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Medwed Boston University Law Review Prosecutorial Resistance to Post-conviction Claims of Innocence 2004

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THE ZEAL DEAL: PROSECUTORIAL RESISTANCE TO
POST-CONVICTION CLAIMS OF INNOCENCE
DANIEL S. MEDWED*

INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................... 125
I. THE INSTITUTIONAL CULTURE OF PROSECUTORS’ OFFICES ................ 132
A. Professional Incentives to Obtain and Maintain Convictions ..... 134
B. Psychological and Personal Barriers for Prosecutors
Confronting Post-Conviction Innocence Claims ......................... 138
C. The Needle in a Haystack Disincentive ....................................... 148
II. UNDER PRESSURE: POLITICAL VARIABLES AFFECTING
PROSECUTORIAL DECISIONS IN THE POST-CONVICTION CONTEXT ..... 150
A. The Elected Prosecutor ............................................................... 151
B. The Political Consequences of Post-Conviction Innocence
Claims for Prosecutors................................................................ 156
III. THOUGHTS ON REFORM ....................................................................... 169
A. Education..................................................................................... 170
B. Carrots and Sticks ....................................................................... 171
C. Administrative Reorganization .................................................... 175
D. Improving Political Accountability ............................................. 177
E. Re-Evaluating the Public Prosecutor Model............................... 180
CONCLUSION ................................................................................................... 181
INTRODUCTION
Prosecutors in St. Paul, Minnesota recently sought to vacate a 1985 rape
conviction after a deoxyribonucleic acid (“DNA”) test confirmed the man’s
innocence.1 What made this event notable was not that an innocent person had
been exonerated based on post-conviction DNA testing—indeed, 140 people
*

Instructor, Brooklyn Law School. B.A., Yale College, 1991; J.D., Harvard Law
School, 1995. I am grateful to many of my colleagues at Brooklyn Law School, my future
colleagues at the University of Utah, S.J. Quinney College of Law, and members of the
Innocence Network for sharing their thoughts on this project, particularly Ursula Bentele,
Adele Bernhard, Stacy Caplow, Paul Cassell, Linda Feldman, Will Hellerstein, Susan
Herman, Sharissa Jones, Claire Kelly, Donna Lee, Erik Luna, Dana Brakman Reiser, Larry
Solan, and Joan Wexler. Special thanks as well to the Brooklyn Law School Summer
Stipend Program for its financial support and to two Brooklyn students from the Class of
2005, Duncan Peterson and Evan Lipton, for their assistance.
1
Paul Gustafson, DNA Exonerates Man Convicted of ‘85 Rape, STAR TRIB.
(Minneapolis), Nov. 14, 2002, at 1A (describing the man’s exoneration); Jodi Wilgoren,
Prosecutors Use DNA Test to Clear Man in ‘85 Rape, N.Y. TIMES, Nov. 14, 2002, at A22.

125

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have been freed in that fashion over the last few years2—but that, for the first
time, a local district attorney’s office had initiated the process that led to the
exoneration rather than members of the defense team.3 Susan Gaertner, the
chief prosecutor in St. Paul, explained that “[t]he major reason we undertook
this review is because of the attack on prosecutors and the criminal justice
system lately—I’m afraid that it’s left an impression with the public that all we
care about is convictions, and not justice.”4
To be sure, a host of individual prosecutors and entire district attorneys’
offices themselves have shown a concern for justice by attempting to remedy
the problem of wrongful convictions. In addition to unilaterally reviewing
post-conviction cases where biological evidence could be subjected to new
forms of scientific testing,5 several prosecutors have tried to prevent unjust
convictions on the front end by establishing committees to evaluate and
2 For a current tally of DNA exonerations, see The Innocence Project, Innocence Project
Homepage, at http://www.innocenceproject.org (last accessed Jan. 9, 2004) [hereinafter The
Innocence Project].
3 See Wilgoren, supra note 1 (characterizing this as the first prosecutor-initiated
exoneration in the country). In response to a December 2002 audit, which found atrocious
conditions in a Houston DNA testing facility, prosecutors reviewed almost ninety cases and,
in March 2003, cleared a man convicted of rape after DNA testing proved his innocence.
See Adam Liptak, Houston DNA Review Clears Convicted Rapist, and Ripples in Texas
Could Be Vast, N.Y. TIMES, Mar. 11, 2003, at A14; Nick Madigan, Houston’s Troubled
DNA Crime Lab Faces Growing Scrutiny, N.Y. TIMES, Feb. 9, 2003, § 1, at 20. Similarly,
in May 2003, the New York County District Attorney’s Office freed a man, who had spent
twelve years in prison for a rape he did not commit, through New York City’s “backlog
project” in which prosecutors utilize a DNA databank to re-examine past sex crimes.
Robert McFadden, DNA Clears Rape Convict After 12 Years, N.Y. TIMES, May 20, 2003, at
B1.
It is becoming increasingly common for prosecutors to take the initiative to review cases,
although not necessarily to exonerate prisoners as a result. See Judith A. Goldberg & David
M. Siegel, The Ethical Obligations of Prosecutors in Cases Involving Postconviction Claims
of Innocence, 38 CAL. W. L. REV. 389, 394 n.21 (2002) (citing articles about prosecutorinitiated reviews); Seth F. Kreimer & David Rudovsky, Double Helix, Double Bind: Factual
Innocence and Postconviction DNA Testing, 151 U. PA. L. REV. 547, 557-60 (2002)
(describing reviews that prosecutors have conducted in San Diego, Minnesota, and Orange
County, California); Ross E. Milloy, Some Prosecutors Willing to Review DNA Evidence,
N.Y. TIMES, Oct. 20, 2000, at A18 (describing the decision of a district attorney in Texas to
review four-hundred convictions after DNA evidence exonerated a man imprisoned for
almost sixteen years, and mentioning the commencement of similar reviews in San Diego
and Riverside, California).
4
Wilgoren, supra note 1; see also Paul Gustafson, DNA Tests May Help Inmates Prove
Innocence; Ramsey County Is Reviewing Old Convictions to See if New Tests Might Change
Outcomes, STAR TRIB. (Minneapolis), Mar. 2, 2001, at 1B (describing Gaertner’s desire to
conduct a review of old cases).
5 See supra note 3 and accompanying text (collecting instances of prosecutor-initiated
reviews of DNA evidence).

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possibly dismiss cases on the verge of proceeding to trial built solely upon the
testimony of a single eyewitness.6 Some district attorneys have even
implemented office-wide policies decreeing that, in specific circumstances,
they will not oppose a motion for a new trial based on newly discovered
evidence.7 Frequently, moreover, the public rhetoric and personal beliefs
expressed by prosecutors condemn the idea that any district attorney would
willingly permit an innocent person to languish in prison.8
Nevertheless, conduct by prosecutors can have a negative impact on the
outcome of post-conviction innocence claims.9 First, in the post-conviction
DNA testing context, the prosecution can affect the availability of this option
by opposing the testing altogether10 or simply by stalling in turning over the
6

Sean Gardiner, For Them, No Justice; Bad Convictions Put 13 Men in Prison.
Persistence–and Luck–Got Them Out, NEWSDAY, Dec. 8, 2002, at A03 (reporting that the
chief prosecutor in Brooklyn implemented a rule whereby he must personally approve all
felony cases in which only a single eyewitness identified the accused); Robin Topping,
Panel Puts Justice Before Prosecution, NEWSDAY, Jan. 8, 2003, at A21 (describing the work
of the One Witness Committee in the Nassau County District Attorney’s Office in New
York, which annually evaluates approximately ten cases that appear questionable and
dismisses on average two per year).
7 Mark Lee, an assistant prosecutor in the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office in
Massachusetts, for instance, has noted how his office adapted to advances in DNA
technology by softening its stance on motions for a new trial. See Mark Lee, The Impact of
DNA Technology on the Prosecutor: Handling Motions for Post-Conviction Relief, 35 NEW
ENG. L. REV. 663, 664 (2001). Lee has observed that “[o]rdinarily, when faced with a direct
appeal or a motion for a new trial, the government typically opposes such appeals or
motions,” but “with respect to requests for DNA testing, the DA’s office has adopted a
position that it will not oppose a defendant’s request for funds to have DNA testing
performed.” Id. Ultimately, in Lee’s view, “[a] DNA test result that clearly exonerates a
defendant should result in the Commonwealth’s assent to the motion for new trial . . . .” Id.
8 See, e.g., Sean Gardiner, Getting It Right: Experts Eye Measures to Prevent Injustices,
NEWSDAY, Dec. 11, 2002, at A08 (quoting one prosecutor as saying, “‘I have no trouble
with any post-conviction remedy that tests the question of do we have an innocent person in
jail’ . . . ‘[i]f you’ve got one person sitting in jail that shouldn’t be there, the system has
done a terrible thing’”); Kevin P. Meenan, DNA Resources Limited, USA TODAY, June 26,
2001, at 12A (arguing, as president-elect of the National District Attorneys Association, that
“[n]o prosecutor in America would willingly convict an innocent person or have one
wrongly convicted languishing in prison”).
9 See Bruce Green, Why Should Prosecutors “Seek Justice”?, 26 FORDHAM URB. L.J.
607, 638 n.133 (1999) (noting that the typical prosecutorial response to post-conviction
innocence claims is to deny that the newly discovered proof is legitimate and that the
prisoner is innocent); see also Goldberg & Siegel, supra note 3, at 394-95 (“On one end of
the spectrum, prosecutors have assented to, and in some cases assisted with, the locating and
testing of evidence . . . . On the other end of this spectrum, prosecutors have forced
defendants to engage in protracted litigation to obtain the evidence and the tests.”).
10
District attorneys often oppose testing on the grounds that it cannot prove the inmate’s
innocence and is a waste of time and money. For example, prosecutors in Pennsylvania
spent seven years fighting Bruce Godschalk’s request for DNA tests on the evidence related

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biological evidence sought by the defense,11 which is almost invariably in the
possession of law enforcement.12 Second, where post-conviction innocence
claims are unrelated to DNA testing, such as those involving statements by
previously unknown witnesses or confessions by the actual perpetrator,13 the
prosecution can influence how courts will resolve the claims by deciding
whether to cooperate with the defense, for instance, by joining—or at least not
contesting—a defendant’s request for an evidentiary hearing based on the
newly discovered evidence.14
to his conviction for two rapes. See, e.g., Michael Rubinkam, DNA Evidence Frees Man
Jailed Since ‘87 in Rape of 2 Women; Prosecutor to Seek Dismissal of Charges, PITT. POSTGAZETTE, Feb. 15, 2002, at B2. Ultimately, Godschalk sued in federal court to force the
release of the evidence that was uncovered during the investigation of the crime, and DNA
tests eventually exonerated him. See id. This case prompted The Washington Post to
publish an editorial arguing that “[e]ven in the absence of more permissive rules,
prosecutors need to be more open to testing that could undermine a verdict. You just never
know when a seemingly airtight case will melt on close inspection.” Editorial, Yet Another
DNA Exoneration, WASH. POST, Feb. 18, 2002, at A22; accord Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra
note 3, at 547-52 (discussing the Godschalk case in detail).
11 Short of actually refusing to turn over evidence, prosecutors can hinder defendants’
access to post-conviction testing through a variety of concrete methods. See Goldberg &
Siegel, supra note 3, at 400-06. Some state post-conviction DNA testing statutes demand
that applicants must still be incarcerated, signifying that the “speed of the prosecutor’s
response . . . could certainly affect whether the testing can occur during the pendency of the
sentence, and therefore the availability of testing under certain statutes.” Id. at 402.
Moreover, almost every jurisdiction that authorizes DNA testing requires a showing as to
the authenticity of the evidence, and, in theory, “prosecutors could demand that the
defendant establish a chain of custody stretching over decades, through offices and
personnel who are clearly beyond his control.” Id. at 403.
12 Simply locating the existing evidence may be burdensome for defendants and defense
lawyers, and may require the assistance of prosecutors. See Laura Maggi, DNA Test for
Inmates Elusive Despite Law; La. Fund Lacks Cash; Evidence Hard to Find, TIMESPICAYUNE (New Orleans), Dec. 16, 2002, at 1 (according to Emily Bolton, legal director of
the Innocence Project New Orleans, the evidence could be with the clerk of the court, the
Criminal Sheriff’s Office, a crime lab, or the state police, thereby making the evidence
difficult for defendants to find).
13
Post-conviction innocence claims that do not have a DNA component may revolve
around any number of other types of evidence; this evidence is often testimonial, including
recantations by trial witnesses. See James McCloskey, Convicting the Innocent, 8 CRIM.
JUST. ETHICS 2, 56 (1989) (observing that such claims may involve new witnesses or trial
witnesses who recant their previous testimony).
14 In New York State, for example, courts summarily deny post-conviction motions with
regularity. Behavior by prosecutors that signals the possible legitimacy of a particular claim
may affect a judge’s decision regarding whether to grant an evidentiary hearing and,
accordingly, enhance the likelihood that actually innocent prisoners will be vindicated. See,
e.g., Goldberg & Siegel, supra note 3, at 393-94 (emphasizing the role the prosecutor plays
in the availability of DNA testing for the defendant); Sean Gardiner, Dynamics of Righting a
Wrong: The DA’s Role in Reversals, NEWSDAY, Dec. 10, 2002, at A35 (describing how

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Not only can prosecutors theoretically affect the results of post-conviction
innocence claims, but they often do so in reality. Empirical proof suggests that
prosecutors have consented to DNA tests in less than fifty percent of the cases
in which testing later exonerated the inmate.15 Likewise, qualitative evidence
of prosecutorial indifference and, on occasion, hostility to even the most
meritorious of post-conviction innocence claims is alarming.16
Some
prosecutors have continued to fight these claims despite clear evidence,
including DNA test results, exculpating the defendant;17 others have averted
the possibility of post-conviction litigation by destroying biological evidence
or urging defendants to waive their rights to the preservation of the evidence.18
Prosecutorial intransigence to setting aside the conviction of an innocent
prisoner all too often wanes only after it becomes politically expedient (or even
prosecutors in Queens County, New York, actively re-investigated three murder cases
during a five-year period and joined in the motions to set aside the verdicts in all three).
15 See Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 564 n.63 (mentioning data compiled by The
Innocence Project at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law); see also Adam Liptak,
Prosecutors See Limits to Doubt in Capital Cases, N.Y. TIMES, Feb. 24, 2003, at A1.
16 See Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 561-64 (discussing instances of
prosecutorial opposition to post-conviction DNA testing); see also McCloskey, supra note
13, at 56 (noting that prosecutors are not only “coldly unresponsive” to post-conviction
innocence claims, “but they quickly act to suppress or stamp them out”); Liptak, supra note
15 (“‘There is enormous resistance to these exonerations’ . . . . ‘That raises, frankly, a
serious ethical question. A prosecutor’s duty is to justice, not convictions. Is it about
holding onto victory? Is it about the fear of having made a mistake?’” (quoting Barry
Scheck, Co-Director of The Innocence Project at Cardozo)).
17 See, e.g., James S. Liebman, The New Death Penalty Debate: What’s DNA Got to Do
with It?, 33 COLUM. HUM. RTS. L. REV. 527, 543 (2002) (arguing that “prosecutors have
become more sophisticated about hypothesizing the existence of ‘unindicted co-ejaculators’
(to borrow Peter Neufeld’s phrase) to explain how the defendant can still be guilty, though
another man’s semen is found on the rape-murder victim”); Charles I. Lugosi, Punishing the
Factually Innocent: DNA, Habeas Corpus and Justice, 12 GEO. MASON U. CIV. RTS. L.J.
233, 235 (2002). Lugosi observes:
[E]ven after DNA testing has proven the innocence of a prisoner, prosecutors refuse to
accept the results and rely upon other evidence that supports guilt, or they create a new
theory of how the crime occurred (never before put to the judge and jury) to justify the
continued punishment of an innocent person.
Id.; see also Adam Liptak, Prosecutors Fight DNA Use for Exoneration, N.Y. TIMES, Aug.
29, 2003, at A1 (discussing two cases in Florida in which DNA testing proved the biological
evidence could not have come from the defendants, yet prosecutors continued to challenge
their innocence claims).
18 See Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 563. Oftentimes, authorities lose or destroy
the evidence from a case after the defendant’s initial appeal. See Barry Scheck & Peter
Neufeld, DNA and Innocence Scholarship, in WRONGLY CONVICTED: PERSPECTIVES ON
FAILED JUSTICE 241, 245 (Saundra D. Westervelt & John A. Humphrey eds., 2001) (“In 75
percent of Innocence Project cases, matters in which it has been established that a favorable
DNA result would be sufficient to vacate the inmate’s conviction, the relevant biological
evidence has either been destroyed or lost.”).

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beneficial) to do so.19 Overall, the signs of resistance by prosecutors to
legitimate post-conviction innocence claims raise troubling questions.
This article examines the question of why prosecutors may turn a blind eye
to post-conviction allegations of innocence20 and concludes that there are
certain institutional and political barriers that deter district attorneys’ offices
from recognizing potentially valid innocence claims, the efforts of St. Paul’s
chief prosecutor and others notwithstanding.21 Part I analyzes the institutional
culture of district attorneys’ offices, evaluating whether specific aspects of how
these organizations operate create an environment where resistance to postconviction innocence claims is an accepted and pervasive cultural norm. Part
II addresses the impact of politics on prosecutorial approaches to innocence
claims and asserts that the bulk of district attorneys benefit politically from
battling defense efforts to overturn convictions and thereby appearing “toughon-crime.”22 Finally, Part III discusses a series of reforms that might affect
19

See infra notes 151-237 and accompanying text. Also, in an apparent effort to save
face, some prosecutors have grudgingly accepted the legitimacy of the innocence claim but
still demanded that the defendant plead guilty to a lesser charge. See, e.g., William
Glaberson, Man Is Freed in Killing in Which His Brother Admitted a Role, N.Y. TIMES,
Sept. 11, 2002, at B1 (describing the defendant’s guilty plea to possession of a weapon after
serving thirteen years on a murder conviction and after he implicated his brother in his
testimony).
In one New York City case, two men, Jose Morales and Ruben Montalvo, were
exonerated when a priest and a lawyer came forward to state that another man, who later
died, had confided in them and confessed to the murder at issue. John Tierney, The Big
City; Prosecutors Never Need to Apologize, N.Y. TIMES, July 27, 2001, at B1. While
prosecutors evaluated whether to re-try the case, a federal judge ordered the release of one
of the men and stated that “‘[i]t is difficult to imagine that any reasonable jury could find
Morales guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.’” Id. The state prosecutors, however, opposed
bail under any circumstances, an odd result considering that Morales had received bail
thirteen years before when he was facing murder charges. Id.
20 In this article, a post-conviction innocence claim refers to any collateral attack upon
the judgment of conviction, i.e., a petition for a federal writ of habeas corpus, see 28
U.S.C.A. §§ 2244, 2254 (2001), or an analogue in state court, where the defendant’s main
contention is that he is actually innocent. Actual innocence differs from general allegations
of wrongful conviction. See, e.g., Daniel Givelber, Meaningless Acquittals, Meaningful
Convictions: Do We Reliably Acquit the Innocent?, 49 RUTGERS L. REV. 1317, 1346 n.92
(1997) (“Actual innocence means what it says—the defendant did not commit the crime of
which he has been convicted. Wrongfully-convicted defendants may or may not be actually
innocent; their defining characteristic is that their convictions were secured as a result of a
material legal error.”).
21
See supra notes 1-8 and accompanying text.
22 A Bureau of Justice study on prosecutors defines a chief prosecutor as “the elected or
appointed attorney advocating for the public in felony cases and in a variety of generally
less serious offenses.” CAROL J. DEFRANCES, U.S. DEP’T OF JUSTICE, PROSECUTORS IN
STATE COURTS, 2001, at 2 (2002), available at http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/
psc01.pdf (last accessed Jan. 9, 2004). Chief prosecutors are granted an assortment of titles,

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prosecutorial behavior in the domain of post-conviction matters and help
effectuate the oft-stated maxim of our criminal justice system that it is better
for ten guilty people to go free than for one innocent person to remain in
prison.23 These proposed reforms include providing incentives and training to
minimize the emphasis placed upon obtaining convictions within prosecutorial
agencies, and re-thinking both the manner in which chief prosecutors campaign
for office and the procedures through which they are elected.
It is impossible to know how many innocent people are currently imprisoned
in this country, yet the wave of exonerations stemming from DNA testing in
the last decade suggests the number is not insignificant.24 Even more, these
exonerations likely comprise only the tip of the iceberg. The vast majority of
criminal cases lack biological evidence suitable for DNA testing25 and these
matters presumably contain the same proportion of flaws—erroneous
eyewitness identifications, false confessions, ineffective assistance of counsel,
and so forth—that led to the wrongful convictions in the cases later reversed
through DNA tests.26 Notably, non-DNA cases are much harder for defendants
including “district attorney,” “prosecuting attorney,” “county attorney,” “commonwealth
attorney,” and “state’s attorney.” Id.
23 This adage is generally attributed to either William Blackstone or Matthew Hale. See,
e.g., Harold J. Berman & Charles J. Reid, Jr., The Transformation of English Legal Science:
From Hale to Blackstone, 45 EMORY L.J. 437, 482 (1996); see also In re Winship, 397 U.S.
358, 372 (1970) (Harlan, J., concurring) (stating the “fundamental value determination of
our society that it is far worse to convict an innocent man than to let a guilty man go free”).
24 See The Innocence Project, supra note 2 (reporting that DNA testing has exonerated
140 people); Richard A. Rosen, Innocence and Death, 82 N.C. L. REV. 61, 69-70 (2003)
(observing that DNA exonerations comprise “a random audit of convictions” and that “DNA
testing has demonstrated beyond question that in the normal course of events, using the
normal run of evidence, we convict innocent people”); see also Paul G. Cassell, Protecting
the Innocent from False Confessions and Lost Confessions—And from Miranda, 88 J. CRIM.
L. & CRIMINOLOGY 497, 518 (1998) (estimating that “approximately 330 wrongful
convictions occur around the country each year”); Givelber, supra note 20, at 1336-50
(discussing studies relating to the conviction of innocent people).
25 See Death Penalty Overhaul: Congressional Testimony Before the Comm. on Senate
Judiciary, 107th Cong. (June 18, 2002), at 2002 WL 20318239 [hereinafter Death Penalty
Overhaul] (“The vast majority (probably 80%) of felony cases do not involve biological
evidence that can be subjected to DNA testing.” (testimony of Barry Scheck)); Rosen, supra
note 24, at 73 (noting “that for every defendant who is exonerated because of DNA
evidence, there have been certainly hundreds, maybe thousands, who have been convicted”
on comparable evidence yet whose cases lack physical evidence suitable for scientific
testing).
26
See BARRY SCHECK ET AL., ACTUAL INNOCENCE: WHEN JUSTICE GOES WRONG AND
HOW TO MAKE IT RIGHT (2001); see also Stanley Z. Fisher, Convictions of Innocent Persons
in Massachusetts: An Overview, 12 B.U. PUB. INT. L.J. 1, 62-68 (2002) (chronicling the
array of factors, including unreliable informants, mistaken eyewitness identifications,
withholding of evidence by prosecutors, and defense counsel exhibiting poor lawyering, that
contributed to the convictions of fifteen factually innocent, now exonerated, people in

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to overturn through post-conviction proceedings because of the absence of a
method to prove innocence to a scientific certainty.27 Thus, the reaction of
prosecutors to post-conviction innocence claims has had and will continue to
have a great bearing on whether actually innocent prisoners receive justice.28
I.

