individual rather than granting
a windfall to the unprejudiced defendant.’”325 The appellate court affirmed,
finding that while the prosecutors’ postings were “unprofessional, inappropriate, and deserving of our condemnation,” they were not actually or presumptively prejudicial.326
In stark contrast, the district judge in Bowen initiated an inquiry that
became a “legal odyssey” into the prosecutors’ conduct.327 The protracted
proceedings never resolved all of the judge’s questions but went far enough
for him to conclude that online postings by three high-level prosecutors warranted reversing all five officers’ convictions. The judge concluded his
detailed opinion with a rebuke: “The government’s actions, and initial lack of
candor and credibility thereafter, is like scar tissue that will long evidence
infidelity to the principles of ethics, professionalism, and basic fairness and
common sense necessary to every criminal prosecution, wherever it should
occur in this country.”328
Two of three appellate judges agreed. The dissenting judge, like the
judges in McRae, acknowledged that the prosecutors’ actions “merit the most
322 795 F.3d 471 (5th Cir. 2015), aff’g No. 10-154, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74743 (E.D.
La. June 2, 2014).
323 799 F.3d 336 (5th Cir. 2015), aff’g 969 F. Supp. 2d 546 (E.D. La. 2013), reh’g denied,
813 F.3d 600 (5th Cir. 2016).
324 McRae, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 74743, at *13.
325 Id. at *13 n.41 (quoting Bank of Nova Scotia v. United States, 487 U.S. 250, 263
(1988)).
326 McRae, 795 F.3d at 481.
327 Bowen, 969 F. Supp. 2d at 549.
328 Id. at 627.

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severe sanctions,” but concluded that a retrial was unwarranted because the
anonymous postings did not affect the jury’s verdicts.329
However, the majority saw a potential, even if unprovable, influence on
the jury and further, posited that the “mob mentality” to which the prosecutors’ online comments contributed may have influenced other defendants to
plead guilty or dissuaded witnesses from testifying.330 Although the majority
stressed the possibility that the trial was prejudiced, its opinion reads like an
exercise of regulatory authority that fits squarely into the Prosecutorial
Accountability 2.0 model. Even though the three offending prosecutors
acted independently, the court characterized their postings as a “pattern of
misconduct,” not “isolated missteps.”331 It criticized the prosecution’s inability to effectively self-regulate, observing that “the government refused to adequately investigate its errors, covered up what it knew to be misleading
omissions, and in some instances lied directly to the court.”332 And the court
expressly rejected the argument “that official and professional discipline
were adequate,” concluding that “[e]xerting professional discipline on three
individual government lawyers does nothing to solve the systemic
problem.”333
One question raised by the conflicting judicial approaches is who will
win out in the evolutionary scheme: Will Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0
become the dominant approach? Our cautious prediction is that the two
approaches will coexist for the foreseeable future. The underlying empirical
assumptions are unprovable and the underlying philosophical debate cannot
be conclusively won. The world in which prosecutors function is diverse, and
there is ample room for different rhetorical and regulatory approaches.
Another question is what will happen if Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0
becomes more dominant. As reflected in our earlier discussion, the implications will include some or all of the following: disciplinary authorities will
pursue more cases against prosecutors; bar associations will push for broader
disciplinary regulation of prosecutors, both by interpreting existing rules
broadly and by adopting additional restrictive standards and model rules for
prosecutors; legislators will adopt more demanding regulations of prosecutors with regard to discovery or other aspects of their conduct; and inroads
may slowly be made into absolute prosecutorial immunity from civil liabil329 United States v. Bowen, 799 F.3d 336, 360, 362 (5th Cir. 2015) (Prado, J., dissenting), reh’g denied, 813 F.3d 600 (5th Cir. 2016).
330 Id. at 358 (majority opinion).
331 Id. at 353.
332 Id. The court was also critical of other aspects of the prosecution, including the
presentation of a cooperating witness’s testimony “that was inconsistent and incredible,”
and the prosecution’s exercise of discretion in giving lenient treatment to cooperating
defendants, including one who lied to the grand jury, while “[throwing] the book at those
who went to trial.” Id. at 347.
333 Id. at 358–59. The anomalous result in Bowen may reflect judicial bias in favor of
police officers on trial more than anything else.