THE INSTITUTIONAL CULTURE OF PROSECUTORS’ OFFICES

A variety of institutional factors may contribute to the reluctance of some
prosecutors to accept the possible validity of post-conviction innocence claims
even if prosecutors should be receptive to such allegations due to their ethical
obligations. Much has been written about the assorted roles that prosecutors
play in the criminal justice system—as advocates obligated to enforce the law,
and as impartial, quasi-judicial officers entrusted with the duty to see that
justice is achieved.29 The primary role of the prosecutor in American society is
often referred to as that of a “minister of justice.”30 Specifically, the United
Massachusetts).
27 See Scheck & Neufeld, supra note 18, at 248-49 (discussing how and why DNA
provides an element of scientific certainty, which is lacking in non-DNA cases, to support
innocence claims).
28 In all probability, as pretrial use of DNA evidence increases, post-conviction
challenges based on DNA testing will diminish over time. See, e.g., DEFRANCES, supra note
22, at 1, 8 (finding that, in 2001, two-thirds of prosecutors’ offices reported use of DNA
evidence during plea negotiations or felony trials as opposed to about half of all offices in
1996); see also GREG W. STEADMAN, U.S. DEP’T OF JUSTICE, SURVEY OF DNA CRIME
LABORATORIES 2001, at 2 (2002), available at http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/
sdnacl01.pdf (last accessed Jan. 9, 2004) (reporting that, between 1997 and 2000, the work
of DNA crime laboratories soared, with a fifty percent increase in the number of subject
cases and convicted offender samples received).
29 See, e.g., George T. Felkenes, The Prosecutor: A Look at Reality, 7 SW. U. L. REV. 98,
117-20 (1975) (discussing ethical concerns arising from the conflict between a prosecutor’s
roles as quasi-judicial officer and advocate); Stanley Z. Fisher, In Search of the Virtuous
Prosecutor: A Conceptual Framework, 15 AM. J. CRIM. L. 197, 226 (1988) (arguing that
“[i]n contexts characterized by reasonably effective adversary system safeguards, the
zealous advocate’s role is most appropriate; in contexts lacking these safeguards, the quasijudicial role becomes more important”).
30
See MODEL RULES OF PROF’L CONDUCT R. 3.8 cmt. 1 (2001) (“A prosecutor has the
responsibility of a minister of justice and not simply that of an advocate.”); see also ABA
STANDARDS FOR CRIMINAL JUSTICE—PROSECUTION FUNCTION & DEFENSE FUNCTION §
3.12(c) (3d ed. 1993) [hereinafter ABA STANDARDS]; NAT’L PROSECUTION STANDARDS § 1.1
(Nat’l District Attorneys Ass’n, 2d ed. 1991) (“The primary responsibility of prosecution is
to see that justice is accomplished.”); Goldberg & Siegel, supra note 3, at 393 (“No ethical
prosecutor should ever oppose the pursuit of justice . . . .”). Cf. Steven K. Berenson, Public
Lawyers, Private Values: Can, Should, and Will Government Lawyers Serve the Public
Interest?, 41 B.C. L. REV. 789, 792-94 (2000) (discussing the public interest serving mission
of prosecutors); Kenneth Bresler, Pretty Phrases: The Prosecutor as Minister of Justice and
Administrator of Justice, 9 GEO. J. LEGAL ETHICS 1301, 1301-02 (1996) (observing that the
phrase “minister of justice” is largely a platitude without genuine implications for

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States Supreme Court has declared that the prosecutor
is the representative . . . whose obligation to govern impartially is as
compelling as its obligation to govern at all; and whose interest, therefore,
in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice
shall be done. As such, he is in a peculiar and very definite sense the
servant of the law, the twofold aim of which is that guilt shall not escape
or innocence suffer. He may prosecute with earnestness and vigor—
indeed, he should do so. But, while he may strike hard blows, he is not at
liberty to strike foul ones. It is as much his duty to refrain from improper
methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as it is to use every
legitimate means to bring about a just one.31
Although it is debatable whether the minister of justice model can ever truly be
reconciled with the adversarial ethos of our criminal justice system,32 both the
courts and the canons of professional responsibility indicate that this concept
should guide prosecutorial behavior.33 The ethical duties for such ministers of
justice, moreover, do not necessarily cease after the procurement of a
conviction; for example, subsequent to a conviction prosecutors are ethically
obliged to disclose after-acquired or other evidence that casts doubt upon the
propriety of the conviction.34
Still, the general ethical obligations borne by prosecutors, grounded as they
are in principles of trial and procedural fairness, are not always clear in the
context of many post-conviction innocence claims—e.g., situations where a
defendant may have received a fair trial yet maintains his innocence due to the
post-trial discovery of new evidence.35 The DNA revolution and the resulting
series of exonerations have put the spotlight on prosecutors’ treatment of postconviction motions, spurring at least one set of scholars, Judith Goldberg and
prosecutorial conduct).
31 Berger v. United States, 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935).
32 See, e.g., Berenson, supra note 30, at 805-06 (explaining that “[t]he normative
argument against the public interest . . . role for prosecutors contends that in order to
preserve balance in our adversarial system and to ensure that guilty defendants are in fact
convicted, prosecutors must ‘fight fire with fire’ and counter aggressive defense tactics with
vigorous efforts to secure convictions”); see also Fred C. Zacharias, Structuring the Ethics
of Prosecutorial Trial Practice: Can Prosecutors Do Justice?, 44 VAND. L. REV. 45, 52
(1991) (“By including government attorneys within the general adversarial framework, the
codes signal that prosecutors can achieve justice while operating within the adversary
system’s rules.”).
33 See supra notes 30-31 and accompanying text.
34 See, e.g., Imbler v. Pachtman, 424 U.S. 409, 427 n.25 (1976) (noting that prosecutors
are ethically bound to inform authorities of any information that “casts doubt upon the
correctness of the conviction”).
35 See Goldberg & Siegel, supra note 3, at 395, 406-09 (arguing that the standards that
apply to prosecutors during trial do not translate easily to innocence-based post-conviction
challenges and that the trial standards do not encompass all post-conviction ethical
obligations).

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David Siegel, to propose the formation of new ethical rules for prosecutors
faced with innocence-based post-conviction claims.36 In particular, Goldberg
and Siegel advocate that prosecutors bear obligations in these cases to (1) seek
the fullest possible accounting of the truth without delay, (2) achieve full
disclosure in completed cases, and (3) utilize the most accurate scientific
methods.37 Another team of scholars, Seth Kreimer and David Rudovsky,
recently addressed the issue of access to post-conviction DNA testing and
argued that ample doctrinal bases support a constitutional right to the
disclosure of biological evidence by prosecutors in cases involving actual
innocence.38 Regardless of the precise contours of the ethical duties of
prosecutors in the post-conviction arena and the doctrinal underpinnings for a
right to DNA testing in specific circumstances, numerous institutional barriers
appear to dissuade prosecutors, in practice, from responding to post-conviction
claims in a fashion that comports with the minister of justice ideal.
A.

Professional Incentives to Obtain and Maintain Convictions

As a preliminary matter, the vision of each prosecutor as a minister of
justice—a title that continues to apply in the post-conviction sphere—may
clash with the emphasis district attorneys’ offices place on conviction rates.
An individual prosecutor’s conviction rate may provide a quantifiable method
for superiors in the office to measure that prosecutor’s success in an
occupation where job performance, aside from anecdotal evidence, is
otherwise difficult to gauge.39 Prosecutors with the highest conviction rates
(and, thus, reputations as the best performers) stand the greatest chance for

36 Id. at 410-12; see also Green, supra note 9, at 640-41 (arguing that to do justice in a
case where a prosecutor realizes that fabricated evidence helped him obtain a conviction, he
should “re-examine the case to determine what went wrong, in order to undertake
institutional and personal measures to avoid recurrences”).
37 See Goldberg & Siegel, supra note 3, at 410-12.
38 See Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 565-76 (arguing that denying defendants
access to DNA evidence implicates the “right of access to the courts”). Another group of
scholars has contended that procedural due process considerations based on Matthews v.
Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319 (1976), and fairness principles require courts to display openness to
“powerful claims of innocence” regardless of the expiration of any pertinent deadlines. See
generally George C. Thomas, III, et al., Is It Ever Too Late for Innocence? Finality,
Efficiency, and Claims of Innocence, 64 U. PITT. L. REV. 263 (2003).
39
See Fisher, supra note 29, at 205 (“Political pressures foster a ‘conviction psychology’
because prosecutors can easily demonstrate their ‘effectiveness’ by pointing to conviction
statistics.”); see also Felkenes, supra note 29, at 114-15 (arguing that standards used to
measure performance in other fields, such as salary or awards, are “inappropriate to the
prosecutor,” whose salary is based primarily on seniority and to whom the public is
reluctant to give awards); Goldberg & Siegel, supra note 3, at 409 (suggesting that a
prosecutor’s superiors may measure his individual success or failure by the “number of
convictions” he obtains).

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advancement internally.40 Individual prosecutors may not have explicit
financial incentives to procure convictions—such as receiving money for each
guilty verdict41—yet the inducements are implicit in a system where
promotions are contingent on one’s ability to garner convictions. Even more,
citing office-wide conviction rates is a tangible means for district attorneys to
tout their performance to government authorities; offices may use conviction
statistics as leverage in budget negotiations, trumpeting their records of success
to support demands for greater resources.42 Placing a premium on “winning”
at the individual and office-wide levels encourages prosecutors to secure
convictions in each and every trial,43 a dangerous concept considering that
40
Felkenes, supra note 29, at 112 (suggesting that upward mobility as a prosecutor may
depend on adherence to the “conviction psychology”); see also Martin H. Belsky, Essay, On
Becoming and Being a Prosecutor, 78 NW. U. L. REV. 1485, 1491-92 (1983-1984)
(reviewing Nissman and Hagen’s The Prosecution Function and suggesting that the text
“reflects an insensitivity to the unique ethical obligations of the prosecutor” and the
problems deriving from a profession where “[s]uccess and reputation are measured by the
ability to ‘win’”); Berenson, supra note 30, at 808-09 (observing that “it has been argued
that because advancement and promotions within such offices are often based upon
conviction rates, prosecutors will seek to maximize convictions rather than ‘do justice’”);
Erwin Chemerinsky, The Role of Prosecutors in Dealing with Police Abuse: The Lessons of
Los Angeles, 8 VA. J. SOC. POL’Y & L. 305, 321 (2001) (“Promotions within the Los Angeles
District Attorney’s office often include consideration of conviction rates.”); Catherine
Ferguson-Gilbert, Comment, It is Not Whether You Win or Lose, It is How You Play the
Game: Is the Win-Loss Scorekeeping Mentality Doing Justice for Prosecutors?, 38 CAL. W.
L. REV. 283, 293 (2001) (“Promotions for subordinate prosecutors depend on their ‘scores’
for convictions.”).
41 See Kenneth Bresler, “I Never Lost a Trial”: When Prosecutors Keep Score of
Criminal Convictions, 9 GEO. J. LEGAL ETHICS 537, 545 (1996). Tracey Meares has
proposed the use of financial incentives, on some level, to affect prosecutorial discretion and
minimize prosecutorial misconduct. See generally Tracey L. Meares, Rewards for Good
Behavior: Influencing Prosecutorial Discretion and Conduct with Financial Incentives, 64
FORDHAM L. REV. 851 (1995).
42 See Bennett Gershman, The Prosecutor’s Duty to Truth, 14 GEO. J. LEGAL ETHICS 309,
350 n.223 (2001) (noting the pressure prosecutors face to justify their budgets); see also
Felkenes, supra note 29, at 116 (arguing that a prosecutor’s political success depends on
justifying his use of public expenditures).
43
See Abbe Smith, Can You Be a Good Person and a Good Prosecutor?, 14 GEO. J.
LEGAL ETHICS 355, 388 (2001) (“In view of the institutional culture of prosecutor’s offices
and the culture of the adversary system generally, it is perhaps inevitable that the overriding
interest of prosecutors would be winning.” (footnote omitted)). For an appraisal of the
penchant of prosecutors to emphasize winning, see Bresler, supra note 41, at 538 (“For if
the goal of prosecution is justice, and not prevailing in a particular case, then it becomes
absurd to equate a prosecutor obtaining a guilty verdict with ‘winning.’ The subjective
virtue of justice cannot be measured by the objective result of a verdict.” (footnote
omitted)). As Bresler emphasizes, the American Bar Association’s (“ABA”) Standards for
Criminal Justice prescribe that, in determining whether to prosecute, “a prosecutor should
give ‘no weight . . . to a desire to enhance his or her record of convictions.’” Id. at 542

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oftentimes the strongest cases against defendants result in plea bargains and the
weaker ones go to trial.44
Furthermore, upon achieving a conviction, both the individual prosecutor
and the office may become vested in maintaining the integrity of the
conviction.45 Simply put, prosecutors may perceive (or fear the public will
perceive) the post-conviction exoneration of an innocent prisoner as
undermining the credibility of the office—and the person—that prosecuted that
defendant.46 In a sense, each exoneration opens the lid further on the
prosecutorial Pandora’s Box, precipitating an inquiry into the factors that
contributed to the wrongful conviction and an assessment of whether local
prosecutors may have convicted other innocent people.47 Indeed, some
prosecutors may have reason to fear such post-mortems: exonerations have
(quoting ABA STANDARDS, supra note 30, § 3-3.9(d)). For a provocative response to
Bresler and a defense of the importance placed on winning by prosecutors, see Thomas A.
Hagemann, Confessions from a Scorekeeper: A Reply to Mr. Bresler, 10 GEO. J. LEGAL
ETHICS 151 (1996). Hagemann argues that
after a case has been properly charged, winning matters. And, if winning matters, then
we must motivate winning . . . and since we don’t pay most prosecutors enough, what
is the harm behind allowing them the motivation of not wanting to lose and keeping
score? Or of allowing ex-prosecutors to talk about their record when their career is
behind them?
Id. at 154.
44 Gardiner, supra note 6 (quoting a former prosecutor who observed that, to get ahead in
the office, prosecutors must win weak cases because “‘[a] lot of the [cases] that went to trial
were dogs’ . . . ‘if it was a good case, they’d plead” (second alteration in original)); see also
Bresler, supra note 41, at 543 (“A prosecutor protective of a ‘win-loss’ record has an
incentive to cut constitutional and ethical corners to secure a guilty verdict in a weak case—
to win at all costs.”); Gershman, supra note 42, at 351 (mentioning that “a prosecutorial
culture that advocates winning and maintains won-loss statistics not only discourages a
critical examination of truth but encourages misconduct as well”); Randolph N. Jonakait,
The Ethical Prosecutor’s Misconduct, 23 CRIM. L. BULL. 550, 553 (1987) (“If the prosecutor
sees weaknesses in his case, his reaction is not to dismiss the case. Instead he offers a good
deal to the defendant.”).
45 Goldberg & Siegel, supra note 3, at 409-10 (discussing factors that affect the
prosecutor’s interest in preserving a conviction).
46
Political concerns might make district attorneys’ offices particularly wary of the
publicity surrounding exonerations. See discussion infra Part II. In addition to potentially
harming the credibility of prosecutors themselves, some prosecutors may be concerned
about the impact exonerations may have on the integrity of the criminal justice system as a
whole. See Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 563 (“[T]o the extent that DNA
exonerations reveal systemic flaws in the criminal justice system . . . some prosecutors may
believe that exonerations undermine the credibility of the system.” (footnote omitted)).
47 See Wilgoren, supra note 1 (explaining that prosecutors have limited interest in freeing
innocent people not only because “‘[i]t’s obviously embarrassing, but it will also precipitate
an investigation into the cause of the wrongful conviction[;] [i]t’s not just one man that is
exonerated, you are calling into question hundreds of convictions’” (quoting Peter Neufeld,
Co-Director of The Innocence Project at Cardozo)).

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occasionally revealed deliberate prosecutorial and police misconduct in
procuring those convictions in the first place.48
Taken together, these realities of life in the prosecutorial workplace—that
one’s “win” rate may be determinative of future success and that both the
individual prosecutor and the office as a whole have interests in maintaining
convictions—have arguably led to an organizational “conviction
psychology,”49 an environment where convictions are prized above all and the
minister of justice concept becomes a myth. The expectation of a conviction
as the inevitable outcome of a criminal trial has become so ingrained that, in at
least one prosecutor’s office, any assistant who tries a case that results in an
acquittal must draft and file a report with the chief prosecutor.50 Offices reveal
their focus on convictions and their urge to motivate assistant prosecutors to
obtain them through assorted tactics, such as by computing each attorney’s
“batting average” or by putting each lawyer’s name on a bulletin board and,
next to each name, affixing green stickers for wins and red ones for losses.51
For an individual prosecutor, defying the conviction-seeking mentality by
dismissing charges prior to trial or seriously contemplating the post-conviction
reversal of the case may, in certain circumstances and with certain bosses,
serve as a death knell to career advancement within the office.52

48 See, e.g., Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 563 (observing that some
exonerations have “disclosed deliberate (and in some cases criminal) police and
prosecutorial misconduct in obtaining the tainted convictions”).
49 Felkenes, supra note 29, at 99, 109-10 (“The majority of the prosecutors queried
expressed a concern for fairness and impartiality toward persons accused of a crime.
Nevertheless, nearly one-third essentially indicated that their major function is to secure
convictions. . . . This exhibits what may be termed the ‘conviction psychology.’”); see also
Fisher, supra note 29, at 207 (“The moral and political climate in an agency can foster a
‘conviction psychology’ more powerfully than can any specific policy basing promotions on
an assistant’s conviction rate.”).
50 Evan Moore, Justice Under Fire: “Win At All Costs” is Smith County’s Rule, Critics
Claim, HOUS. CHRON., June 11, 2000, at A1 (reporting that, in Harris County, Texas,
assistant district attorneys must file a written report if they lose a case).
51
See Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 290 (collecting instances of competition
between prosecutors for convictions); see also Maurice Possley & Ken Armstrong, The Flip
Side of a Fair Trial, CHI. TRIB., Jan. 11, 1999, at 1 [hereinafter Possley & Armstrong, Flip
Side] (recalling the “two-ton contest” that used to exist in the State’s Attorney’s Office in
Cook County, Illinois where prosecutors raced to determine who could be the first person to
convict defendants weighing that amount in total).
52 Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 294 n.96 (recounting a telephone conversation
with a former prosecutor, Kenneth Bresler, who reported being reprimanded and removed
from a case after informing his superiors that he believed the defendant was innocent); see
also Kenneth J. Melilli, Prosecutorial Discretion in an Adversary System, 1992 BYU L.
REV. 669, 688 (observing that advancement may hinge on appearing fearless about
prosecuting difficult cases, and showing doubts about a defendant’s guilt might lead other
prosecutors to perceive the lawyer as scared).

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Psychological and Personal Barriers for Prosecutors Confronting
Post-Conviction Innocence Claims

Given the institutional culture of many district attorneys’ offices,
prosecutors have not only professional incentives to battle post-conviction
claims of innocence, but psychological and personal reasons as well. It is hard
for anybody to admit to a mistake, much less someone who may have
participated in the conviction of an innocent person or whose colleague may
have done so.53 As members of organizations that hail convictions, moreover,
prosecutors may begin to internalize the emphasis placed on conviction rates
and view their win-loss record as a symbol of their self-worth.54 Victories, in
particular, can serve as an ego gratification device for trial lawyers, whose jobs
hinge on the ability to display confidence before jurors and judges.55
Evidently, the conviction psychology may take root with young prosecutors
and grow stronger over time; one study demonstrated that assistant district
attorneys articulating a primary focus on convictions had, on average, roughly
twice as much experience as those who displayed a deep concern for justice.56
Although this data suggests that exposure to prosecutors’ offices may lead to
an erosion of idealism for new attorneys,57 more troubling perhaps is the
53

See, e.g., McCloskey, supra note 13, at 56 (“It is human nature to resist any
information that indicates that we have made a grievous mistake.”); see also supra note 16
and accompanying text.
54 See Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 292 (discussing prosecutors’ desires to get
credit for a “win” and to cherish the praise of fellow prosecutors). Daniel Richman has
noted that “[t]he prosecutor’s interest can also be described as one in ‘non-defeat,’” where a
fear of losing may be a more powerful motivation than a desire to win. Daniel C. Richman,
Old Chief v. United States: Stipulating Away Prosecutorial Accountability?, 83 VA. L. REV.
939, 968-69 (1997). Steven Berenson has suggested that government lawyers may feel
inferior to private attorneys and, thus, may seek to prove their mettle by obtaining
convictions. Berenson, supra note 30, at 834 (“[G]overnment lawyers sometimes feel that
they need to prove themselves in the eyes of their private sector counterparts. Sometimes,
this results in an undue desire to ‘win’ cases (as opposed to serving the public interest).”).
55 See MARK BAKER, D.A.: PROSECUTORS IN THEIR OWN WORDS 24 (1999) (“[I]t’s easy
to lose sight of all that business about seeing that justice is done and to dive into the pure
one-on-one competition before the spectators. . . . Ego is a powerful drive.”); Hagemann,
supra note 43, at 152 (“Good trial lawyers, including prosecutors, have big egos. They are
driven to succeed—and those things are not just facts of life, they are necessary tools of the
trade. A little chest-pounding, some war stories and tales of wins, losses, and won-lost
records come with the territory.”).
56 Felkenes, supra note 29, at 111.
57 Id. (“Exposure to the prosecutorial system . . . may in itself tend to mold one’s
perceptions and beliefs, while eroding the idealism that generally characterizes the more
inexperienced prosecutor.”).
Felkenes suggests that “[a]dherence to ‘conviction
psychology’ arises as much out of the imitation of superiors as out of peer group
conformity. . . . The young prosecutor desirous of career stability may well exhibit
‘conviction psychology’ as a result of his conformity to the peer group and imitation of his
superiors.” Id. at 112. Richard Uviller, a former prosecutor, has stated that “even the best

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implication that the most experienced prosecutors—those handling the highest
degree felony cases—may be those most affected by the conviction
psychology.
Prosecutorial responses to post-conviction innocence claims are also shaped
by the macro-level ideology that often draws individual attorneys to law
enforcement work in the first place: a desire to protect the public.58 This
impulse adds an element of personal morality and self-righteousness to a
prosecutor’s approach to her occupation.59 Dedicated to fulfilling a mission to
protect the public by fighting crime and inspired in part by self-righteousness,
incoming prosecutors frequently adopt a “gung ho” persona, a mindset that
finds a welcome home in district attorneys’ offices.60 Indeed, the prevalence
of an aggressive, macho culture is an oft-cited feature of these agencies.61 In
the past, men dominated this field62 and, even as the percentage of women
of the prosecutors—young, idealistic, energetic, dedicated to the interests of justice—are
easily caught up in the hunt mentality of an aggressive office . . . . I know that the earnest
effort to do justice is easily corrupted by the institutional ethic of combat.” H. Richard
Uviller, The Neutral Prosecutor: The Obligation of Dispassion in a Passionate Pursuit, 68
FORDHAM L. REV. 1695, 1702 (2000); see also Fisher, supra note 29, at 206 (“If the veterans
communicate conviction-oriented values, clearly that is the strongest message we can expect
young prosecutors to receive.”).
58 Felkenes, supra note 29, at 107 (observing that many prosecutors surveyed found
public service to be their overriding motive—“[b]eing on the side of the law in the ‘war on
crime’ and being in a position to protect society against the lawless element”); see also
Maura Dolan, A Man Consumed by His Convictions, L.A. TIMES, Apr. 14, 1999, at A1
(quoting one prosecutor as saying that “I am sort of frightened by what I consider to be a
certain talent . . . and I have chosen to use that talent to the greater public good”).
59 See Stacy Caplow, What If There is No Client?: Prosecutors as “Counselors” of
Crime Victims, 5 CLINICAL L. REV. 1, 18 (1998) (“The outraged query ‘How can you defend
these people?’ comes from the prosecutor who sees herself a ‘defender of justice,’ a selfimage which may lead to the injection of a large dose of personal morality and selfrighteousness into the mix.” (footnote omitted)); Smith, supra note 43, at 378 (“[T]oo often
righteousness becomes self-righteousness. Too often prosecutors believe that because it is
their job to do justice, they have extraordinary in-born wisdom and insight. Too often
prosecutors believe that they and only they know what justice is.” (footnotes omitted)).
60 See, e.g., Ellen Yaroshefsky, Cooperation with Federal Prosecutors: Experiences of
Truth Telling and Embellishment, 68 FORDHAM L. REV. 917, 949 (1999) (discussing the
responses of former Assistant United States Attorneys (“AUSAs”) who described some of
their former peers as gung ho, law enforcement, or “true believer” types—macho lawyers
who befriended agents, and could never imagine themselves as defense lawyers); see also
Fisher, supra note 29, at 204-15 (describing the institutional pressures on prosecutors to
behave “overzealously” and stating that “prosecution agencies might not actually reward the
overzealous mentality, but still subtly discourage more than minimal concern for competing
values”).
61
See Felkenes, supra note 29, at 120 (stating that an overwhelming majority of
prosecutors are male and that many are their parents’ oldest child or only child).
62 See, e.g., Robert L. Misner, Recasting Prosecutorial Discretion, 86 J. CRIM. L. &

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prosecutors climbs, a macho image persists.63 A veneer of toughness, even
cynicism, may be essential to survive in this culture.64 Accepting the possible
legitimacy of post-conviction innocence claims, then, might collide with this
ethos; specifically, prosecutors perceived by their colleagues as amenable to
entertaining post-conviction innocence claims could be dubbed “soft” on crime
or sympathetic toward defendants.65
A prosecutor motivated generally by a public service ideology may also
become personally committed to the idea that the system punished the true
perpetrator of a particular crime and, therefore, may struggle to accept the
possibility that he convicted an innocent man, not to mention that a guilty
person may remain at large.66 As part of their training in ethics, prosecutors
are told that they should believe in the probable guilt of the defendants they
charge with crimes.67 The perception, even among prosecutors, that the police
only arrest guilty people in the first place reinforces the belief that the right
person was charged and later convicted.68 Commentators have observed that
the phenomenon of police “tunnel vision”—whereby once the police pinpoint a
chief suspect, they neglect to subject exculpatory evidence or alternative
perpetrators to critical examination—has led to the arrest and eventual
CRIMINOLOGY 717, 734 (1996) (“Prosecutors are usually white males—70% of prosecutors
are male and 88% of prosecutors are white, non-Hispanic.”).
63 This macho image may be perpetuated, in part, through the conduct of several highprofile prosecutors renowned for their aggression. See, e.g., Green, supra note 9, at 609
(referencing the tradition of “machismo” in the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern
District of New York, a tradition embodied by longstanding assistant Bill Tendy, “the
quintessential tough-talking prosecutor”); Dolan, supra note 58 (describing a prosecutor
nicknamed “Mad Dog” for his aggressive style).
64 As Abbe Smith notes, “[i]n order not to be played for a fool, taken for a ride,
considered a sucker—a nightmarish reputation for a prosecutor—prosecutors often become
suspicious, untrusting, disbelieving.” Smith, supra note 43, at 384.
65 Goldberg & Siegel, supra note 3, at 409 (“Prosecutors may be perceived as being
‘soft’ on crime or sympathetic towards defendants if they assist with, or fail to object to,
postconviction testing.”).
66 Id. (“Prosecutors may themselves be invested in the knowledge or belief that the
perpetrator has been punished and the case concluded.”).
67
Ethical rules forbid prosecutors from pursuing charges that they know are not
substantiated by probable cause. MODEL RULES OF PROF’L CONDUCT R. 3.8(a) (2001); see
also Gershman, supra note 42, at 309 (“Years ago, when I became a prosecutor, I was
trained to believe that you never put a defendant to trial unless you were personally
convinced of his guilt. This was, as I recall, the accepted ethos in our office and, I assumed,
in prosecutors’ offices generally.”).
68
See Felkenes, supra note 29, at 112 (mentioning that more than fifty percent of
prosecutors surveyed did not presume that a man is innocent until proven guilty and that
many believed that guilt was determined by the screening processes of the police and
prosecutor prior to trial); see also Smith, supra note 43, at 384 (“Notwithstanding the legal
presumption of innocence, the cultural and institutional presumption in most prosecutor
offices is that everybody is guilty.”).

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prosecution of innocent people.69 By working closely with the police,
prosecutors may begin to trust or at least defer to the detectives’ judgment in
the investigative aspects of the matter.70 A mutual orientation toward “getting
the bad guys” can serve as a unifying force to bridge any cultural gap that
might exist between prosecutors and law enforcement agents.71 Prosecutors
69 See, e.g., Steve Mills & John Biemer, Ford Heights 4 Inquiry Clears Cops,
Prosecutors, CHI. TRIB., Aug. 22, 2003, at 1 (discussing the report of the special prosecutor
appointed to investigate the mistakes made in the infamous “Ford Heights Four” case in
Illinois and noting the report’s conclusion that police “tunnel vision” contributed to the
wrongful convictions). James McCloskey has observed that, given the volume of crime and
the pressure to solve cases, too often
police officers take the easy way out. Once they come to suspect someone as the
culprit, and this often occurs early within the investigation and is based on rather
flimsy circumstantial information, then the investigation blindly focuses in on that
adopted “target.” Crucial pieces of evidence are overlooked and disregarded. . . .

Before too long, momentum has gathered, and the “project” now is to put it on the
suspect. Any information that points to the suspect, no matter how spuriously secured,
is somehow obtained; and anything that points away from him is ridiculed and twisted
into nothingness.
McCloskey, supra note 13, at 56; see also Jonakait, supra note 44, at 552 (stating that, in
light of limited resources and the nature of investigations, the inquiry will switch from
impartial information gathering to building a case against a specific suspect resulting in “a
natural tendency to acquire all the evidence that inculpates the person selected as guilty
while all other evidence is ignored”). Dianne Martin has argued that the problem of “tunnel
vision” is pervasive in many common law jurisdictions and comprises a major source of
wrongful convictions. Dianne L. Martin, Lessons about Justice from the “Laboratory” of
Wrongful Convictions: Tunnel Vision, the Construction of Guilt and Informer Evidence, 70
UMKC L. REV. 847, 848 (2002).
70 See Judith L. Maute, “In Pursuit of Justice” in High Profile Criminal Matters, 70
FORDHAM L. REV. 1745, 1747 (2002) (“Overzealous prosecutors may become too closely
aligned with law enforcement personnel and forensics witnesses who are willing to shade or
falsify their testimony in order to obtain a conviction.”); see also Green, supra note 9, at 640
(“Prosecutors abdicate their responsibility to [protect innocent people from unjust
convictions] when they act merely as conduits of evidence developed by the police.”). For
an interesting discussion of the interaction, and competing roles, of prosecutors and the
police, see Daniel Richman, Prosecutors and Their Agents, Agents and Their Prosecutors,
103 COLUM. L. REV. 749 (2003).
71 As Richman notes with respect to prosecutors and agents,
one ought not underestimate the unifying influence of a shared commitment to “getting
the bad guys,” hardened by the adversarial process, nurtured by mutual respect and
need, and on occasion lubricated by alcohol. . . . And, as in any other organizational
setting, the social relationships that can arise out of constant and routine contacts will
provide a solid foundation for trust.
Richman, supra note 70, at 792 (footnotes omitted); see also Chemerinsky, supra note 40, at
315 (“Prosecutors and police feed on each other’s desire to ‘win’ the case.”). The shared
commitment of the police and prosecutors to law enforcement is bolstered by the fact that
prosecutors themselves play a role in training the police and offering legal advice about
police conduct in criminal matters. See ABA STANDARDS, supra note 30, § 3-2.7(a), (b)

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may also admire police officers and, therefore, may be wary of challenging
their opinions.72
Moreover, a prosecutor in the midst of preparing a case for the grand jury
does not typically receive the evidence pointing to all potential suspects, but
only the evidence incriminating a single suspect, the person on whom the
police focused during their investigation and deemed culpable.73 Once the
prosecution files charges, the assistant district attorney may be susceptible to a
phenomenon similar to that experienced by the police: putting on intellectual
blinders to all evidence failing to substantiate the defendant’s guilt.74 When a
jury verdict validates this form of “pre-conviction”75 of the defendant, it may
become extremely difficult ever to establish the defendant’s innocence in the

(declaring that prosecutors should provide legal advice to the police with respect to police
duties and functions in criminal matters, and that prosecutors should cooperate with the
police to aid in training officers).
72 See, e.g., Yaroshefsky, supra note 60, at 950 (“[E]very prosecutor secretly wants to be
a cop. The allure is to get the bad guys. You talk about your agent, the guy who shows you
the ropes. He exudes confidence on the street.” (quoting a former AUSA)).
73 See Jonakait, supra note 44, at 553. As Jonakait explains:
The trial prosecutor preparing his case sees the fruits of . . . an investigation [that
focuses on one suspect] and little else. He does not see evidence about all the possible
suspects, but only the incriminating evidence concerning the defendant. Not
surprisingly, the picture presented to the prosecutor almost always shows a guilty
defendant.
Id.; see also Richman, supra note 70, at 813 (“Prosecutors are ill-equipped to second guess
agency choices about tactics and targets when they lack sufficient information about the
cases agencies decide to pursue and the universe of potential cases. . . . [M]uch could be
done to increase the flow of investigative information to prosecutors.”).
74 Jonakait, supra note 44, at 559. Jonakait has described the process that leads to the
“blinders” phenomenon:
[O]nce the prosecutor has decided to prosecute (i.e., once he has determined that the
defendant is guilty), he will gather evidence for trial . . . . It becomes easy for the
prosecutor to overlook and ignore evidence that does not fit his conception of the
proper outcome. The natural inclination is not to see inconsistent or contradictory
evidence for what it is, but to categorize it as irrelevant or a petty incongruity.
Id.; see also Felkenes, supra note 29, at 113 (stating that the preliminary views of a case
become fixed conclusions—evidence that confirms the preliminary diagnosis makes a
strong imprint on the mind, while evidence that runs counter to it is received with diverted
attention); Yaroshefsky, supra note 60, at 945 (“‘Prosecutors are convinced they have the
guilty guy, then they go about seeking to convict and do not carefully look at things that are
funny about their case . . . . They get wedded to their theory and things inconsistent with
their theory are ignored.’” (quoting a former AUSA)). Also, in recent years, prosecutors
themselves have evidently played an increasingly extensive role in criminal investigations.
See Rory K. Little, Proportionality as an Ethical Precept for Prosecutors in Their
Investigative Role, 68 FORDHAM L. REV. 723, 733-37 (1999).
75 Felkenes, supra note 29, at 112 (using the phrase “pre-conviction” to describe the
presumption of guilt that prosecutors sometimes mentally attribute to accused individuals).

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eyes of the prosecuting lawyer.76
The prosecuting lawyer’s view of the case, in turn, can mold the parameters
of the office’s subsequent reaction to a post-conviction innocence claim,
considering that the trial assistant is likely to be consulted regarding a postconviction motion involving a case she handled. Admittedly, there is limited
data pertaining to how prosecutors’ offices across the country handle postconviction motions administratively.77 While it appears as though some
offices have formed separate divisions to field only post-conviction motions
that collaterally attack a judgment of conviction,78 many larger prosecutorial
agencies assign these motions to lawyers in the general appeals bureau.79
Smaller offices, however, usually direct post-conviction filings to the attorney
who handled the case originally;80 this is probably a popular method of
assignment nationally given that the average prosecutor’s office in the United
States consists of only three attorneys.81 As a practical matter, even in large
76 See supra note 74 and accompanying text; see also Jonakait, supra note 44, at 554. As
Jonakait suggests:
Because the prosecutor is convinced that the defendant is guilty, he is convinced that
the right result for the trial process is a conviction. When there is an acquittal, he does
not conclude that a defendant was truly innocent, but that the truth did not come out at
the trial, that the verdict was wrong.
Id.
77 The director of research at the American Prosecutors Research Institute, a non-profit
group affiliated with the National District Attorneys Association, the main professional
organization for prosecutors in the United States, informed me that she was not aware of any
national studies analyzing how prosecutors assign post-conviction motions. Telephone
Interview with M. Elaine Nugent, Director, Office of Research and Evaluation, American
Prosecutors Research Institute (June 26, 2003) [hereinafter Nugent Telephone Interview].
78 The Office of the District Attorney of the City and County of Philadelphia in
Pennsylvania, for example, has established a Post-Conviction Relief Act Unit to handle all
petitions submitted by defendants under that statute. See Philadelphia Information Locator
Service, Agency Information: Office of the District Attorney, at http://www.phila.gov/
phils/Docs/Inventor/graphics/agencies/A006.htm (last accessed Jan. 9, 2004). In the
prosecutor’s office for Oklahoma County, Oklahoma, one lawyer is assigned to handle all
requests for post-conviction relief. See Oklahoma County District Attorney, Organization
of the Office of the District Attorney for Oklahoma County, at http://www.daweslane.com/
organization.html (last accessed Jan. 9, 2004).
79 Nugent Telephone Interview, supra note 77 (stating her belief that post-conviction
matters in large offices are usually assigned to appellate lawyers). In the Queens County
District Attorney’s Office in New York, for example, all post-conviction motions are
handled by lawyers in the Appeals Bureau, whose workload generally consists of processing
direct appeals. Telephone Interview with John Castellano, Bureau Chief, Appeals Bureau,
Queens County District Attorney’s Office (July 25, 2003).
80 Nugent Telephone Interview, supra note 77.
81
See DEFRANCES, supra note 22, at 2 tbl.2 (citing that the median-sized staff in
prosecutors’ offices handling cases in state courts constitutes the chief prosecutor and two
assistant prosecutors).

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offices, such motions may be allocated—if not to the trial assistant herself—to
a supervisor or a co-equal within the trial department.82 A prosecutor’s office
may also assign post-conviction motions on an ad hoc, case-by-case basis that
takes numerous elements into account, including whether the defendant has
already filed a direct appeal from the judgment of conviction and whether the
trial lawyer who prosecuted the case is still with the office.83 Although
consulting the trial assistant about a post-conviction motion makes sense—that
person may be in the best position to assess whether, factually, the defendant’s
claim of innocence seems plausible—there is an inherent problem in asking
people to oversee their colleagues’ or their own work.84
Additionally, the group dynamics of working within a law enforcement
agency may affect a prosecuting lawyer’s vision (and treatment) of parties
outside the organization. Prosecuting crimes requires teamwork, namely,
reliance on a group of other lawyers, police officers, and witnesses.85
Questioning the sanctity of a conviction, and, concomitantly, the police
82

In the New York County District Attorney’s Office in Manhattan, all state postconviction motions are assigned to the trial assistant who prosecuted the case. Telephone
Interview with Mark Dwyer, Bureau Chief, Appeals Bureau, New York County District
Attorney’s Office (July 24, 2003) [hereinafter Dwyer Telephone Interview]. If that
individual is no longer a member of the office, the case is reassigned to a substitute within
the trial bureau. Id.; see also Gardiner, supra note 14 (mentioning that the prosecutors’
offices in New York City’s five counties often assign allegations of unjust convictions to the
supervisor of the bureau where the trial occurred). The five boroughs comprising New York
City, however, each seem to have a slightly different policy, with appellate lawyers
frequently handling the cases. Dwyer Telephone Interview, supra.
83 In the Bronx County District Attorney’s Office in New York, state post-conviction
motions are assigned on a case by case basis, with the litmus test being an assessment of
who is in the best position to respond to the allegations—the trial assistant or an appellate
lawyer. Telephone Interview with Yael Levy, Assistant District Attorney and Motion
Editor, Bronx County District Attorney’s Office (July 24, 2003). In that office, if the
defendant has yet to file his direct appeal, then the case will likely be allocated to the trial
attorney and, if the defendant has already filed his direct appeal and/or the trial assistant has
left the office, then an appeals lawyer usually handles the motion. Id. In the Richmond
County (Staten Island) District Attorney’s Office in New York, post-conviction motions are
assigned to the trial division if the direct appeal has not yet been submitted and to an
appellate lawyer if the defendant has already filed his direct appeal. Telephone Interview
with Karen McGee, Chief of Appeals, Appeals Bureau, Richmond County District
Attorney’s Office (July 25, 2003).
84 Gardiner, supra note 14 (“‘There’s always a fundamental institutional problem in
having somebody oversee their own work or their friends’ work.’” (quoting Ron Kuby,
criminal defense attorney)); see also Adam Liptak, Prosecutions Are a Focus in Houston
DNA Inquiry, N.Y. TIMES, June 9, 2003, at A20 (reporting how the grand juries
investigating the problems at Houston’s police crime lab had rejected the guidance of the
district attorney’s office, noting the possibility of a conflict of interest in investigating the
scandal).
85 Smith, supra note 43, at 392.