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ity.334 Finally, legislatures will consider regulatory models such as a state
commission on prosecutorial conduct or an inspector general for prosecutors’ offices.335
There are also implications for criminal defense and civil rights lawyers,
reform groups, the media, and academia. As regulatory institutions become
more interested in prosecutorial oversight, there will be more motions practice seeking judicial control of prosecutorial conduct. Overall, there will be
greater interest in telling regulators what to do. With respect to reforming
prosecutorial practices, for example, robust discussion has already developed
within the bar336 and academia.337 Increasing attention has also focused on
prosecutorial conduct relating to wrongful convictions338 and racial disparities.339 One can expect greater scrutiny, and more proposals for reform,
with regard to other aspects of prosecutors’ conduct.
The shift to Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0 would have particularly
profound implications for judges in criminal proceedings. More judges
would take an active role in supervising prosecutors as members of the bar.
They would be slower to take prosecutors at their word and to assume their
good faith, and quicker to identify perceived prosecutorial abuses, including
with regard to the exercise of prosecutorial discretion. They would become
more critical of prosecutors’ negligence and of inadequate supervision,
rather than targeting only what they perceive to be intentional wrongdoing.
Rather than looking at instances of prosecutorial wrongdoing as individual,
isolated, and aberrational occurrences, they would consider whether wrong334 See Morse v. Fusto, 804 F.3d 538, 547, 550 (2d Cir. 2015) (holding prosecutor civilly
liable and denying qualified immunity where prosecutor intentionally manipulated evidence); Scheck, supra note 280.
335 See, e.g., S.B. 24, 238th Reg. Sess. (N.Y. 2015), https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/bills/2015/S24 (proposing to establish a state commission on prosecutorial conduct).
336 The American Trial Lawyers Association and various other national organizations
will likely continue to make proposals for changes in discovery laws. See, e.g., Barry Scheck
& Nancy Gertner, Combating Brady Violations with an ‘Ethical Rule’ Order for the Disclosure of
Favorable Evidence, 37 CHAMPION 40 (2013) (proposing an “Ethical Order” that should be
adopted by courts to insure compliance with discovery); Irwin H. Schwartz, Beyond Brady:
Using Model Rule 3.8(D) in Federal Court Discovery of Exculpatory Information, 34 CHAMPION 34
(2010).
337 See, e.g., Miriam H. Baer, Timing Brady, 115 COLUM. L. REV. 1, 61–64 (2015) (advocating earlier disclosure of evidence to the defense).
338 See, e.g., Jon B. Gould & Richard A. Leo, One Hundred Years Later: Wrongful Convictions After a Century of Research, 100 J. CRIM. L. & CRIMINOLOGY 825, 854 (2010) (noting that
certain prosecutorial conduct, including witness coaching, inappropriate closing arguments, and withholding evidence, results in wrongful convictions); Peter A. Joy, The Relationship Between Prosecutorial Misconduct and Wrongful Convictions: Shaping Remedies for a
Broken System, 2006 WIS. L. REV. 399; Alisha L. McKay, Let the Master Answer: Why the Doctrine
of Respondeat Superior Should Be Used to Address Egregious Prosecutorial Misconduct Resulting in
Wrongful Convictions, 2012 WIS. L. REV. 1215.
339 See, e.g., Angela J. Davis, In Search of Racial Justice: The Role of the Prosecutor, 16 N.Y.U.
J. LEGIS. & PUB. POL’Y 821 (2013) (examining the role of prosecutors in creating racial
disparity within the criminal justice system).