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investigation and lawyering activities that preceded it, is not an ideal way for
an individual prosecutor to secure the cooperation and loyalty of law
enforcement colleagues that may be needed in the future.86 Prosecutors
labeled as “hard” on the police may face delays in obtaining updates about
investigations or be deprived of access to information altogether.87 Thus, there
are strong incentives for prosecutors to collaborate with their law enforcement
colleagues—both the police and other prosecutors—and few incentives to
assist members of the defense team. People outside the organization may be
viewed as unworthy of extensive cooperation and courtesy; social science
research indicates that people are often less cooperative in interacting with
outsiders when they are performing as part of a group than when they are
acting on their own.88
With regard to the personal commitment of prosecutors to the outcome of a
case, trial attorneys may also have interacted with the victims of violent crimes
and may be hesitant to revisit disturbing experiences.89 Unlike most lawyers,
prosecutors have no individual client per se, but rather are charged with
representing the interests of the state.90 On a personal level, though,
prosecutors may naturally develop an allegiance to—and affinity for—the
crime victims in their cases, the people for whom they are seeking vindication

86 Id. at 392 n.229 (noting the difficulties a prosecutor can experience without willing
cooperation from the police). In his study of the Rampart police scandal in Los Angeles,
Erwin Chemerinsky acknowledges the conundrum faced by prosecutors in these
situations—while they are uniquely positioned to monitor police conduct, due to the close
working relationship between the groups, “[f]or obvious reasons, prosecutors are reluctant
to alienate the very officers that they must work with and rely on in their cases.”
Chemerinsky, supra note 40, at 305.
87 See Laurie L. Levenson, The Future of State and Federal Civil Rights Prosecutions:
The Lessons of the Rodney King Trial, 41 UCLA L. REV. 509, 536-38 (1994) (describing
various uncooperative tactics that police officers may use to make the job difficult for a
deputy district attorney with a reputation of being “hard on police”).
88 See, e.g., Lawrence M. Solan, Theory Informs Business Practice: The Written
Contract as Safe Harbor for Dishonest Conduct, 77 CHI.-KENT L. REV. 87, 98-102 (2001)
(describing some of the social science research, including the work of psychologist Chester
Insko, relating to how people act as part of a group).
89 Goldberg & Siegel, supra note 3, at 409 (stating that prosecutors work with victims of
violent crimes and may become connected to the case on a more personal level, to the point
where they may not want to revisit those horrific experiences).
90
As highlighted by Stacy Caplow, “[t]he critical absence of an individual client to
whom a lawyer owes allegiance and whose confidences are protected distinguishes
prosecutors from most other lawyers engaged in litigation.” Caplow, supra note 59, at 4;
see also Roberta K. Flowers, A Code of Their Own: Updating the Ethics Codes to Include
the Non-Adversarial Roles of Federal Prosecutors, 37 B.C. L. REV. 923, 931 (1996)
(observing that a prosecutor represents not a single client, but rather groups of
constituencies: “the crime victims, law enforcement agencies, the prosecutor’s office’s
policies and the elusive concepts of ‘truth’ and ‘justice’”).

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through the prosecution of defendants.91 By contrast, prosecutors have limited
personal interaction with defendants and typically only know them through
police reports and rap sheets, that is, in the context of the criminal accusations
against them.92 In any event, alerting victims to a post-conviction motion in a
case is not a task cherished by prosecutors and, accordingly, one not readily
undertaken for fear of evoking painful memories.93 In resisting postconviction innocence claims, prosecutors frequently mention the need for
finality in the process—the need for victims to experience closure, and for
lawyers to focus on their active, pressing cases.94
91 See, e.g., Melilli, supra note 52, at 689 (“Quite naturally, prosecutors may develop
loyalty to victims, and that loyalty may influence the prosecutors’ decisions.”). In fact,
some scholars have lobbied for a victim-centered model of prosecution, particularly in the
realm of domestic violence cases, through which victims’ interests and objectives are
explicitly incorporated into prosecutorial decisionmaking. See Caplow, supra note 59, at
35-44 (proposing a collaborative relationship between the prosecutor and victims where
there is greater consultation and explanation about the process, and where the victim has
some involvement in the decisionmaking); Linda G. Mills, On the Other Side of Silence:
Affective Lawyering for Intimate Abuse, 81 CORNELL L. REV. 1225, 1229-31 (1996) (calling
for a more subjective, case specific, and victim controlled criminal system when dealing
with domestic violence cases).
92 Melilli, supra note 52, at 689 (“Prosecutors rarely speak to defendants. Prosecutors
come to know defendants from police reports and rap sheets, and thus think of defendants
only in the context of the criminal accusations.”). As Stanley Fisher notes, prosecutors are
constantly exposed to victims, police officers, civilian witnesses, probation officers and
others who can graphically establish that the defendant deserves punishment, and who
have no reason to be concerned with competing values of justice. [Whereas] the
prosecutor is normally isolated from those—the defendant, his family and friends, and
often, his witnesses—who might arouse the prosecutor’s empathy or stimulate concern
for treating him fairly.
Fisher, supra note 29, at 208.
93 See Liptak, supra note 15 (“‘Every prosecutor dreads making a phone call to a victim
after the victim thinks the case is over . . . . You’re reopening the wound.’” (quoting Joshua
Marquis, Co-Chairman, National District Attorneys Association’s Capital Litigation
Committee)). David Meier, Chief of the Homicide Unit at the Suffolk County District
Attorney’s Office in Massachusetts, has described how bad he felt for two people who were
wrongly convicted of murder in Boston and later exonerated, but then noted that
it felt equally bad, and perhaps for me even worse, to go back to those same two
families, sit in their living rooms, trying to explain why as a prosecutor and not as a
defense attorney, I was going to tell the court and the world that the people; whom they
had identified; whom the police had arrested; whom they, the victim’s family, had
picked out in court; whom twelve people had found was responsible beyond a
reasonable doubt for the crime; and for whom the Supreme Judicial Court had affirmed
the conviction, were not the people responsible for killing their nine-year-old son or
their nineteen-year-old brother.
David Meier, The Prosecution’s Perspective on Post-Conviction Relief in Light of DNA
Technology and Newly Discovered Evidence, 35 NEW ENG. L. REV. 657, 660 (2001).
94 See, e.g., Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 561 n.50 (citing sources emphasizing
the significance of finality in criminal justice decisions); Liptak, supra note 15 (discussing

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Even for those prosecutors open to the possibility that they or members of
their office may have convicted innocent people, their self-conceived role as
the protector of the public and an “ends justifies the means” outlook can still
serve as impediments to acknowledging the worthiness of a post-conviction
innocence claim. In theory, prosecutors may justify decisions to proceed to
trial with borderline cases through the rationale that the failings of the case,
instead of signifying innocence, simply reflect the inability of the police to find
proof: the defendant is guilty despite any holes in the actual evidence.95
Having seen other defendants whom they believed to be guilty escape
punishment,96 prosecutors may become emotionally tied to preserving the
convictions they did manage to attain. In addition, a prosecutor may believe
that a defendant has committed other crimes for which he was not caught; even
if he may be innocent of this particular crime, he is undoubtedly guilty of
others.97 Although, obviously, this belief should not cloud a prosecutor’s
assessment of the viability of a defendant’s post-conviction innocence claim in
a specific case, it may have a subconscious impact, obscuring the evaluation of
the claim.98 The goal of seeking convictions, in the opinion of some
prosecutors, is to uphold the rights of the victim in the instant case and
simultaneously protect the rights of prospective, future victims by imprisoning
the conflicting views on the importance of finality in light of the increasing amount of postconviction claims of innocence). As observed by Kreimer and Rudovsky, the Supreme
Court itself has consistently declared that “finality is essential to both the retributive and
deterrent functions of the criminal law and to the interests of victims of crimes in obtaining
closure.” Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 606.
95 Scholars have criticized the prosecutorial tactic of offering plea bargains in weak
cases, noting that prosecutors often justify these offers on the basis that the weakness of the
case does not signify innocence, but rather a mere lack of proof. See, e.g., Jonakait, supra
note 44, at 554; Smith, supra note 43, at 391 (discussing how prosecutors come to believe
that defendants to whom they make generous plea offers, even in weak cases, must be guilty
of something and that “the deal simply reflects problems of proof, not truth”). Former
AUSA Thomas Hagemann, for one, has justified his zealous pursuit of convictions as a
prosecutor on the basis that “factually guilty defendants should usually lose.” Hagemann,
supra note 43, at 153.
96
This may occur not only when a defendant is acquitted, but also when a complaining
witness drops the charges or the prosecution otherwise opts against pursuing the case due to
a dearth of evidence.
97 See BAKER, supra note 55, at 47 (quoting one prosecutor as saying that “[a]t one point
I didn’t care who went to jail, because everybody was guilty of something[;] [i]t was just a
matter of winning”); see also McCloskey, supra note 13, at 56 (discussing how the police
may rationalize steering an investigation to a suspect with a police record “because he
should be ‘taken off the streets’ anyhow”).
98 See Jonakait, supra note 44, at 553-59 (emphasizing how subconscious beliefs and
motivations affect prosecutorial decisions); see also Sharon Lamb, The Psychology of
Condemnation: Underlying Emotions and Their Symbolic Expression in Condemning and
Shaming, 68 BROOK. L. REV. 929, 939-48 (2003) (discussing how fear may lie at the core of
the need to condemn as part of the criminal law).

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the defendant—to keep the streets “safe.”99 Releasing inmates who are
schooled in the mores of jailhouse life and might have lengthy prior criminal
records, even those who are innocent of the particular charge for which they
were imprisoned, may run counter to the safe streets philosophy.100
C.

The Needle in a Haystack Disincentive

Irrespective of any professional, psychological, and personal barriers that
prosecutors may construct against post-conviction claims of innocence,
prosecutors’ skeptical stance toward such claims is understandable from the
viewpoint of pragmatism: the deluge of post-conviction motions filed by
prisoners each year, many of which lack merit, provides a formidable deterrent
to treating each claim as potentially valid.101 In effect, the tidal wave of
frivolous motions can drown out the viable ones.102 Numbed by the volume of
motions, which are often filed pro se, prosecutors tend to take a cynical
approach in coping with them.103 Not only might a prosecutor be more
99

See, e.g., Prosecutors vs. the Law, CHI. TRIB., Jan. 17, 1999, at C18 (“‘All I cared
about was making sure the defendant would not hit the street. There ain’t no appeal if I
lose.’” (quoting a former Illinois prosecutor cited for misconduct)).
100 See Daniel S. Medwed, Actual Innocents: Considerations in Selecting Cases for a
New Innocence Project, 81 NEB. L. REV. 1097, 1112 (2003) (“All other things being equal,
assisting an innocent person without any prior convictions may be more palatable to the
District Attorney’s Office than aiding someone who is innocent of the crime for which he is
incarcerated but has an extensive criminal record.”).
101 Some prosecutors view post-conviction motions with plain hostility. See, e.g., Liptak,
supra note 15. Jennifer Joyce, circuit attorney for St. Louis, “saw a ‘steady trickle’ of
‘deceitful and sadistic’ motions [where] . . . [t]he defendant knows he is guilty . . . and he
wants to play the lottery.” Id. Joyce would like to fine defendants who request DNA tests
that fail to exonerate them and has proposed adding the cost of failed tests to prison
accounts or otherwise penalizing defendants by adding time to sentences and requiring
failed DNA tests to be considered at parole hearings. Id.
102 See, e.g., Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 610 (“Prosecutors have argued that
allowing access to DNA evidence will divert scarce resources from other tasks and bury
prosecutors beneath a tidal wave of frivolous requests.”). In the DNA context, however,
prisoners have a disincentive to file false claims of innocence; if the prisoners know that
DNA testing will only substantiate their guilt, they incur the risk of undermining any legal
claims they may otherwise have. Id.
103
See, e.g., Abu-Jamal’s Lawyers Claim Sabotage, PHIL. DAILY NEWS, May 24, 2003,
(Local), at 2 (quoting a prosecutor as saying, in response to the filing of a motion in a 1981
murder case that, according to the defense, could exonerate the man convicted of that crime
and sentenced to death, “[w]ithout even having seen [the court document], I feel pretty
confident in saying I’m not going to be very impressed by it[;] . . . [i]t’s more of the same
old [thing], the same old delay tactics”); Meenan, supra note 8 (asserting that very few cases
are overturned because of actual innocence, and arguing that DNA testing would be
irrelevant in most post-conviction cases and would only add to a growing backlog of cases).
Cf. Death Penalty Overhaul, supra note 25 (“[A]t least 40% of the post-conviction DNA
tests performed by private and public laboratories generate evidence favorable to the inmate

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dubious about the legitimacy of a specific motion given the quantity of
comparable papers, but the sheer volume also makes it harder to isolate the
meritorious claims, even for the prosecutor predisposed to hunt for them.
In light of this “needle in a haystack” view of innocence claims, efficiency
considerations militate against prosecutors thoroughly reviewing all postconviction motions. Frivolous claims of innocence burn up scarce resources
and detract attention from the prosecution of new crimes.104 Time spent by an
individual prosecutor reviewing post-conviction motions signals time lost in
handling her regular caseload of trials and direct appeals, an extremely taxing
obligation in and of itself.105 In reality, the overwhelming number of cases on
the docket makes it a challenge for prosecutors to examine pending matters
with a critical eye, let alone cases in which a conviction has already been
procured.106 Also, since district attorneys’ offices experience a high turnover
rate, the prosecuting lawyer may very well have switched jobs by the time a
post-conviction motion is submitted, thereby imposing added burdens on the
attorney assigned to handle the case and compelled to grapple with the case’s
factual intricacies.107 With regard to post-conviction requests for DNA testing,
moreover, the financial costs associated with such tests may concern
prosecutors.108
claiming innocence and demanding the test.” (testimony of Barry Scheck)).
104 Liptak, supra note 15 (crediting Joshua Marquis, Co-Chairman, National District
Attorneys Association’s Capital Litigation Committee, with this observation).
105 As it is, “immense caseloads and understaffed offices . . . make careful consideration,
selection, and prosecution of each case a practical impossibility.” Belsky, supra note 40, at
1492-93. The 2001 survey of prosecutors working in state courts conducted by the Bureau
of Justice found that, in the twelve-month period preceding the study, roughly eighty-seven
felony cases were closed per assistant prosecutor. See DEFRANCES, supra note 22, at 6. The
study defined a closed case as “any case with a judgment of conviction, acquittal, or
dismissal with or without prejudice, entered by the court.” Id. at 6 tbl.7.
106 See, e.g., Chemerinsky, supra note 40, at 312. As Chemerinsky explained:
In speaking to many assistant District Attorneys, I heard the constant complaint about
the sheer volume of cases and how difficult it was for them to do anything but try to
process them as effectively as possible. There simply wasn’t time, many said, to look
into suspicions about officers and their testimony.
Id. The courts, too, suffer from the malady of time constraints in evaluating post-conviction
motions. See, e.g., William Glaberson, Unbelievable Stories (Just ask the Judge), N.Y.
TIMES, July 30, 2003, at B1 (discussing Judge Jack Weinstein’s efforts in the Eastern
District of New York to review that court’s astonishing backlog of federal habeas corpus
petitions).
107 See, e.g., Felkenes, supra note 29, at 105-07 (interpreting his survey, which revealed
the youth and experience levels of most prosecutors, as signifying a high job turnover rate);
Liptak, supra note 15 (citing the statement of a prosecutor, who noted that the trial assistant
typically leaves the office before the post-conviction motion is filed). If the trial assistant
has left the office, there might be the additional problem of asking a new lawyer to plunge
into the case and gain the victim’s trust. See supra notes 89-94 and accompanying text.
108 See, e.g., Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 561 n.49 (noting the limited

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In sum, the institutional culture of most prosecutors’ offices values
conviction rates and, in this environment, prosecutors may become wedded to
maintaining convictions and resist incoming post-conviction motions based on
innocence. The administrative burden generated by the abundance of such
motions may create a further disincentive to treat each one as potentially
viable. As a result, the individual prosecutor must overcome various obstacles
if she wishes to acknowledge the validity of post-conviction innocence claims
and, thus, acknowledge that the office erred.109
II.

UNDER PRESSURE: POLITICAL VARIABLES AFFECTING PROSECUTORIAL
DECISIONS IN THE POST-CONVICTION CONTEXT

The reaction of prosecutors to post-conviction innocence claims must be
viewed through the lens of politics as well as in the context of the institutional
culture of district attorneys’ offices described in Part I. Indeed, the
institutional culture of prosecutorial agencies is determined, to some extent, by
the political landscape of the particular community.110 Except at the federal
level, virtually every chief prosecutor is elected by the public.111 Therefore,
along with the primary goal of obtaining and maintaining convictions,112 a
resources of prosecutors and forensic scientists and the potentially significant fiscal impact
of expanded DNA testing).
109 See Green, supra note 9, at 642-43. Green outlined a number of such obstacles in his
article:
[P]rosecutors must resist various forces that would undermine the government’s other
aims. At times, this may mean standing up to the police (when their investigations are
inadequate), disregarding the public (when its expectations are unreasonable), and
overcoming one’s own self-interest or ennui. In the face of contrary pressures and
expectations, both external and internal, it may take a certain amount of inner strength
(or strength of character) for an individual prosecutor . . . to confess error, or to seek to
overturn a conviction that was unfairly procured.
Id.; see also Gershman, supra note 42, at 350-54 (discussing how prosecutors must summon
the moral courage to decline to prosecute certain cases).
110 For example, the presence of a “liberal” district attorney in San Francisco, a former
defense attorney with a criminal record as a youth, may reflect the political reality of that
region. See, e.g., Maura Dolan, In Land of Liberals, D.A. Race Takes Twist, L.A. TIMES,
Dec. 13, 1999, at A3.
111 See DEFRANCES, supra note 22, at 2 (stating that, in 2001, all chief prosecutors
working in state courts were elected, except for those in three states and the District of
Columbia).
112
A number of scholars have delved into the issue of prosecutorial discretion,
particularly in the area of charging decisions, and posited that “conviction maximization” is
not the overriding goal. See, e.g., Richman, supra note 54, at 966 (“It is surely simplistic to
say that all prosecutors are primarily interested in maximizing convictions.”). Irrespective
of the motives behind their charging decisions, prosecutors have experienced increasing
autonomy in this realm of their power. See Bennett L. Gershman, The New Prosecutors, 53
U. PITT. L. REV. 393, 405-10 (1992) (asserting that “we have witnessed recently an even
larger accretion of the prosecutor’s charging power through legislative enactments, bold

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more complex blend of variables, including political considerations and public
sentiment, may affect discretionary decisions by prosecutors.113 This Part of
the article will analyze how political factors often operate to discourage
prosecutors from accepting the legitimacy of post-conviction innocence claims,
aside from distinct situations where it is politically advantageous to do so.
A.

The Elected Prosecutor

Chief prosecutors at the municipal and county levels normally must be
elected,114 unlike most lawyers engaged in public service—much less private
attorneys—who do not need to clear this hurdle. In general, there are no term
limits for these chief prosecutors, and they typically may be elected to any
number of terms.115 Assistant district attorneys in these agencies, although not
directly subject to the electoral process,116 serve at the pleasure of their boss
and might suffer—either through the loss of their job or a decline in status
within the office—in the event of a change of regime. In larger jurisdictions,
serving as the local prosecutor is a full-time position, prohibiting the chief and
assistant prosecutors from maintaining a private practice.117 In smaller
jurisdictions, the post may be a part-time one, allowing prosecutors to continue

prosecutorial initiatives, and judicial acquiescence”); Leslie C. Griffin, The Prudent
Prosecutor, 14 GEO. J. LEGAL ETHICS 259, 265 (2001) (“‘Twenty years after the onset of the
debate, prosecutorial discretion has expanded rather than contracted.’” (quoting Theodora
Galacatos, The United States Department of Justice Environmental Crimes Section: A Case
Study of Inter- and Intrabranch Conflict Over Congressional Oversight and the Exercise of
Prosecutorial Discretion, 64 FORDHAM L. REV. 587, 641-42 (1995) (footnotes omitted))).
113 See Smith, supra note 43, at 399 (“Prosecution is inherently political. It is impossible
for prosecutors to avoid political and public pressure, and even the best sometimes cave in
to it. It doesn’t matter how experienced or popular the chief prosecutor.” (footnotes
omitted)).
114 See DEFRANCES, supra note 22, at 2. The vast majority of states also hold popular
elections for the post of attorney general. See Angela Davis, Prosecution and Race: The
Power and Privilege of Discretion, 67 FORDHAM L. REV. 13, 57 (1998) (observing that
forty-three states hold such elections). Most chief prosecutors (85%) serve districts
composed of one county, although in Alaska, Delaware, and Rhode Island, criminal
prosecution is primarily the function of the state attorney general. DEFRANCES, supra note
22, at 2.
115
See DEFRANCES, supra note 22, at 3 (citing that twenty percent of chief state
prosecutors nationwide reported having served over fifteen years, with half of the chief
prosecutors in full-time medium-sized offices having served 8.4 years or more); see also
infra notes 280-284 and accompanying text (briefly discussing the advantages and
disadvantages of imposing term limits on prosecutors).
116 Davis, supra note 114, at 57 (mentioning that state and local prosecutors hire assistant
district attorneys to handle caseloads).
117 See Misner, supra note 62, at 733 (citing BUREAU OF JUSTICE STATISTICS, U.S. DEP’T
OF JUSTICE, BULLETIN: JUSTICE EXPENDITURE AND EMPLOYMENT 1990, at 1 (1993)).