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doing, whether or not intentional, is symptomatic of systemic deficiencies. If
so, they would seek meaningful assurances that, through training, supervision, and other systemic reforms, the prosecutor’s office will reduce the likelihood of recurrences. Judges would be more inclined to refer prosecutors to
state disciplinary authorities rather than relying on prosecutorial self-regulation, and they would be more open to initiating their own investigations into
legal and ethical wrongdoing. And they would overcome their traditional
reluctance to remedy serious prosecutorial wrongdoing in the course of criminal proceedings.340
Finally, a significant implication of Prosecutorial Accountability 2.0,
whether or not it comes to dominate, relates to the reactions of prosecutors.
No doubt, some will not even acknowledge the shift. Just as some prosecutors consider prosecutorial misconduct to be a problem of rogue prosecutors, some will perceive the responses of judges such as Judge Kozinski, Judge
Sullivan, and Chief Judge Wolf as aberrational. Others will assume that both
prosecutorial misconduct and the regulatory response are problems in other
jurisdictions, not their own. But these assumptions will become increasingly
unsustainable as, in the information age, cases of prosecutorial misconduct
and judicial criticisms linger in the public eye.
Other prosecutors may hope that shifting attitudes within the judiciary
are like the swing of a pendulum. They will await the day when the public
again becomes preoccupied with the fear of crime. When public attitudes
change, they may assume judges and other regulators will return to being
generally unconcerned about occasional, seemingly isolated prosecutorial
missteps.
Meanwhile, some or all prosecutors will at times push back against the
regulatory shift.341 The federal prosecution did so unsuccessfully in Bowen,
in furtherance of its efforts to avoid a retrial, by arguing that wrongdoing was
not systemic, that the Department of Justice could adequately police itself,
and that punishing the three individual rogue prosecutors was an adequate
remedy. Likewise, the Department of Justice pushed back against regulatory
expansion in opposing the adoption of prosecutorial ethics rules on postconviction obligations,342 in opposing an interpretation of the discovery pro340 See supra notes 61–65 and accompanying text.
341 Perhaps the most notable example was the Department of Justice’s response to
efforts to apply disciplinary rules based on Model Rule 4.2 to restrict prosecutors and their
agents from interrogating represented suspects and defendants. The Department’s reaction included adopting an internal memorandum, followed by a regulation, to authorize
prosecutors to engage in conduct that might otherwise be forbidden by the rules. The
Department’s efforts provoked a judicial and congressional backlash, culminating in legislation nullifying the regulation and expressly subjecting prosecutors to state ethics rules.
For accounts of this series of events, see Rima Sirota, Reassessing the Citizens Protection Act: A
Good Thing It Passed, and a Good Thing It Failed, 43 SW. L. REV. 51, 54–85 (2013); Fred C.
Zacharias & Bruce A. Green, The Uniqueness of Federal Prosecutors, 88 GEO. L.J. 207, 211–16
(2000).
342 See Green, supra note 4, at 892–903.

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vision to go beyond the constitutional requirement,343 and in opposing proposed legislation on federal criminal discovery.344 Some state and local
prosecutors have pushed back in similar ways.345
But that said, prosecutors’ responses have not been uniformly unyielding. Prosecutors have a long tradition of being conciliatory when they think
they must. The Department of Justice, for example, has often adopted voluntary, unenforceable self-restraint, as a matter of internal policy, if only to discourage courts or legislatures from adopting enforceable restraints.346 The
revision of federal discovery policy after the collapse of the Ted Stevens prosecution is a recent example.347 State prosecutors’ establishment of Conviction Integrity Units is a comparable response, in part, to regulatory
pressures.348 Prosecutors are sensitive to small regulatory shifts. Even if only
a handful of judges take a more aggressive regulatory approach, prosecutors
will have an incentive to be more careful lest they come before a more progressive judge.
CONCLUSION
Attention to prosecutorial misconduct has grown in the Internet era.
Traditionally, prosecutorial misconduct was viewed as episodic, where the
perception was that only a few “rogue prosecutors” engaged in such conduct.
Historically, there was limited examination of the issue beyond some defense
organizations and a few judges, and regulation of prosecutorial conduct,
either by courts or disciplinary authorities, was scant. Discipline within prosecutors’ offices was considered ineffective. It was difficult to obtain information about prosecutorial misconduct in cases and, to the extent the issues
were exposed, discussions reached a limited audience.
This has changed significantly in the Internet era. The rhetorical shift
has moved toward the perception that prosecutorial misconduct is recurring
and systemic. Moreover, there has been a regulatory shift toward examining
prosecutorial conduct more broadly. Judges more readily express skepticism
about prosecutorial compliance with law and ethics rules, and legislative
reform has targeted prosecutorial conduct, most notably in areas regarding
343 See Brief for the United States as Amicus Curiae in Support of Appellee Jeffrey
Auerhahn, In re Auerhahn, 724 F.3d 103 (1st Cir. 2013) (No. 11-2206); Brief for the
United States as Amicus Curiae in Support of Respondent Andrew J. Kline at v, In re Kline,
113 A.3d 202 (D.C. 2015) (No. 11-BD-007).
344 See Green, supra note 3, at 641–42.
345 See Green, supra note 4, at 889–93 (discussing state prosecutors’ opposition to ABA
Model Rules 3.8(g), (h)); Weaver, supra note 151 (discussing the pushback of New York
District Attorney Fitzpatrick); see also N.Y. STATE JUSTICE TASK FORCE, REPORT OF THE NEW
YORK STATE JUSTICE TASK FORCE OF ITS RECOMMENDATIONS REGARDING CRIMINAL DISCOVERY
REFORM 13 (2014), http://www.nyjusticetaskforce.com/pdfs/Criminal-Discovery.pdf.
346 See generally Ellen S. Podgor, Department of Justice Guidelines: Balancing “Discretionary
Justice”, 13 CORNELL J.L. & PUB. POL’Y 167, 169 (2004).
347 See supra note 183 and accompanying text.
348 See supra notes 191–205 and accompanying text.