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to engage in private practice on the side.118 Recent statistics, though, show that
there is a trend within the last decade toward embracing the full-time
prosecutorial model in smaller jurisdictions.119
Federal prosecutors are appointed, yet the process surrounding their
selection has political overtones.120 The President of the United States
possesses the power to appoint the Attorney General, who supervises the
Justice Department,121 and to appoint United States Attorneys in each of the
federal judicial districts.122 All of these appointees, in turn, must receive
confirmation from the Senate,123 which exposes their records to public
scrutiny.124 As for lower-level federal prosecutors, the Attorney General may
appoint Assistant United States Attorneys for any district.125 Accordingly, all
members of a prosecutor’s office—be it state, local, or federal—must be
mindful of the political ramifications of their conduct in handling cases.
The paradigm of the elected state and local prosecutor surfaced during the
1820s, instigated by the wish to make prosecutors accountable to their
constituents, “the People.”126 In the ensuing years, however, little has been
done to provide the public with access to information about the nature of
prosecutorial choices, specifically, those decisions relating to charging, plea
bargaining, and sentencing.127 The public’s capacity to hold prosecutors
accountable for their actions has thus become more fiction than fact.128
118

Id. (citing BUREAU OF JUSTICE STATISTICS, U.S. DEP’T OF JUSTICE, BULLETIN: JUSTICE
EXPENDITURE AND EMPLOYMENT 1990, at 1 (1993)). For a discussion of some of the
problems stemming from the existence of part-time prosecutors, see Richard H. Underwood,
Part-time Prosecutors and Conflicts of Interest: A Survey and Some Proposals, 81 KY. L.J.
1 (1993).
119 See DEFRANCES, supra note 22, at 3 (“In 2001 the percentage of full-time chief
prosecutors was 77% compared to 53% in 1990.”).
120 See Davis, supra note 114, at 57 (“Federal prosecutors are appointed, but their
selection is also political.”)
121 Id. (citing 28 U.S.C. § 503 (1994)).
122 Id. (citing 28 U.S.C. § 541(a) (1994)).
123 Id. (citing 28 U.S.C. §§ 503, 541(a) (1994)).
124
Id. (“Theoretically, the confirmation hearings provide an opportunity to inform the
public of the practices and policies of a particular prosecutor since the hearings are open to
members of the public, who may express their views by writing or calling their senators.”).
125 Id. (citing 28 U.S.C. § 542(a) (1994)).
126
Id. at 57-58 (noting the irony in the fact that the government established prosecutorial
elections so that the people they served could hold them accountable).
127 Id. at 58 (stating that public access to information regarding prosecutorial practices
has “not expanded since the 1820s”).
128 See, e.g., James Vorenberg, Decent Restraint of Prosecutorial Power, 94 HARV. L.
REV. 1521 (1981) (discussing the expansion of prosecutorial power as problematic and
suggesting the need for reform to ensure greater accountability and transparency, especially
in charging decisions); see also Tierney, supra note 19 (“In theory, prosecutors are
accountable to voters. In practice, that doesn’t seem to be much of a deterrent . . . .”

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Instead, because few prosecutors’ offices have written guidelines about their
procedures and policies,129 the electorate is usually only privy to information
revealed by prosecutors themselves, or unearthed by the press, come election
time. 130
Also, prosecutors are ordinarily elected during the same elections as other
public officials131 and, consequently, more prominent political races may
overshadow their campaigns unless the candidates take affirmative steps to
catch the public’s attention. Prosecutorial elections might warrant less notice
than usual if the candidate is unopposed, as is often the case.132 Even
assuming that a smattering of voters would like to learn about an individual
candidate’s agenda, prosecutors are not especially forthcoming with precise
information; many commentators have noted that prosecutors tend to campaign
on generalized themes as opposed to specific policies.133
Often, particularly in recent years, the generalized campaign theme adopted
by a candidate running for the office of chief prosecutor is from the tough-oncrime category.134
Prosecutorial candidates have favored broad, noncontroversial messages about public safety and their ability to maintain it,
matters of concern to the vast majority of voters who see themselves primarily
as prospective victims of crime rather than as potential defendants. Given that
most contenders already have some experience as assistant prosecutors,
candidates are apt to rely on their courtroom records to buttress their public
safety message, highlighting their “wins” in notorious cases and their overall
“winning” percentage.135 Many prosecutors have political ambitions extending
(reporting the opinion of Walter Olson, a Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute)).
129 See Misner, supra note 62, at 772-73 (“[A]pproximately twelve percent of prosecutor
offices currently have written prosecutorial guidelines . . . .” (citing BUREAU OF JUSTICE
STATISTICS, UNITED STATES DEP’T OF JUSTICE, PROSECUTORS IN STATE COURTS 5 (1993))) .
130 See, e.g., Felkenes, supra note 29, at 112 (noting that, because the public is not
informed about the precise attitudes adopted in a prosecutor’s office, they do not surface as
political issues in elections).
131 See Davis, supra note 114, at 57 (“Prosecutors are usually elected in the same general
elections as other public officials.”).
132 See Richman, supra note 54, at 963 (mentioning that many elections for chief
prosecutor are uncontested).
133 See Davis, supra note 114, at 58-59 (stating that elected prosecutors typically
campaign on generalized themes rather than relying on specific information regarding office
policies).
134 Id. at 58 (“[P]rosecutors typically run on very general ‘tough on crime’ themes. . . .”);
Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 295 (stating that prosecutors give the electorate “what
they want” by conveying a “tough on crime” message). The growth of anti-crime sentiment
in the United States, often traced back to the early 1980s, arguably spawned an environment
where, “[b]y the 1990s, candidates from both major parties at all levels of government were
competing to claim the mantle of ‘toughest on crime.’” Note, Breathing New Life into
Prosecutorial Vindictiveness Doctrine, 114 HARV. L. REV. 2074, 2087-88 (2001).
135 See, e.g., Bresler, supra note 41, at 541 n.18 (citing examples of prosecutors who

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beyond the district attorney’s office, namely, the judicial bench or the mayoral
or gubernatorial mansion, and may also broadcast their record of trial success
as prosecutors when vying for these posts.136
An added benefit of the tough-on-crime theme, especially for candidates
competing for county prosecutorial seats, is that it does not necessarily signal
that a prosecutor is fiscally irresponsible. While district attorneys must
consider the costs of prosecuting crimes—because they largely use county
funds in managing their offices137—they need not overly concern themselves
with the costs of incarceration given that, in the majority of jurisdictions, the
prison system operates via state monies.138 This “split-funding” of the criminal
justice system results in both the diffusion of the financial burden between
state and local budgets139 and, in political terms for prosecutors, the evasion of
wholesale blame for the expenditures required in seeking convictions and
procuring severe sentences.140
have used their win-loss records in campaigns); Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 294-96
(describing how career advancement pressures often cause prosecutors to become engrossed
in the “score keeping, conviction seeking mentality”); Richman, supra note 54, at 967 n.95
(noting how a prosecutor’s win-loss record can often become an important issue during
elections). Newspaper articles and other accounts of prosecutorial elections reveal the
degree to which prosecutors focus on their trial success, particularly in high-profile cases,
during campaigns. See, e.g., District Attorney, DENVER POST, Oct. 22, 2000, Special
Section, at 47 (reporting that, when asked what makes him the best-qualified candidate, the
incumbent chief prosecutor in Jefferson County answered in part that “I am a tough
prosecutor[;] I have personally tried seven cases during my tenure as district attorney (three
were murder cases), all with successful results”).
136 See, e.g., Kenneth Bresler, Seeking Justice, Seeking Election, and Seeking the Death
Penalty: The Ethics of Prosecutorial Candidates’ Campaigning on Capital Convictions, 7
GEO. J. LEGAL ETHICS 941 (1994). Bresler describes, in particular, John K. Van de Kamp’s
campaign for Governor of California in 1990 where one television commercial boasted that,
as District Attorney of Los Angeles County and California’s Attorney General, the
candidate “put or kept 277 murderers on Death Row.” Id. at 945 n.18 (citing John Balzar,
Van de Kamp TV Ads Focus on Death Row, Will Air Today, L.A. TIMES, Mar. 25, 1990, at
A3).
137 See DEFRANCES, supra note 22, at 4 (finding that, in the state court system, “[h]alf of
the prosecutors’ offices received 85% or more of their funding from the county
government” and “[a]bout a third of the offices relied exclusively on the county government
for their budget”).
138
Misner, supra note 62, at 719-20 (suggesting that most prosecutors do not consider
the availability of prison space or resources because state funds are generally used to pay the
expenses related to incarceration).
139
Id. (arguing that the diffusion of costs creates a disincentive for prosecutors to find
less costly ways to punish criminals).
140 Id. (“As a result, the electorate does not have one official to whom it can look for
leadership.”). Given the recent economic downturn across the nation, however, prosecutors
and legislators alike have received greater criticism about the escalating number of inmates
and the costs of their imprisonment—particularly the expense of incarcerating people for

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Dwelling on one’s past conquests in appealing to the public for support is
viewed by some observers to be crucial to a prosecutor’s electoral chances,141
although others have attacked this practice as unethical.142 In particular,
Kenneth Bresler, a former prosecutor, has criticized the practice of identifying
individual defendants sentenced to death and publicizing “body counts”—
tallies of capital convictions—as part of a candidate’s campaign literature and
speeches.143 The ethical issue revolves principally around the fear that when a
prosecutor seeking election or re-election to public office uses such tactics, it
suggests political considerations have infected the prosecutorial decisionmaking process.144 A “chicken-or-egg” problem arises; it becomes unclear
whether the prosecutor sought those convictions and harsh sentences in the
hopes of campaigning on the backs of those defendants, or whether the
convictions were merely an ancillary result of the prosecutor’s effort to do
justice.145 What is clear, however, is that ethical rules forbid a prosecutor from
allowing political considerations to dictate the decision to prosecute or
recommend a specific punishment in a case.146 Even if accusations that a
prosecutor permitted political variables to affect her decisions can most likely
never be substantiated, as Bresler observes, campaigning on one’s “win-loss”
record and notable “victories” may create an appearance that justice has been
compromised.147
minor offenses. See, e.g., Editorial, The Growing Inmate Population, N.Y. TIMES, Aug. 1,
2003, at A20 (“Getting tough on crime has long been an easy way to impress voters. But
with government strapped for funds, it makes no sense to spend an average of $22,000 a
year to keep people behind bars who do not need to be there.”).
141 Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 295-96 (“Campaigning on their trial success—
their convictions—has been deemed by some as essential to be elected as a prosecutor.”).
142 See, e.g., Bresler, supra note 136.
In essence, Bresler contends that permitting
prosecutorial “politicking on the defendants they sent to death row” violates several ethical
rules, including the goal to seek justice and to prevent political factors from affecting
prosecutorial decisionmaking. Id. at 943. Bresler distinguishes between prosecutors who
highlight their support for capital punishment (in his view, an acceptable campaign practice)
from those who mention convicted defendants by name or present the number of executions
carried out on their watch (which he deems unethical). Id. at 944.
143
Id. at 944.
144 Id. at 950.
145 Id. at 949 (“Capitalizing on capital convictions in campaigns raises the question:
Which came first, the decision to pursue the death penalty or the decision to pursue political
advantage? The question is hard to answer, and an answer is hard to prove.”).
146 Id.; see also ABA STANDARDS, supra note 30, § 3-1.3(f) (“A prosecutor shall not
permit his or her professional judgment or obligations to be affected by his or her own
political . . . or personal interests.”); id. § 3-3.9(d) (“In making the decision to prosecute, the
prosecutor should give no weight to the personal or political advantages or disadvantages
which might be involved . . . .”).
147
See Bresler, supra note 136, at 949-50 (observing that using capital convictions to
achieve political success is unethical “because it demonstrates, not that a particular decision
to prosecute was politicized, but that it easily could have been”).

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Whereas chief prosecutors are theoretically accountable to the public due to
the manner in which they attain (and retain) their posts, the true extent of this
accountability is uncertain. In running for election as a district attorney,
candidates often convey tough-on-crime rhetoric sprinkled with references to
their winning percentage and successes in high-profile cases.148 The public,
though, has minimal access to precise information about the rest of a
candidate’s decisionmaking record that is not otherwise divulged by the
candidate herself.149 Rather, in lieu of specific details about office policies and
procedures, broad themes resonate in most elections and information about
prosecutors’ discretionary decisions is seldom available and seldom sought for
public consumption in evaluating candidates.150
B.

The Political Consequences of Post-Conviction Innocence Claims for
Prosecutors

The fact that candidates for chief prosecutor and former prosecutors seeking
other public offices typically depend upon their conviction rates and track
records in high-profile cases151 necessarily affects their approach to postconviction claims of innocence. For a rank-and-file prosecutor anticipating a
run for elected office, conceding a past mistake could undercut any tough-oncrime swagger and perhaps call into question his fitness for the position. How
many innocent people has this lawyer imprisoned? If elected, will he be able
to “get the bad guys”? Together with generating politically damaging
questions about the candidate’s competence, the exoneration of an innocent
prisoner suddenly produces an unsolved crime and, hence, one more criminal
at large: a development that, considering the media frenzy accompanying these
cases, occurs right in front of a curious public.152
A political incentive, therefore, exists for prosecutors to fight postconviction innocence claims, to duke it out in the courts, so to speak.
Opposing an innocence claim and letting the motion wend its way through the
adversarial system not only reinforces a prosecutor’s tough-on-crime message,
but any political capital lost due to a subsequent vacatur of a conviction can be
attributed to the system as a whole, rather than the individual prosecutor or the
local district attorney’s office. In non-DNA exonerations, where innocence

148
See Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 295-96 (describing how politicians must use
their “wins,” especially in the realm of capital punishment, when campaigning).
149 See Davis, supra note 114, at 58-59 (stating that the public’s access to precise
information regarding prosecutorial decisionmaking is minimal and has not expanded since
the 1820s).
150
Id. (arguing that the electorate is not fully informed when voting for prosecutors).
151 See supra notes 135-136 and accompanying text.
152
Occasionally, however, the exoneration of an innocent prisoner occurs simultaneously
with the discovery of the true perpetrator. See infra notes 207-232 and accompanying text
(describing the case of Anthony Porter).

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may never be proven to a scientific certainty,153 the judge in effect becomes the
one who is “soft” on crime, not the prosecution. And, in reversals deriving
from DNA tests conducted pursuant to a court order, the prosecutor can argue
that justice was ultimately served—that the adversarial system worked in the
end. Not incidentally, post-conviction battles of attrition through the court
system decrease the likelihood that cases will be overturned, particularly when
the prosecution balks at subjecting evidence in its possession to DNA
testing.154
Finally, there may be a financial incentive for prosecutors to resist postconviction innocence claims given the trend toward the adoption of state
legislation providing compensation for the wrongfully-convicted.155 Although
these statutes do not expressly designate that funds used for this compensation
should be drawn directly from prosecutors’ budgets,156 the impact of these
payouts on state coffers could conceivably have an indirect effect on the
amount of money allocated to prosecutors partially dependent on state
funding.157
Overall, the elected nature of most chief prosecutors allows for the
possibility that political factors may unduly influence decisions,158 among
153

See supra note 27 and accompanying text.
See supra notes 9-14 and accompanying text (commenting that the prosecution may
not consent to testing or may refuse to turn over biological evidence for testing). In one
particularly egregious case, a law student in Kentucky found evidence from a blood stain
near a broken window that, in the view of investigators, belonged to the perpetrator in an old
murder case. See Death Penalty Overhaul, supra note 25. The inmate convicted of the
murder, Michael Elliott, claimed that testing the blood stain would prove his innocence. Id.
Rather than consenting to DNA tests, however, the local prosecutor asked the trial court to
destroy the evidence, a request that was granted by the court. Id. Ultimately, the Kentucky
Court of Appeals prevented the issuance of the destruction order. Id.
155 See Adele Bernhard, When Justice Fails: Indemnification for Unjust Conviction, 6 U.
CHI. L. SCH. ROUNDTABLE 73 (1999) (discussing the existence of statutes in certain
jurisdictions that explicitly provide compensation for the wrongfully-convicted, and
asserting the need for additional legislation throughout the country because traditional tort
and civil rights remedies are inadequate to compensate the exonerated).
156
The indemnification statutes for wrongful convictions that have been enacted do not
indicate that prosecutors must directly bear any of the financial brunt for compensating
claimants. See Adele Bernhard, Table: When Justice Fails: Indemnification for Unjust
Conviction, 7 U. CHI. L. SCH. ROUNDTABLE 345 (2000). The fear that damage awards could
strain state budgets, in Bernhard’s view, may be one of the reasons why legislators in many
states implemented caps on individual recoveries. See Bernhard, supra note 155, at 106.
157 Although many prosecutors’ offices that handle cases in the state court system are
largely dependent on county funds for their budgets, see supra note 137 and accompanying
text, data also suggests that roughly half of these offices receive some funding from the state
government and about six percent of the offices reported total financial reliance on state
funding. See DEFRANCES, supra note 22, at 4.
158 Some of the earlier analyses of elected prosecutors’ offices—the crime commissions
of the 1920s and 1930s—also made this observation. See Misner, supra note 62, at 730-31
154

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them, choices regarding how to respond to post-conviction claims of
innocence. Prosecutors are also largely not accountable for these decisions in
light of the fundamental lack of transparency of their internal decisionmaking
processes.159 Generally, the public only has access to information about these
choices when the prosecution unilaterally opts to disclose details concerning a
criminal matter or when the media, usually at the behest of a zealous and wellconnected defense attorney, takes an interest in a case, transforming it into a
political cause.160 Since prosecutors tend to rely on their win-loss record in
political campaigns where vague tough-on-crime oratory is deemed critical,161
revealing past errors and rectifying wrongful convictions do not appear to be
politically advantageous. Exceptions to this principle, however, may lie in
cases where someone else (the press, the defense) draws public attention to the
case and it becomes expedient for prosecutors to intervene and salvage
whatever political benefits they can.
Indeed, many of the situations where prosecutors have come forward to
assent to—or at least not oppose—post-conviction innocence claims have a
reactive, almost opportunistic quality to them: many prosecutors “do the right
thing” in responding to these motions only when there are discernible political
advantages to be accrued and/or doing otherwise could have a grave political
downside. Occasionally, even in the absence of overt political pressure,
prosecutors have initiated “backlog projects” to review old cases in order to
ascertain whether there are any viable claims of innocence.162 Critics of these
programs, though, characterize them as mere window-dressing, an attempt by
district attorneys to inoculate themselves from attack by proclaiming to be
open to the possibility of innocence claims while preventing outside observers
from having access to the same files and undertaking a more nuanced review
(“Generally the commissions found that the elective nature of the office often led to undue
political influence on prosecutorial decisions.”).
159 See Davis, supra note 114, at 58-59 (arguing that prosecutors are not truly accountable to the electorate because information regarding prosecutorial decisionmaking is not
fully available).
160 See Press Release, National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, Winning at
Any Cost: Prosecutorial Excess Distorting America’s Justice System (Feb. 9, 1999),
available at http://www.nacdl.org/public.nsf/newsreleases/99mn001?opendocument (last
accessed Jan. 9, 2004) (“Despite the recent spate of coverage of misconduct, prosecutorial
discretion is the least-covered thing in American government . . . . The press has written a
lot about bad cops, a lot about judges, but prosecutors, in the main, have only been covered
through their leaks and announcements.” (quoting David Burnham, an investigative
reporter)). The notion that some attorneys may be better able to grab the attention of the
media than others raises disturbing fairness questions, especially for inmates who do not
have the benefit of any counsel whatsoever after the exhaustion of their direct appeals.
161 Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 295-96 (stating that some people regard
campaigning on prosecutorial “wins” as essential to success).
162 See supra note 3 and accompanying text (identifying instances where prosecutors
have taken the initiative in reviewing convictions).

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of their contents.163 In addition, tough-on-crime rhetoric by prosecutors may
be music to the ears of much of the electorate, but such themes may strike a
more discordant note in certain regions of the country than elsewhere.164 On
the whole, the receptivity of prosecutors to post-conviction allegations of
innocence seems to be greatly affected by the local political climate prevailing
at the time of the claim.
There are several distinct circumstances where prosecutors can reap political
rewards, or bypass political potholes, by accepting the potential legitimacy of a
post-conviction innocence claim. Specifically, these circumstances include:
(1) a case that fascinates members of the media, and their investigative
reporting presents the possibility of tainting the chief prosecutor’s reputation;
(2) a situation where refusing to fight the defendant’s post-conviction motion
affords an opportunity for a prosecutor to portray a political adversary in a bad
light; (3) a case where the defendant’s innocence claim is coupled with signs of
the actual perpetrator’s culpability; and/or (4) a situation where the defendant
remains in prison, despite the exoneration, because of a sentence for an
unrelated crime.
First, pressure on prosecutors to respond to innocence claims may come in
the form of media exposure. A classic example of this situation is the case of
Jeffrey Blake, a young Brooklyn man convicted of murder in New York state
court in the early 1990s based solely on the testimony of a single eyewitness,
Dana Garner.165 At the outset of the Blake case, prosecutors failed to disclose
information casting doubt on the witness’s credibility.166 Years later, due to a
painstaking re-investigation of the case by Michelle Fox, the Legal Aid Society

163 As Goldberg and Siegel have observed, many of these initiatives “rely upon
prosecutorial judgments concerning which cases will ultimately receive testing.” Goldberg
& Siegel, supra note 3, at 394-95; see also Eric Lichtblau, New Federal Plan for DNA
Testing Is Proposed, N.Y. TIMES, Mar. 12, 2003, at A20 (discussing Peter Neufeld’s
criticism of a Justice Department proposal, which includes funds to assist states in defraying
the costs of post-conviction DNA testing, because the plan gives the Justice Department and
prosecutors too much authority to decide who should have access to testing).
164 Liberal enclaves may provide a political environment in which prosecutorial openness
to post-conviction innocence claims is not a political detriment. For instance, the District
Attorney of San Francisco, Terence Hallinan, is a former criminal defense lawyer who
ascended to his post on a wave of liberal ideology. See, e.g., Ilene Lelchuk, D.A. Race
Could Hinge on Police Indictments, S.F. CHRON., Mar. 10, 2003, at A1 (stating that Hallinan
has been referred to as the country’s most progressive district attorney and that he overcame
reports during his 1999 election that “his office had won convictions in only 35.5 percent of
the homicide, rape, robbery and assault cases police brought to his office”); see also supra
note 110 and accompanying text (describing the San Francisco district attorney’s race in
1999).
165 See, e.g., Green, supra note 9, at 637-42 (describing the circumstances surrounding
the conviction and exoneration of Jeffrey Blake).
166 Id. at 638 (“[I]nformation, known by the authorities but not disclosed to the defense,
cast doubt upon the witness’s credibility.”)

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lawyer assigned to handle Blake’s direct appeal, Garner recanted entirely and
the person with whom he had previously claimed to be standing at the time of
the incident denied seeing the shooting.167 The local district attorney’s office
was initially hesitant to set aside the conviction until a New York Times
columnist joined in Fox’s efforts by writing a series of articles, scathing in
their depiction of the county prosecutor’s office.168 It was only in response to
this media coverage that the prosecution eventually agreed that the conviction
should be set aside, and Blake was finally released upon the motion of the
district attorney after eight years’ imprisonment.169
Jeffrey Blake’s release is just one example of an occasion where the
prosecution evidently relented and accepted the legitimacy of a post-conviction
innocence claim when faced with the prospect of looking “bad” due to a public
shellacking by the media.170 This form of pressure is arbitrary, contingent
upon the ability of the defendant (who is often litigating his claim pro se) to
alert the media to his case, and the willingness of the media to listen. Even
more, attempting to showcase an innocence claim through the media carries
with it dangers for the defendant, including exposing his prior criminal record
to dissection and possibly antagonizing judges who are wary—perhaps
justifiably—of claimants who try to litigate their cases through the press.171
Second, prosecutors may be amenable to a post-conviction innocence claim
in situations where the prior conviction occurred during the reign of a previous
chief prosecutor, as in the case of Earl Truvia and Greg Bright in New
Orleans.172 The two men were convicted, based upon the testimony of a single
167

Id.
Id. (acknowledging New York Times columnist Bob Herbert’s efforts to help publicize
the wrongful conviction).
169 Id. (stating that the district attorney’s motion to set aside the conviction was most
likely a reaction to increased media attention).
170 Several years later, with the media coverage in The New York Times reduced to a
single paragraph in the Metro Briefing section, the United States Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit ordered the vacatur of a murder conviction where the witness who lied
against Blake again served as the chief prosecution witness. Metro Briefing New York:
Manhattan: Murder Conviction Vacated, N.Y. TIMES, June 19, 2003, at B10. The
prosecutor’s office in Brooklyn announced that it would retry the case. Id.
171 An analysis of the ethical and strategic issues involved in a defendant’s assessment of
whether to try to publicize an innocence claim through the media is beyond the scope of this
article. For a discussion of journalism and wrongful convictions generally, see Rob
Warden, The Revolutionary Role of Journalism in Identifying and Rectifying Wrongful
Convictions, 70 UMKC L. REV. 803 (2002) (detailing instances where the media has either
positively or negatively affected cases); see also Steve Weinberg, A Short History of
Exposing Misconduct: An Unlikely Cast of Characters Has Shone a Spotlight on Bad
Prosecutors, and On Occasion Sparked Reform, June 26, 2003, at
http://www.publicintegrity.org/pm/default.aspx?sid=sidebarsb&aid=37 (last accessed Jan. 9,
2004) (briefly surveying past efforts to publicize prosecutorial misconduct).
172 See, e.g., Michael Perlstein, Jordan Drops Charges in 1975 Murder; Two Men Freed
168

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eyewitness, of murdering a teenager on Halloween night in 1975.173 At the
time, there were questions about the credibility of the witness, whom
prosecutors knew to be battling drug addiction and mental illness prior to and
during the trial.174 Prosecutors did not, however, share this information with
members of the defense team.175
Many years later, the nonprofit Innocence Project New Orleans (“IPNO”)
looked into the matter on behalf of Bright, intrigued by a case that lacked any
motive, weapon, or physical evidence implicating the defendant, and stirred by
Bright’s unwavering assertions of innocence.176 IPNO ultimately filed a postconviction motion arguing that Bright “has spent a quarter century in prison for
a crime he did not commit,”177 and the defense team’s efforts resulted in a
reversal of his conviction in February 2002 and the ordering of a new trial.178
The court also vacated Truvia’s conviction and ordered a new trial.179
Harry Connick, Sr., who had served as Orleans Parish District Attorney
since 1973180 and was ensconced in the office at the time of the original trial,
appealed the 2002 ruling, but the Louisiana Supreme Court upheld a new trial
for both defendants.181 Undaunted, Connick vowed to re-try the case and
insisted that the two men were guilty.182 Renowned for his feisty personality
and law-and-order values,183 Connick achieved notoriety for his fervent
application of the death penalty as well as allegations that his office not
infrequently tampered with evidence in high-profile cases.184 Over the course
on Eve of Retrial, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), June 24, 2003, Metro, at 1.
173 Id.
174 Id. (reporting that the defense, assembled by the nonprofit Innocence Project New
Orleans, had shown that prosecutors knew about the eyewitness’s problems).
175 Id. (reporting that the defense team had shown that the prosecution withheld
information regarding the eyewitness’s credibility).
176 Michael Perlstein, Group Trying to Correct Courts’ Mistakes; Current Appeal Faults
Lone Witness in Trial, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Mar. 14, 2003, at 1 (discussing
Bright’s impassioned claim of innocence, as reflected by his unwillingness to accept
responsibility for the crime even when doing so could have led to a sentence commutation
from the Pardon Board).
177 Id. (quoting a petition presented on behalf of Bright).
178 See Perlstein, supra note 172.
179 Id. (stating that the convictions of both Bright and Truvia were vacated in 2002);
accord Michael Perlstein, Open to Appeal: Convicted Criminals Say DA Policy Change
Gives Them Fair Shot, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), July 20, 2003, at 1.
180 Gwen Filosa, Connick Calling It Quits After 30 Years; Love Him or Hate Him, DA
Shaped Law and Order in Orleans Parish, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Mar. 23, 2002,
at 1 (“[Connick] defeated incumbent Jim Garrison for the job of district attorney in
1973 . . . .”).
181
Perlstein, supra note 172.
182 Id.
183 See Filosa, supra note 180.
184 Id. (describing how Connick sought the death penalty whenever possible, and noting

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of his long career, Connick lobbied against almost any policy that could be
perceived as a sign of prosecutorial “softness,” even plea bargaining.185 In
particular, prosecutors during Connick’s tenure uniformly opposed postconviction motions as a matter of principle, and nearly all such motions
provoked a fight.186
In March 2002, Connick announced his retirement and, later that year, he
endorsed Dale Atkins—a clerk of the Civil District Court who had worked for
Connick for three years before her election as clerk—as his successor.187
Soon, eight candidates began to jockey for the post of district attorney, one of
whom quickly surfaced as Atkins’s main rival: Eddie Jordan, a former federal
prosecutor.188 Playing the role of outsider to Atkins’s insider in the campaign,
Jordan highlighted his hard-nosed prosecution of former Louisiana Governor
Edwin Edwards on federal corruption charges189 and proclaimed his
independence from political machines.190 Despite the fact that Atkins outspent
him by a wide margin,191 Jordan won the election, but only after a bitter twosome of the allegations that surrounded Connick’s office).
185 See Gwen Filosa, Harry Bids Adieu; After 29 Years and Five Terms as Orleans
Parish District Attorney, Harry Connick Sr., 76, Decides to Close His Briefcase, TIMESPICAYUNE (New Orleans), Mar. 28, 2002, at 1 (describing Connick’s strong belief in “lawand-order criminal justice” and his disdain for plea bargaining because of “its connotations
of deal-making and the perception of prosecutorial softness”). Two scholars recently
studied Connick’s opposition to plea bargaining and, on the whole, praised the prosecutor
for his emphasis on pre-screening cases and only pursuing cases that had a sincere chance
for success at trial. Ronald Wright & Marc Miller, The Screening/Bargaining Tradeoff, 55
STAN. L. REV. 29 (2002).
186 Perlstein, supra note 179 (“During Connick’s tenure, defense motions were uniformly
opposed on principle, nearly every post-conviction appeal or pardon request was vigorously
contested.”).
187 Gwen Filosa, District Attorney Throws Weight Behind Atkins; Connick Endorses Her
to Replace Him, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Aug. 8, 2002, Metro, at 8; Gwen Filosa,
Jordan, Atkins to Face Off in DA Race; Connick Successor to be Selected in Nov. 5 Runoff,
TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Oct. 2, 2002, at 1 [hereinafter Filosa, Runoff].
188 See Gwen Filosa, DA Race Heating Up As Primary Looms; 8 Jockeying To Stick Out
In Voters’ Minds, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Sept. 30, 2002, at 1 (describing the
campaign efforts of both Jordan and Atkins); Filosa, Runoff, supra note 187 (recounting the
results of the election in which Jordan finished first and Atkins finished second out of eight
candidates).
189
Filosa, Runoff, supra note 187 (“He touted his seven years as U.S. attorney and
landmark cases, including successful prosecution of . . . former Gov. Edwin Edwards.”).
190 Gwen Filosa, DA Race Heats Up in Forum, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Oct. 16,
2002, at 1 (noting that Jordan attributed his lack of endorsements to the fact that he was
“unconnected to political circles”); Filosa, Runoff, supra note 187 (“In his first bid for
elected office, Jordan said he relied on the voters instead of political machines. ‘We
achieved this result without any major political endorsements, not one,’ Jordan told
supporters . . . .”).
191 Gwen Filosa, Atkins Leading Money Race; $84,500 Raised in Past Week, TIMES-

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person runoff with Atkins.192 Continuing to assume his outsider persona in the
aftermath of the election, Jordan reiterated his reformist agenda during his
inauguration speech,193 and proceeded to fire over sixty employees a few
weeks later, invoking his predecessor’s wrath.194 In a letter that found its way
to the press, Connick blasted Jordan for beginning his administration “on a
note of distrust and mean-spiritedness.”195
It was in this atmosphere of simmering hostility between predecessor and
successor as Orleans Parish District Attorney that the Truvia-Bright case reemerged in the summer of 2003.196 On the eve of the re-trial, Jordan dropped
the charges after reviewing the evidence and attacked Connick for unethical
conduct;197 a newspaper reporter quoted Jordan as saying that “[t]he way this
case was handled by the former district attorney’s administration is
inexcusable. . . . This type of disregard of the disclosure rules will not be
tolerated under my administration.”198 Jordan’s decision to abandon the retrial was heralded by members of the criminal defense bar, with Barry Scheck,
Co-Director of the Innocence Project at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law,
terming Jordan “a prosecutor with a conscience.”199 Scheck added that
“[i]nstead of adopting the old-fashioned knee-jerk ‘the-system-is-never-wrong’
position, he took the time to review the facts and make a just decision.”200
Since the resolution of the Truvia-Bright case, all indications suggest that
Jordan continues to be flexible in dealing with post-conviction defense
PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Nov. 1, 2002, Metro, at 1 (comparing the campaign spending
amounts for Jordan and Atkins); Gwen Filosa, DA Race ‘Wide Open’ Again; 2 Hopefuls
Separated by Only 8,565 Votes, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Oct. 7, 2002, Metro, at 1
(stating that, before the initial primary, Atkins spent twice as much money as Jordan).
192 James Gill, Gloves Off in Race for DA, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Oct. 2, 2002,
Metro, at 7; see also Filosa, Runoff, supra note 187; Gwen Filosa, Jordan Victorious in
Close Race, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Nov. 6, 2002, at 1 (describing the increase of
personal attacks by the candidates in the runoff, and noting that Jordan went on to win).
193 Gwen Filosa, City Hails Jordan in Elaborate Inauguration; New District Attorney
Vows to Reform System, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans), Jan. 14, 2003, at 1 (“Jordan said
the voters had given him a mandate for change in the way the district attorney’s office fights
crime, and that the time has come to install new policies and strategies.”).
194 Gwen Filosa, Connick, Jordan Spar Over Firings, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New Orleans),
Jan. 24, 2003, at 1 (“Jordan’s abrupt firing of more than 60 employees Tuesday was ‘callous
and unprofessional,’ Connick wrote.”).
195 Id.
196 Perlstein, supra note 172 (illustrating Jordan’s hostility toward his predecessor and
describing his decision to drop the charges against Truvia and Bright).
197 Id. (“Blasting his predecessor for withholding critical evidence . . . Orleans Parish
District Attorney Eddie Jordan dropped the charges Monday on the eve of a muchanticipated retrial.”).
198 Id.
199 Id.
200 Id.

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motions, which Connick had previously shunned.201 In July 2003, Jordan
stated that “[w]e’re not going to be bound by the decisions of the previous
administration. We don’t have a one-size-fits-all philosophy.”202 Local
criminal defense lawyers, however, have taken Jordan’s rapprochement with a
grain of salt. In the words of one veteran public defender, “Jordan is a lot
more relaxed listening to criticism of old cases because they weren’t handled
under his tenure by people he hired and trained and supported. The real test
will come when people from his administration get socked with these kinds of
criticisms and complaints about cases handled under his watch.”203
Jordan’s decision to drop the murder charges against Bright and Truvia may
indeed reflect the work of “a prosecutor with a conscience,” yet it also
presented an opportunity for a new chief prosecutor to score some political
points against a previous regime. That is, one cannot discount the lingering
animus between Connick and Jordan as a factor in Jordan’s choice to drop the
charges in the Truvia-Bright case and lambaste Connick in the media.
Although Jordan stopped short of publicly stating that Truvia and Bright were
innocent,204 this episode nevertheless shows how political considerations—
specifically, the desire to harm a political foe—may be a major impetus behind
a prosecutor’s decision to join the side of the defense in a post-conviction
innocence case. In “doing the right thing,” Jordan also managed to give
Connick what he believed was his due.
A third circumstance where prosecutors may find accepting the legitimacy
of a post-conviction innocence claim politically palatable is in cases where
new evidence exculpates the defendant while also inculpating another person.
These situations may take the form of a post-conviction DNA test exonerating
the defendant that concurrently results in a “hit” on a person whose genetic
material is on file with a database.205 They may also arise when the true
201 For instance, Jordan refused to oppose two separate post-conviction motions from
prisoners seeking to modify their sentences, motions that Connick had previously fought.
See Perlstein, supra note 179 (discussing Jordan’s refusal to oppose the post-conviction
motions of both Norris Henderson and Raymond Perique, whose release Connick had
strongly opposed). For an editorial by a former prosecutor criticizing Jordan’s “defensefriendly philosophy,” see Editorial, DA’s Office is Going Too Far, TIMES-PICAYUNE (New
Orleans), July 22, 2003, Metro, at 4 (suggesting that the district attorney’s office was
granting “wholesale plea bargains”).
202 See Perlstein, supra note 179.
203
Id.
204 See Perlstein, supra note 172 (discussing Jordan’s decision to refrain from retrying
Bright and Truvia, but failing to declare them wrongfully convicted).
205
Proponents of DNA testing, even defense lawyers, often hail the benefits of this
technology as a crime-fighting tool just as much as it is a means to prove innocence. See,
e.g., Death Penalty Overhaul, supra note 25 (Barry Scheck stating how, as a commissioner
on New York State’s Forensic Science Review Board, he spent significant time training and
urging law enforcement to focus on old “cold” cases that can now be solved via DNA); see
also John P. Cronan, The Next Frontier of Law Enforcement: A Proposal for Complete DNA

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perpetrator comes forward to confess, and there is evidence to corroborate that
statement.206 Where a post-conviction innocence claim is accompanied by
evidence strongly implicating another suspect, a prosecutor incurs minimal
political risk in displaying openness to the claim: an innocent person is
exonerated yet without the attendant creation of an unsolved crime.
A prime example of this situation is the Anthony Porter case from Illinois.207
Porter was convicted and sentenced to death for the 1982 double murder of a
young couple, Marilyn Green and Jerry Hillard, in a park on Chicago’s South
Side.208 In the ensuing years, it was revealed that Porter was likely mentally
incompetent, a detail his defense team overlooked at trial,209 and—largely
through the efforts of David Protess and his students at Northwestern
University’s Medill School of Journalism—that he was innocent.210 Protess
and his students interviewed William Taylor, the prosecution’s chief
eyewitness at Porter’s trial, and he recanted his testimony, asserting that he had
falsely accused Porter under the heat of police pressure.211 The unraveling of
the case against Porter, however, involved something more remarkable than a
Databanks, 28 AM. J. CRIM. L. 119 (2000) (proposing a system for the creation of a DNA
databank, and discussing the benefits of increased successful convictions of violent and sex
offense-related criminals and decreased erroneous convictions that would result from such a
system); William K. Rashbaum, New York Pursues Old Cases of Rape Based Just on DNA,
N.Y. TIMES, Aug. 5, 2003, at A1 (discussing the announcement by New York City officials
of a plan to review biological evidence from unsolved sex crimes with the goal of indicting
unidentified attackers through DNA profiles); Ronald Smothers, Newark Sex Assaults to Be
Rechecked Using DNA, N.Y. TIMES, Oct. 9, 2003, at B5 (mentioning a New Jersey law that
requires convicts’ DNA to be entered into a state database, and noting the Essex County
chief prosecutor’s desire to begin review of unsolved crimes). Naturally, the evolution of
these databases has not occurred without controversy, especially considering the privacy
issues implicated by their development. See, e.g., Mark A. Rothstein & Sandra Carnahan,
Legal and Policy Issues in Expanding the Scope of Law Enforcement DNA Data Banks, 67
BROOK. L. REV. 127, 129-30 (2001) (analyzing both the constitutional and policy issues
surrounding the expansion of DNA databank collection, and concluding that “only the DNA
of convicted sex offenders and violent felons should be collected” and that the samples
should be destroyed once analyzed).
206
See infra notes 207-232 and accompanying text.
207 People v. Porter, 489 N.E.2d 1329 (Ill. 1986) (affirming Porter’s conviction and
sentence to death for the murders of Jerry Hillard and Marilyn Green).
208 See, e.g., Look Anew at this Murder Case, CHI. TRIB., Jan. 30, 1999, at 20 [hereinafter
Look Anew].
209 Id. (“A series of tests performed last year by a psychologist hired by his new defense
team consistently put Porter’s IQ at about 51 . . . . That would have rendered him
marginally capable, at best, of participating in his defense.”).
210 Pam Belluck, Class of Sleuths to Rescue on Death Row, N.Y. TIMES, Feb. 5, 1999, at
A16 (“[T]he journalism students and Mr. Protess examined court records, re-enacted the
crime and tracked down witnesses. What they found suggested that another man had
committed the murders.”).
211 Look Anew, supra note 208.

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witness recantation: mounting evidence against another suspect, Alstory
Simon.212
As part of their investigation in the late 1990s, the journalism students
gleaned that Simon had had a dispute with one of the victims, Hillard, over the
proceeds from the sale of drugs and that Simon and his wife, Margaret Inez
Jackson, were with the victims on the night of the incident.213 The students
obtained an affidavit from Jackson, who had since become estranged from her
husband, which stated that she observed Simon shoot Hillard and Green before
he grabbed her arm and led her out of the park.214 Furthermore, Walter
Jackson, Margaret’s nephew, executed an affidavit that described the return of
his aunt and uncle to their apartment that night and how “Alstory took me
aside and told me he had ‘taken care of’ Jerry and Marilyn.”215 Simon and his
wife then fled Chicago the very next day.216 In 1999, Protess’s team
interviewed Simon in Milwaukee, and Simon confessed to the crime on
videotape.217
The State’s Attorney’s Office immediately expressed eagerness to review
the materials gathered by Protess and his students.218 The prosecution reinvestigated the case and, according to David Erickson, the First Assistant
Cook County State’s Attorney, “sent investigators to Wisconsin and other parts
of the Midwest to confirm” the evidence procured by the defense team.219
Upon concluding its whirlwind re-investigation, the prosecution took the
initiative and filed a motion to release Porter on his own recognizance in
February 1999.220 Although Porter’s conviction was not formally overturned
via that motion—the prosecution claimed it needed more time to
investigate221—the court vacated his murder conviction shortly thereafter.222
212

Id. (describing how Walter Jackson signed a statement from prison linking his uncle,
Alstory Simon, to the double murder); Eric Zorn, Evidence Grows That Wrong Man Is on
Death Row, CHI. TRIB., Feb. 2, 1999, Metro, at 1 (describing affidavits from different
witnesses that implicate Alstory Simon as the killer).
213 Zorn, supra note 212.
214 Id.
215 Id. (quoting Walter Jackson’s affidavit).
216
Id.
217 See, e.g., Jon Jeter, A New Ending to an Old Story; Journalism Students Rewrite the
Case of an Innocent Man Set to Die, WASH. POST, Feb. 17, 1999, at C01 (describing how
Simon eventually admitted on camera that he shot Green and Hillard).
218 Zorn, supra note 212 (“A spokesman for the Cook County state’s attorney’s office
said prosecutors are eager to review the affidavits of Simon, Jackson and Taylor . . . .”).
219 Douglas Holt & Flynn McRoberts, Porter Fully Savors 1st Taste of Freedom; Judge
Releases Man Once Set for Execution, CHI. TRIB., Feb. 6, 1999, at 1.
220 Id. (mentioning that the court granted the state’s motion to release Porter on his own
recognizance).
221
Pam Belluck, Convict Freed after 16 Years on Death Row, N.Y. TIMES, Feb. 6, 1999,
at A7 (“Mr. Porter’s conviction was not overturned today, and he is technically out on bond,
because prosecutors said they needed a few more weeks to investigate.”).