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compliance with discovery in criminal cases. Even disciplinary authorities
have stepped up action against errant prosecutors.
The reasons for the shift in attention to prosecutorial misconduct are
multiple and interrelated. We have highlighted five necessary social conditions, beginning with the obvious one—the recurrence of prosecutorial
misconduct.
Second, failings of the criminal justice system are front and center in the
American discourse. Over-criminalization, mass incarceration, racial disparity in policing, and a myriad of other criminal justice concerns are the fodder
of daily news stories. Many of these implicate prosecutors’ work, especially
their exercise of discretion in investigation, charging, plea bargaining, and
sentencing. Concern about prosecutorial conduct is no longer limited to
intentional lawbreaking.
Third, hundreds of DNA exonerations and the work of innocence
projects exposing the causes of wrongful convictions have prompted public
and professional discourse about the prosecutorial responsibility to avert
wrongful convictions. Years of litigation, scientific research, and policy work
exposed cases where prosecutors relied upon faulty eyewitness identification,
false confessions, bad science, and police misconduct in obtaining criminal
convictions of innocent people. Many of those cases also involved intentional and negligent failure to disclose evidence favorable to the defense.
Fourth, academic scholarship, particularly in the social sciences, has
demonstrated deficiencies in the criminal justice process that prosecutors
can ameliorate, and deficiencies in prosecutors’ decisionmaking. The scholarship has contributed to the expansion of concern from deliberate
prosecutorial wrongdoing to a concept of misconduct that encompasses both
negligent wrongdoing and failures to take reasonable measures to ensure the
fairness and reliability of the criminal process.
Fifth, as a consequence of and contributor to increased public attention
to prosecutorial misconduct, reform organizations slowly built momentum
toward discovery reform and other reform directed at prosecutors’ conduct.
However, it is unlikely that any of these conditions, individually or collectively, would have resulted in the rhetorical and regulatory shift we describe
but for a change in the medium by which prosecutors’ conduct is catalogued
and debated and made a subject of reform. Information technology has
served as a catalyst for change. The Internet has expanded public exposure
to wrongful conviction cases, the fault lines in the criminal justice system, the
misconduct of prosecutors, and work of reform organizations. Blogs, listservs, Twitter, evolving sites, and new applications contribute to a flurry and
exchange of information that was impossible in the pre-Internet days.
There has been a shifting discourse about prosecutorial misconduct, its
causes, and potential remedies. Attention to the issue has not waned in the
past decade. If anything, public attention is relatively constant and sustained
by Internet exposure of new cases, issues, proposed reforms, and new programs. Slowly, but in significant measure, courts, legislatures, and disciplinary authorities have responded to the call for enhanced accountability

Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2722791

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measures. One cannot predict the future, but the inevitable increase in the
sources, availability, and dissemination of information suggests that at the
very least, information technology will continue to fuel a movement toward
expanded judicial, legislative, and disciplinary regulation of prosecutors and
attention to systemic changes in the role of prosecutors in our criminal justice system.

Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2722791

 

 

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