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Even so, Porter, freed from prison after sixteen years and no longer a convicted
murderer, technically remained convicted of robbery and weapons charges,223
and the prosecution still believed he was guilty of those other crimes.224 By
the time the court vacated Porter’s murder conviction, Simon had already been
charged with the murders and taken into custody.225 He pled guilty to the
slayings in September 1999, receiving a sentence of thirty-seven years in
prison.226
In the Porter case, therefore, the prosecution suffered no net loss in its
conviction rate by failing to battle his innocence with respect to the murders—
in effect, Simon’s conviction supplanted Porter’s227—and it may have accrued
some political capital through its prompt investigation and evident openness to
the strength of the defense claim. Still, by insisting that Porter was guilty of
the other crimes, the prosecution showed an unwillingness to admit it had
completely erred; in its view, Porter deserved some part of his incarceration.
The reluctance of prosecutors to dismiss the robbery and weapons charges also
had a financial component to it. Under the pertinent Illinois statute, Porter
would be eligible to seek compensation for the sixteen years he spent in prison
due to his wrongful conviction, but the prospective recovery would be reduced
dramatically if it were determined that much of that prison time stemmed from
legitimate charges, i.e., the sentences that he received for the robbery and

222

See Andrew Bluth, Illinois Man is Finally Cleared in 2 Murders, N.Y. TIMES, Mar.
12, 1999, at A20.
223 Id. (“Though cleared of the murder charges, Mr. Porter remains convicted of armed
robbery and related weapons charges that were also heard at his 1983 murder trial.”).
224 Id. (“[P]rosecutors still believed that Mr. Porter was in the park that night and
committed the armed robbery against the couple.”); Monica Davey, New Bump in Porter’s
Rocky Road; Retrial for $2 Holdup May Cost Him Millions, CHI. TRIB., Sept. 14, 1999, at 1
(noting that another man, Henry Williams, had testified at Porter’s 1983 trial that Porter had
robbed him at gunpoint of two dollars near the park’s swimming pool).
225 Bluth, supra note 222.
226 See Elizabeth Neff, Milwaukeean Sentenced in Chicago Killings, MILWAUKEE J.
SENTINEL, Sept. 8, 1999, at 3 (stating that Simon was sentenced to thirty-seven years in
prison for the first-degree murder of Green and fifteen years for the voluntary manslaughter
of Hillard, with the sentences to be served concurrently). In December 2002, Simon
retreated from his confession and claimed that he “made up” his statement. Abdon M.
Pallasch & Carlos Sadovi, Killer Backs Off Confession, CHI. SUN-TIMES, Dec. 14, 2002, at 6
(quoting a jailhouse interview in which Simon professed his innocence).
227
Notably, since this was a murder case, there was no statute of limitations problem
hindering the prosecution’s pursuit of Simon. In some situations, however, the district
attorney’s office may be time-barred in prosecuting a new suspect even when evidence is
found that exculpates a defendant and simultaneously inculpates another person. For
instance, with respect to the David Sutherlin rape case in Minnesota, the authorities are
time-barred from prosecuting the man whom they now believe committed the rape. See,
e.g., Gustafson, supra note 1. Nevertheless, the chief prosecutor in St. Paul has vowed to
attempt to force the suspect to be registered as a sex offender. See Wilgoren, supra note 1.

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weapons offenses.228 In September 1999, however, the court dismissed those
charges and ordered a new trial, as the judge announced that the robbery
conviction was “tainted” because it was obtained at the same trial that resulted
in Porter’s wrongful conviction for the murders.229 Days later, after initially
vowing to re-try the case, the prosecution relented and moved to dismiss the
charges altogether, purportedly on the basis that Porter had already served the
probable prison term.230 The Anthony Porter saga, to a large degree, provoked
Illinois Governor George Ryan to re-assess the state’s death penalty system,231
a review that eventually led him to pardon four death row inmates and
commute 167 death sentences to terms of life in prison in January 2003.232
Fourth, there may be a limited political downside for a prosecutor in
agreeing to overturn a conviction when the inmate would nevertheless remain
in prison by virtue of a sentence incurred for an altogether separate crime. For
instance, in the aforementioned case from Minnesota involving the vacatur of
an inmate’s 1985 rape conviction,233 the defendant, David Sutherlin, stayed in
prison due to a life sentence he had received for an unrelated double murder.234
In such situations, even if the evidence leading to the inmate’s exoneration
fails to inculpate another person and the crime remains unsolved, the district
attorney’s office, at the very least, need not worry about any public relations
228 See Davey, supra note 224 (“[I]f Porter is convicted of those charges again, it likely
would be more difficult to win compensation for the years he spent on Death Row.”); see
also 705 ILL. COMP. STAT. ANN. 505/8(c) (West 2003) (providing that the Court of Claims
shall have jurisdiction over “[a]ll claims against the State for time unjustly served in prisons
of this State where the persons imprisoned shall receive a pardon from the governor stating
that such pardon is issued on the ground of innocence of the crime for which they were
imprisoned,” and describing the limits on possible monetary awards).
229 See Marla Donato, Case Against Porter is Dropped; Robbery Charge Had Hung Over
Ex-Inmate, CHI. TRIB., Sept. 16, 1999, at 1 (describing the prosecution’s initial vow to retry
the robbery case after the court dismissed the conviction because the robbery case was
“tainted”).
230 See Monica Davey, Porter At Last Free of All Charges, CHI. TRIB., Sept. 21, 1999, at
1 (reporting that the prosecution chose to drop the case and determined that Porter had been
incarcerated long enough); Donato, supra note 229 (quoting a prosecution spokesman’s
statement that the prosecution “did think there was a strong case for armed robbery, (but) it
was less than likely he would be jailed for that”).
231 See Monica Davey, Close Call Spurred Review; Porter’s Release Influenced Ryan to
Study System, CHI. TRIB., Jan. 13, 2003, Metro, at 1 (“Porter’s case was one of the
fundamental reasons [Governor] Ryan began reconsidering the state’s death penalty
system.”).
232 Jodi Wilgoren, Citing Issue of Fairness, Governor Clears Out Death Row in Illinois,
N.Y. TIMES, Jan. 12, 2003, at 1; accord Jodi Wilgoren, 4 Death Row Inmates Are Pardoned,
N.Y. TIMES, Jan. 11, 2003, at A13.
233
See supra notes 1-4 and accompanying text.
234
See Wilgoren, supra note 1 (“The man convicted of the rape, David Brian Sutherlin,
is serving a life sentence for a double murder committed while he was out on bail on the
rape charge.”).

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issues regarding the release of a person from prison and the psychological
impact that the event might have on the victim.235
As discussed throughout this Part of the article, prosecutors have an array of
political incentives to resist post-conviction claims of innocence. Burnishing
an image as a rugged crime-fighter can prove vital to a candidate’s chances,
with anything undercutting that carefully-crafted image possibly fatal. These
political realities have produced an environment where resistance to postconviction claims of innocence has few political shortcomings, save the four
circumstances detailed above: where the media has already taken an interest in
a case, the original conviction took place during a previous chief prosecutor’s
regime, the newly discovered evidence inculpates the true perpetrator, and/or
the defendant remains in prison because of an unrelated crime. As
demonstrated by the Blake, Truvia-Bright, Porter, and Sutherlin cases, these
factors are by no means mutually exclusive; a combination of them might
interact to spur the prosecution to deviate from its trademark opposition to
post-conviction innocence claims.236
Overall, the arbitrariness associated with the occasions where prosecutors
have tempered their resistance to post-conviction innocence claims is deeply
troubling in that the outcome of an individual prisoner’s claim may hinge, to a
great extent, on political conditions outside his control. This pattern of how
prosecutors, in practice, respond to viable post-conviction claims of innocence
also clashes with the ethical foundation on which prosecutorial power and
discretion rests: the duty to do justice.237
III. THOUGHTS ON REFORM
Without a doubt, the idiosyncrasies of the institutional culture of district
attorneys’ offices and the peculiar nature of prosecutorial politics discussed in
Parts I and II above do not alone account for the frequency and venom with
which prosecutors often resist post-conviction motions based on innocence.
Structural aspects of the criminal justice system, specifically, the perpetuation

235

See supra note 93 and accompanying text (describing the difficulty experienced by
prosecutors in notifying victims about a post-conviction motion). Prosecutors may feel
conflicted in post-conviction cases where the victim maintains that the defendant committed
the crime, even when faced with DNA evidence to the contrary. Prosecutors in Houston, for
example, released Josiah Sutton after a DNA test proved his innocence for a rape
conviction, but they have fought Sutton’s request for an unconditional pardon, partially due
to the victim’s continued assertion that she identified the correct man. Liptak, supra note 17
(stating that prosecutors have continually resisted Sutton’s appeal for an unconditional
pardon, and illustrating the prosecution’s concern with “[calling] the victim in this case a
liar”).
236 For instance, media pressure likely had an effect on the prosecutorial decisions in the
Blake, Truvia-Bright, and Porter cases.
237 See supra notes 30-31 and accompanying text (discussing the prosecutor’s role as a
“minister of justice” and the ethical duties attached to that role).

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of the adversary model for litigating post-conviction claims238 and the systemic
emphasis placed upon the concept of finality,239 surely affect how prosecutors
treat such claims. By demanding that the defense bear the burden of proof at
the post-conviction stage and that prosecutors assume the role of defending the
conviction, the procedures through which post-conviction claims are litigated
offer few motives for prosecutors to “think outside the box” and engage in
creative lawyering, e.g., agree to turn over biological evidence absent a court
order or consent to the holding of an evidentiary hearing.240 An analysis of the
structural barriers to post-conviction innocence claims relating to the nature of
the criminal justice system itself, however, is beyond the scope of this article.
To that end, I will devote the remaining pages of this piece to a narrower topic:
to help rehabilitate the ideal that prosecutors are obliged to do justice, a series
of reforms should be considered regarding the institutional and political factors
deterring prosecutors from recognizing the legitimacy of post-conviction
claims of innocence.
A.

Education

Better training and supervision of prosecutors may assist in transforming the
theoretical underpinnings of their ethical obligations to do justice in the postconviction sphere into a reality of everyday practice.241 Incoming prosecutors
238

In theory, some prosecutors may resist suggestions to respond creatively to postconviction innocence claims because of a belief in the fundamental importance of the
adversary system in resolving criminal cases in our society. See supra note 32 and
accompanying text (discussing the need for prosecutors to counter aggressive defense tactics
with vigorous efforts to secure convictions under the adversary model).
239 The systemic concern for finality is reflected by the statutes of limitations that are
often imposed on post-conviction innocence claims based on newly discovered evidence.
See, e.g., Liebman, supra note 17, at 544 (“In most states, pure innocence-based attacks on
criminal convictions are legally limited to the first few weeks or months following
conviction.”); Thomas et al., supra note 38, at 277-82 (discussing procedural rules and
deadlines relating to post-conviction innocence claims, and observing that “[t]he trend is
undoubtedly in the direction of finding a basis to allow powerful claims of innocence to be
heard even if filed too late under the rules of procedure”). Florida’s statute regarding postconviction DNA testing is particularly onerous: it imposed an October 1, 2003, deadline for
defendants to file such requests. See, e.g., Liptak, supra note 17.
240 Exacerbating the disincentive for prosecutors to engage in creative lawyering is the
fact that, in some jurisdictions, post-conviction motions are filed with the original trial
judge, with the effect that prosecutors may not want to “lose face” with the judge in front of
whom they had tried the case. See, e.g., N.Y. CRIM. PROC. LAW § 440.10 (McKinney 1994)
(prescribing the power of the court in which the original judgment was made to vacate such
judgment upon post-conviction motion).
241 Ethical rules mandate that prosecutors’ offices institute effective training programs
for their attorneys. See ABA STANDARDS, supra note 30, § 3-2.6; Little, supra note 74, at
767-69. Many scholars, however, have argued that these training programs could be
improved. See, e.g., Gershman, supra note 112, at 458 (“To be sure, better training and
supervision play a significant role in fostering an atmosphere in which ethical norms are

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may receive training and materials concerning their ethical duties, but these
requirements are not emphasized as they work in the field over time.242 Using
education to reorient prosecutors toward doing justice in post-conviction
innocence cases, as opposed to seeking to uphold those convictions without
much reflection, would certainly be a welcome step forward. It may only be a
baby step, though, given how entrenched the conviction psychology is within
prosecutorial offices and the political dynamics facing prosecutors elected by
the public.243
B.

Carrots and Sticks

Training, as discussed above, must be accompanied by a blend of incentives
and disincentives to impel prosecutors to keep an open mind in reviewing postconviction claims of innocence and to consider inventive solutions in
responding to them. As Erwin Chemerinsky has noted, incentives make a
difference in shaping the behavior of prosecutors.244
In particular,
Chemerinsky studied the prosecutor’s office in Los Angeles and its reaction to
widespread police misconduct in one precinct in the late 1990s, determining
that the prosecutorial agency’s policies lacked any incentives for uncovering
police wrongdoing or dismissing cases because of suspicions about police
activities.245 As part of his research, Chemerinsky repeatedly “heard from
Assistant District Attorneys that they felt that they were evaluated based on
their effectiveness in processing cases and gaining convictions.”246 Observing
that this form of “promotion and reward structure maximizes the incentive for
understood and practiced.”); Gershman, supra note 42, at 353 (asserting that the
“‘conviction mentality’ is especially dangerous in a prosecutor’s office that fails to train and
supervise young prosecutors on basic norms of prosecution, such as the duties not to lie, use
false and misleading evidence, and prosecute persons who are not clearly guilty”); Griffin,
supra note 112, at 293 (maintaining that thorough orientation and re-training are necessary
for enforcing discretionary standards); Little, supra note 74, at 767-69 (discussing the need
for training regarding investigative discretion).
242 See Chemerinsky, supra note 40, at 317.
243 See Gershman, supra note 112, at 458 (suggesting that “the present ethos of
overzealous prosecutorial advocacy may be too ingrained to be appreciably affected by
education and training”). Bresler suggests that prosecutors must be reminded that trials are
not “zero-sum” contests and that—as reflected in certain jury charges—the government
always wins, even with an acquittal. Bresler, supra note 41, at 538.
244
See Chemerinsky, supra note 40, at 320.
245 Id. at 320-21 (showing that promotions were tied to conviction rates and that there
were few incentives for uncovering police misconduct). For additional information about
this event in Los Angeles, known as the Rampart Scandal, and the failure of prosecutors to
prevent such pervasive police misconduct, see Gary Williams, Incubating Monsters?:
Prosecutorial Responsibility for the Rampart Scandal, 34 LOY. L.A. L. REV. 829 (2001). In
the aftermath of the Rampart Scandal, more than one hundred convictions were reversed due
to police planting of evidence and perjury. Id. at 840.
246 Chemerinsky, supra note 40, at 320.

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prosecutors to disregard problems with police credibility that may undercut the
strength of the prosecutor’s case,” Chemerinsky championed a reconsideration
of the criteria for prosecutorial promotions to include overt recognition of
attempts to identify—and rectify—those problems.247
More generally,
changing the performance measures by which individual prosecutors are
judged to entail factors other than conviction rates, such as decisions not to
prosecute, would likely serve to diminish the influence of the conviction
psychology within the institutional culture of prosecutors’ offices.248
Similarly, in the realm of post-conviction matters, incentives should be reconceived to account directly for individual efforts by prosecutors to join in or
refrain from contesting legitimate post-conviction claims of innocence. For
example, a prosecutor’s decision to turn over biological evidence for DNA
testing without litigating the case, and ultimately being ordered by the court to
do so, should be lauded within the office and taken into consideration for
promotion purposes in cases where the testing ultimately exonerates the
inmate. In such situations, the choice to work with the defense saves time and
may avoid the possibility of a flogging by the media, both of which are likely
desirable from the perspective of high-ranking officials within the
organization.
Creating incentives to encourage prosecutors to be responsive to the
possible validity of post-conviction innocence claims, though, may not be
enough: carrots should be coupled with sticks to deter prosecutors from
rejecting the merits of these claims too readily. Many scholars cite the absence
of effective methods of deterrence as a reason for the disturbing frequency of
prosecutorial misconduct at trial, including the failure to disclose exculpatory
evidence to the defense, the presentation of perjurious testimony, and improper
summations.249
Indeed, few convictions are overturned by virtue of
247

Id. at 320-21.
See, e.g., Elizabeth Glazer, Crime Busting and Crime Prevention: A Dual Role for
Prosecutors, 15 A.B.A. J. CRIM. JUST. 10, 15 (2001) (proposing that prosecutors should
focus not on how many people they imprison, but on whether their actions helped reduce
crime); see also Berenson, supra note 30, at 846 (stating that “career advancement in
prosecutors’ offices should be based on richer measures of compliance with the ‘do justice’
standard, rather than simply on conviction rates”); Meares, supra note 41, at 852-53
(arguing for the implementation of financial incentives to curb prosecutorial misconduct).
249
See, e.g., Richard A. Rosen, Disciplinary Sanctions Against Prosecutors for Brady
Violations: A Paper Tiger, 65 N.C. L. REV. 693, 697 (1987) (demonstrating that
prosecutorial misconduct often goes unpunished and that potential deterrents—disciplinary
charges, meaningful sanctions, removal from office, contempt citations, or the reversal of
convictions—are rarely employed); Walter W. Steele, Jr., Unethical Prosecutors and
Inadequate Discipline, 38 SW. L.J. 965, 979 (1984) (asserting that cases of prosecutorial
misconduct “provoke little or no outrage among the legal profession and very rarely result in
any disciplinary investigation or sanction [which] causes one to wonder how the appearance
of fairness and professionalism in the American legal system has survived”). But see Fred
C. Zacharias, The Professional Discipline of Prosecutors, 79 N.C. L. REV. 721, 744 (2001)
248

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prosecutorial misconduct250 and, in the rare incidences of reversal, the
appellate court opinions invariably neglect to identify the prosecutor by name
as a matter of “professional courtesy.”251 Also, prosecutors are generally
immune from civil suits relating to misconduct252 and seldom, if ever, face
criminal charges for their work on the job.253
Despite the platitudes asking prosecutors to do justice contained in the codes
of professional responsibility, moreover, there is a conspicuous reticence on
the part of disciplinary bodies to punish prosecuting lawyers for misdeeds.254
In fact, a 1999 study, which analyzed 326 Illinois state court convictions that
were reversed on appeal for prosecutorial misconduct since 1977, revealed that
only two prosecutors had received sanctions from the Illinois Attorney
Registration and Disciplinary Commission, and nary a single prosecutor had
been dismissed from the State’s Attorney’s Office.255 In contrast, private
(suggesting that the incidence of disciplining prosecutors is not negligible after uncovering
over one-hundred cases in which prosecutors were disciplined). Yet, Zacharias also
observes that disciplinary agencies do not punish prosecutors as often as private attorneys
and “that, at least sometimes, bar authorities are remiss in their obligation to review
prosecutorial violations of the professional rules.” Id. at 773.
250 See, e.g., Maute, supra note 70, at 1749 (commenting that, even when courts
affirmatively find prosecutorial misconduct, the courts rarely overturn convictions). Even in
those cases where courts find that the prosecutorial misconduct constituted error, the
convictions still might not be overturned because of the harmless error doctrine. See, e.g.,
Gershman, supra note 112, at 429.
251 See, e.g., Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 300.
252 Id. at 303; see also Steve Weinberg, Shielding Misconduct: The Law Immunizes
Prosecutors from Civil Suits, June 26, 2003, at http://www.publicintegrity.org/pm (last
accessed Sept. 22, 2003).
253 Ferguson-Gilbert, supra note 40, at 303 (recognizing that “[o]ut of 381 homicide
convictions reversed due to prosecutor misconduct, by failing to disclose evidence or
presenting false evidence to the court, not one prosecutor faced trial for the misconduct”);
see also Maurice Possley & Ken Armstrong, Prosecution on Trial in DuPage, CHI. TRIB.,
Jan. 12, 1999, at 1 [hereinafter Possley & Armstrong, Prosecution on Trial in DuPage].
254 See, e.g., Maurice Possley, Act on Prosecutor Abuses, Bar Urges, CHI. TRIB., Jan. 19,
1999, at 3 (describing one bar association’s demand for stronger disciplinary actions against
prosecutors found to have committed misconduct); see also Andrea Elliott, Prosecutors Not
Penalized, Lawyer Says, N.Y. TIMES, Dec. 17, 2003, at B1 (reporting the allegations of a
lawyer claiming to have uncovered dozens of examples of prosecutorial misconduct
stemming from the Bronx County District Attorney’s Office in New York that failed to
result in disciplinary action).
255 See Possley, supra note 254 (describing the Cook County Bar Association’s reaction
to the lack of disciplinary action taken against prosecutorial misconduct, which included
demands for firings, stronger disciplinary actions, and public access to statistics of
misconduct). For information regarding this study and, more generally, the problem of
prosecutorial misconduct in Illinois, see the series of articles by Maurice Possley and Ken
Armstrong printed in the Chicago Tribune in January 1999. See Ken Armstrong & Maurice
Possley, Break Rules, Be Promoted, CHI. TRIB., Jan. 14, 1999, at 1 (describing an alarming

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criminal defense attorneys are regularly disciplined.256 The failure to
discipline prosecutors may relate to the fact that they do not have an individual
client who might file a complaint alleging an ethics violation as well as the
notion that prosecutors are powerful figures and, thus, bar associations may be
wary of antagonizing them.257 Ultimately, the vagueness of prosecutorial
ethical standards—such as the amorphous duty to do justice—may lie at the
heart of their ineffectuality.258
The proposed reforms to stem the tide of prosecutorial misconduct at trial
include mentioning the names of individual prosecutors in appellate court
opinions involving misconduct259 and founding discrete prosecutor misconduct
commissions aimed solely at evaluating and disciplining prosecutors.260 Both
number of instances in which the careers of Cook County prosecutors who committed
misconduct have prospered, including three prosecutors who later became judges); Possley
& Armstrong, Flip Side, supra note 51 (describing the explicit importance placed on
conviction statistics in the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office); Possley & Armstrong,
Prosecution on Trial in DuPage, supra note 253 (recounting the misconduct that ultimately
resulted in the trial of three former prosecutors and four sheriff’s deputies for conspiring to
obstruct justice and perjury in framing and convicting an innocent man of murder); Ken
Armstrong & Maurice Possley, Reversal of Fortune, CHI. TRIB., Jan. 13, 1999, at 1
(discussing particular Cook County prosecutors who were well-known for misconduct and
the consequences of their misconduct); Ken Armstrong & Maurice Possley, The Verdict:
Dishonor, CHI. TRIB., Jan. 10, 1999, at 1 (describing a study into prosecutorial misconduct
in Cook County, the reaction of courts to such misconduct, and the effects of such
misconduct on defendants’ lives).
256 See, e.g., Gershman, supra note 112, at 445 (explaining that the failure to discipline
prosecutors with regularity “contrasts sharply with the fairly common use of disciplinary
sanctions against private attorneys in civil and criminal matters”).
257 Id. (commenting that the disparity between sanctions on private attorneys and
prosecutors likely stems from the reality that prosecutors do not have individual clients, the
fact that they are not bound by many of the ethical rules that regulate the attorney-client
relationship, their power and prestige as government officers, and from recognition that
prosecutors are encouraged to be zealous in reducing crime); Zacharias, supra note 249, at
749-50 (explaining that disciplinary boards generally rely on third party complaints before
instituting an investigation into prosecutorial misconduct and boards receive fewer
complaints about prosecutors because prosecutors have no clients to complain, defense
attorneys generally do not want to antagonize common adversaries by instituting such
claims, and criminal defendants have few resources to pursue prosecutor misconduct
complaints).
258
Bennett Gershman has noted that these rules “are often so nebulous as to be
unenforceable, which merely reinforces the institutional reluctance to enforce the rules in
the first place.” Gershman, supra note 112, at 445.
259
See Maurice Possley & Ken Armstrong, Illinois Courts May End Secrecy; State’s
Chief Justice Wants Prosecutorial Abuses Made Public, CHI. TRIB., Feb. 3, 1999, at 1
(reporting that Chief Justice Charles Freeman of the Illinois Supreme Court suggested that
prosecutors guilty of misconduct should be identified more often by name in court
opinions).
260 See Gershman, supra note 112, at 453-55 (observing that, because disciplinary bodies

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of these reforms could be applied to prosecutorial misbehavior in the postconviction context as well. In court opinions, the process of “shaming by
naming” prosecutors who battle legitimate post-conviction innocence claims
with excessive zeal could, on the margins, provoke assistant district attorneys
to take these claims seriously and to weigh the possibility of choosing an
approach other than outright attack. Likewise, establishing misconduct
commissions endowed with the authority to impose sanctions in cases of
extreme prosecutorial obstinacy to innocence claims could affect behavior in
the long-run.
C.

Administrative Reorganization

To mitigate the conflict of interest inherent in a prosecutor reviewing his
own work or that of a co-equal in the office,261 district attorneys’ offices could
consider altering the manner in which they assign post-conviction motions by
creating internal innocence or post-conviction units. These units might not
only unilaterally review cases to ascertain the existence of any potential
innocence claims, which is an increasingly common practice,262 but also serve
as a general repository for post-conviction motions within the office. The
formation of a separate division to handle post-conviction matters in a
prosecutor’s office has several benefits, not the least of which is the
centralization of procedural and substantive knowledge about these types of
claims. The lawyers in such a unit could become experts in this area and,
accordingly, be in a better position to assess the legitimacy of a motion than
would a “generalist” in the trial or appeals bureau. Moreover, establishing an
innocence unit would aid defense attorneys in discussing their claims
informally with the prosecution at the outset instead of simply filing a motion
as an opening salvo. On a basic level, criminal defense attorneys would know
the appropriate lawyers to contact, and those prosecutors, having been
officially delegated the chore of handling post-conviction motions, might be
keener on meeting with defense lawyers prior to the commencement of any
appear “unable or unwilling” to sanction prosecutors, “[i]t may be appropriate to consider
creating a disciplinary mechanism aimed solely at prosecutors”). Angela Davis has
suggested that a “Prosecution Review Board” might be more desirable than a misconduct
commission. Angela J. Davis, The American Prosecutor: Independence, Power, and the
Threat of Tyranny, 86 IOWA L. REV. 393, 463-64 (2001). In Davis’s vision, the review
board “would not only review specific complaints brought to its attention by the public, but
it would conduct random reviews of routine prosecution decisions.” Id. at 463. Such a
process, according to Davis, would provide for “affirmative investigations to discover bad
practices, and its random nature is more likely to deter arbitrary prosecution decisions.” Id.
at 464.
261 See supra note 84 and accompanying text.
262 See supra notes 3, 162-163 and accompanying text; see also Peter Neufeld, Legal and
Ethical Implications of Post-Conviction DNA Exonerations, 35 NEW ENG. L. REV. 639, 641
(2001) (observing that, “[i]ncreasingly, progressive-minded prosecutors around the country
are setting up their own ‘innocence projects’” and citing several examples).

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litigation.
One drawback of the proposed formation of innocence wings within
prosecutorial agencies, however, is that it would not thoroughly obviate the
conflict of interest issue—prosecutors in the unit would still be reviewing the
work of their peers or former peers in the organization. The attorneys whose
work they would review might resent the thought of fellow prosecutors looking
over their shoulders, second-guessing their treatment of cases; an innocence or
post-conviction unit could be perceived by fellow prosecutors as an entity akin
to a police internal affairs bureau, and spawn the hostility that those bureaus
often engender within police departments.263 Also, in light of the small size of
most prosecutors’ offices,264 the bulk of these agencies may lack a sufficient
number of attorneys to establish a separate post-conviction division. Housing
post-conviction units with the state attorney general’s office could be an
efficient alternative to the placement of these divisions in county prosecutorial
offices,265 and might minimize the potential for intra-organizational resentment
by creating greater distance between trial and post-conviction prosecutors.
Finally, many prosecutors might resist the very idea of launching internal
innocence units on the ground that it implicitly undercuts the principle, to
which they often cling, that each and every prosecutor adheres to their duty to
do justice. In the words of one prosecutor, “I would like to think that there is
no need to establish an innocence unit or an innocence project in a prosecutor’s
office. On the contrary, ensuring that only the guilty are convicted is what a
prosecutor should be doing, day in and day out.”266 Notwithstanding these
concerns, the creation of internal post-conviction departments where
practicable would be an upgrade from the current archetypes, especially the
habit of assigning innocence claims to the individual attorney who prosecuted
263 Members of a police internal affairs bureau (“IAB”) and police officers that assist
with IAB investigations are notoriously scorned and ostracized within police departments.
See, e.g., Gabriel J. Chin & Scott C. Wells, The “Blue Wall of Silence” as Evidence of Bias
and Motive to Lie: A New Approach to Police Perjury, 59 U. PITT. L. REV. 233, 258 (1998).
Chin and Wells provided a disturbing example from one department:
[A] detective who served in the Internal Affairs Division was transferred to a precinct
detective squad; in his first week on the job, his colleagues “placed dead rats on his car
windshield, stole or destroyed his personal property, and told him directly that he could
not count on them in times of danger.”
Id.
264 See supra note 81 and accompanying text (mentioning that the average prosecutor’s
office in the United States consists of three attorneys).
265 See,
e.g., Utah Office of the Attorney General, Appeals Division, at
http://www.attorneygeneral.utah.gov/Appeals%20Division.htm (last accessed Jan. 31, 2004)
(noting that the Appeals Division of the Office of the Attorney General of the State of Utah
handles all post-conviction writs).
266 Meier, supra note 93, at 657-58; see also Lee, supra note 7, at 666 (discussing his
belief “that every good prosecutor already has an ‘innocence unit’ built into his or her daily
habits[;] . . . every good prosecutor, as part of his or her routine investigation of a case,
should subject every case to an objective, critical analysis”).

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the defendant in the first place.267
An alternative, and more radical, administrative reform would be to
eliminate the role played by institutional prosecutors (and individual defense
attorneys) in the process altogether by establishing an independent, bipartisan
commission to review post-conviction innocence claims and refer the most
meritorious of them to the courts.268 The United Kingdom has created such an
agency, the Criminal Cases Review Commission, with admirable results thus
far.269 Lissa Griffin, for one, has evaluated whether some form of this nonadversarial, inquisitorial model for handling post-conviction innocence claims
predicated upon newly discovered evidence could be imported from across the
Atlantic, and she suggests that it could.270
D.

Improving Political Accountability

As indicated in Part II of this article, prosecutors suffer little, if any, political
damage by combating post-conviction claims of innocence and letting motions
be resolved through the adversary system, except for certain situations where
the political environment is ripe for prosecutors to depart from their general
tough-on-crime agenda. This signifies that, considering the vast impact that
prosecutors’ responses can have on the outcome of post-conviction motions,271
there is an element of randomness to the cases where actually innocent
prisoners receive justice. To mend this hole in the criminal justice system,
changes to the methods through which the public receives information about
prosecutorial practices—and through which prosecutors are elected—may be
in order.
First, to improve political accountability, the veil of secrecy covering some
of the prosecutorial decisionmaking process should be lifted. Traditionally,
prosecutors have argued that exposing the inner workings of their offices and
policies to the public eye would impair their effectiveness in enforcing the
law.272 Injecting a modicum of transparency into the activities of prosecutors,
though, would strengthen public confidence in the criminal justice system in

267

See supra notes 77-84 and accompanying text.
Scholars have debated whether the adversarial model of litigation should apply at all
in the post-conviction context. Lissa Griffin has praised the English method of handling
post-conviction claims of innocence through the bipartisan Criminal Cases Review
Commission, which analyzes post-conviction claims and refers the most valid of them to the
Court of Appeal. Lissa Griffin, The Correction of Wrongful Convictions: A Comparative
Perspective, 16 AM. U. INT’L L. REV. 1241, 1275-78 (2001).
269
See id. at 1275-92 (describing the creation of the commission and its review process,
and noting that, of the first forty-nine cases referred to the Court of Appeal and heard by that
court, thirty-eight resulted in quashed convictions).
270 Id. at 1302-03.
271
See supra notes 9-14 and accompanying text.
272 See Davis, supra note 260, at 461 (explaining that prosecutors “traditionally have
argued that revealing their prosecution policies would hinder law enforcement efforts”).
268

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general and boost the accountability of prosecutors in particular.273 For
instance, some scholars have endorsed the creation of public information
departments within district attorneys’ offices to offer news about their basic
functions, objectives, duties, purposes, and responsibilities.274
The
departments could provide general information about how prosecutors reach
charging decisions, the grand jury process, and plea bargaining policies.275 By
not divulging details about specific cases, and thereby not compromising
ongoing law enforcement efforts, these departments could allay prosecutorial
fears.276
Public information departments that acquaint citizens with the procedures
relating to post-conviction innocence claims through community outreach
could assist prospective voters in understanding how prosecutors and courts
handle these cases. The public, for its part, could apply this knowledge in
evaluating any information it may learn from the media about a particular case.
Aware that the public has some knowledge about the complexities surrounding
post-conviction innocence claims, prosecutors could be inspired to retreat from
their typical tough-on-crime platform and display openness to defense
allegations when warranted in specific cases.
Second, to minimize the impact of extraneous political variables on the
treatment of post-conviction innocence claims by prosecutors, the rules
governing the process of electing district attorneys could be modified. Part II
of this article touched upon the ethical problem of a prosecutor campaigning
on a high-profile conviction previously obtained by her or on her watch—did
the prosecutor seek the conviction at the time of trial with the goal of later
campaigning on it or did she campaign on it later because it was simply a
consequence of her genuine desire to do justice?277 This situation causes an
acute dilemma in the post-conviction arena, provoking a fear that a prosecutor
who cites a specific case on the campaign trail may feel conflicted if and when
that same defendant later files a post-conviction motion alleging innocence.278
To ameliorate this problem, prosecutors could be forbidden from ever working
on the post-conviction proceedings or retrial of a conviction upon which they
had directly and plainly campaigned.279

273 See, e.g., id. at 461-62 (suggesting that publicizing the implementation of
prosecutorial policies “would promote prosecutorial accountability and public confidence in
the criminal justice system”).
274 See, e.g., id. at 462.
275 Id.
276
Id.
277
See supra notes 141-147 and accompanying text.
278 See Bresler, supra note 136, at 952-53.
279 Id. at 953-54 (recommending that “a prosecutor should be disqualified from handling,
one, the post-conviction proceedings and, two, the retrial of a defendant whose conviction
she has campaigned upon, either by identifying the defendant or including the defendant’s
conviction in a body count”). Enforcing this rule might be difficult in practice given that it

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Structural changes to the election process itself could also help to lower the
political incentive for prosecutors to resist legitimate post-conviction
innocence claims. Imposing term limits on the duration of a district attorney’s
stay in office,280 for example, could guard against the entrenchment of the
conviction psychology within the office and prevent chief prosecutors from
becoming attached to the maintenance of convictions dating back many
years.281 On the one hand, term limits might embolden an assortment of
talented, innovative lawyers, no longer deterred by the prospect of competing
against a long-time incumbent, to seek office.282 These candidates, in turn,
might be less wedded to traditional modes of treating post-conviction
innocence claims. On the other hand, subjecting chief prosecutors to term
limits could dissuade some able lawyers from ever seeking the position at
all,283 and lead to the departure of many seasoned district attorneys, including
officials who may have established beneficial working relationships with
veteran members of the defense bar.284
Another possible reform might be merely changing the dates of
prosecutorial elections to ensure they do not coincide with other, more
would probably require either self-regulation and/or an independent organization to provide
oversight and keep track of the names that candidates refer to during their campaigns.
280 The Supreme Court of Colorado recently held that district attorneys in that state are
subject to a limit of two terms in office as part of a 1994 state constitutional amendment
providing for term limits on nonjudicial, elected county officials, among others. Davidson
v. Sandstrom, No. 03SC287, 2004 WL 111652 (Colo. Jan. 26, 2004). Even so, the court
noted that pursuant to this amendment “[t]he voters of Colorado reserved to themselves the
right to modify or abolish the term limits” within a particular political subdivision. Id. at
*10; see also Howard Pankratz, Court OKs Term Limits for DAs[;] State Ruling Dismays
Prosecutors; 13 of 22 Must Go in January 2005, DENVER POST, Jan. 27, 2004, at A-01
(noting that the court’s decision made Colorado “the first state in the nation to restrict the
length of time that elected prosecutors can serve”).
281 See DEFRANCES, supra note 22, at 3 (finding that the median length of service for
chief prosecutors, elected or appointed, was 6.8 years but that twenty percent had served
fifteen years or more and half of chief prosecutors in full-time medium-sized offices served
8.4 years or more). For an analysis of the respective advantages and disadvantages of
imposing term limits on elective offices generally, which is far beyond the reach of this
article, see Einer Elhauge, Are Term Limits Undemocratic?, 64 U. CHI. L. REV. 83 (1997),
and Elizabeth Garrett, Term Limitations and the Myth of the Citizen Legislator, 81 CORNELL
L. REV. 623 (1996).
282
People contemplating running for elective office are no doubt discouraged by the
propensity of voters to return incumbent candidates to political positions. See, e.g.,
Elhauge, supra note 281, at 85 (stating that, as of the mid-1990s, “voters were generally
returning 90 percent of state incumbents and up to 98 percent of federal incumbents who ran
for reelection”).
283 See Pankratz, supra note 280 (quoting Bob Miller, a former district attorney in
Colorado, as saying that the eight-year term limit will deter many bright attorneys from
vying for public office for fear that it may hamper their future prospects in the private
sector).
284
Id. (crediting Karen Steinhauser, a law professor in Colorado, with this observation).

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prominent races. Even if the overall turnout for prosecutorial elections would
likely fall due to the absence of higher-profile races to lure voters,
disentangling prosecutorial campaigns from the web of other elections
occurring simultaneously could encourage the public to pay greater attention to
the various candidates’ policies and practices, including those related to postconviction innocence claims, and consequently encourage accountability.285 A
different option, retreating from the democratic model of electing prosecutors
and returning to the appointment norm, might hinder the likelihood that a chief
prosecutor’s objectives will reflect the concerns of her citizenry and will
probaby fail to enhance accountability.286 Although serving as an appointed
prosecutor may provide a degree of insulation from political pressures to
obtain convictions, the pressure to “win” is felt acutely even in appointive
prosecutorial agencies, such as the U.S. Attorney’s Office.287
E.

Re-Evaluating the Public Prosecutor Model

One reform that might reduce the obstacles facing prosecutors in
confronting post-conviction innocence claims, albeit somewhat extreme, would
be to depart from the public prosecutor model and consider privatizing the job:
that is, out-source a segment of the prosecution workload to private attorneys
via contracts.288 In Great Britain, a country renowned for its lack of rabid
partisanship between prosecuting lawyers and defense counsel, there was no
institutional public prosecutor until 1985.289 Even now, a portion of
prosecutorial tasks continue to be performed by private lawyers hired to
represent the Crown in court on a piecemeal basis.290 While plunging full-bore
into the debate concerning the merits of retaining or abandoning the public
prosecutor model in the United States far exceeds the scope of this article,291 it
285 See supra notes 126-133 and accompanying text (suggesting that the lack of
information provided to the public about prosecutorial policies and actions shields the
district attorney and the entire office from a great deal of political accountability).
286 See Richman, supra note 54, at 961. Richman explains:
Even though a professional prosecutor residing in the jurisdiction she serves may share
the concerns of its citizenry, some formal mechanism is thought necessary to ensure
that the “people” have a voice in how she deploys resources in their name. That is why
most state and local jurisdictions originally chose to make their chief prosecutors
elected officials, and presumably why most of those offices remain elective.
Id.
287
See id. at 967-68 (referring to sources indicating that the desire to seek convictions is
prevalent among U.S. Attorneys).
288
See Gershman, supra note 112, at 455-58 (discussing some benefits of outsourcing
prosecutorial functions).
289
See Griffin, supra note 268, at 1264-65 (mentioning that, considering this historical
context, “there has been little opportunity to establish an institutional adversarial ethos”).
290
Id. at 1264.
291 For a thorough analysis of the model of the public prosecutor over time, see Carolyn
B. Ramsey, The Discretionary Power of “Public” Prosecutors in Historical Perspective, 39

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is worth noting that allowing non-institutional prosecutors to participate in
some prosecution functions could, in theory, have several benefits.292 Most
notably, it would introduce attorneys who do not have a deep-seated interest in
obtaining—and maintaining—convictions into the prosecutorial process.293
Equipped with a combination of (1) no vested, institutional interest in the
upholding of convictions and (2) some experience, most likely, on the other
side of the fence as a defense attorney, prosecuting lawyers might display
greater receptivity to the potential worthiness of post-conviction innocence
claims. Formally exposing attorneys practicing criminal law to both
prosecution and defense work could, at the very least, sensitize them to the
quandaries facing actually innocent inmates as well as the barriers preventing
prosecutors from exercising flexibility when responding to innocence
claims.294
CONCLUSION
This article has discussed the institutional and political factors deterring
prosecutors from accepting the possible legitimacy of post-conviction
innocence claims and formulating creative responses to them. Now, I should
qualify the observations made in this article with the caveat that many
prosecutors certainly resist the conviction psychology and that individual
prosecutors may possess a range of motives, including a profound commitment
to doing justice.295 An array of prosecutorial styles may co-exist in any
particular office, and the aggressive crime-fighter model can be a source of

AM. CRIM. L. REV. 1309 (2002).
292 See Gershman, supra note 112, at 455-58 (“Such programs are laudable for several
reasons. They allow private attorneys to engage in public service, they enhance the public
interest by helping to more expeditiously process criminal cases, and they introduce into
prosecution attorneys who do not have a vested interest in winning convictions.”).
293 See id.
294 Gershman even suggests the possibility of establishing rotations between prosecutors’
offices and public defenders’ organizations to educate and sensitize lawyers to both sides of
criminal law practice. Id. at 457.
295
See Richman, supra note 70, at 758 (“My provisional assumption is that every
prosecutor or agent is impelled by a broad variety of motives, personal and institutional, and
that the salience of each motivation to each actor varies greatly.”); see also Richman, supra
note 54, at 966-69 (describing various sources of motivation for prosecutors, which include
personal ideology, the influence of long-term economic self-interest, and the psychological
aspects of prosecutors’ self-selection). As Hagemann articulated:
Prosecutors work hard, if they do, for essentially three reasons: (1) they want to do the
right thing; (2) having done the right thing and charged the right people, they want to
convict them; in short, to win; and (3) having won, they want to be recognized—by
peers, publicity, awards, supervisory slots, subsequent judicial appointments, and, in
their finest hours, book tours.
Hagemann, supra note 43, at 152.

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[Vol. 84:125

embarrassment and, thus, is discouraged by some district attorneys.296 There
also seems to be an awareness within the prosecutorial ranks that conviction
rates ought not serve as the sole yardstick in measuring an office’s or an
individual lawyer’s performance.297 In addition, not every entering assistant
district attorney anticipates a long-term career as a prosecutor; on the contrary,
the data suggests that many new prosecutors view the job primarily as an
opportunity for hands-on training and a stepping stone to other areas of law
practice.298 As Stanley Fisher has observed, prosecutors aspiring to shift to
private practice or a judgeship may “have an incentive to impress defense
lawyers and judges with their ability to be ‘fair’ and ‘reasonable.’”299 In
regard to political pressures, some chief prosecutors, to be sure, operate above
the political fray and are unafraid to act in a direction counter to the prevailing
political winds. A number of prosecutors, moreover, undoubtedly harbor an
affirmative desire to help free innocent prisoners.300
Nonetheless, the institutional culture of most prosecutors’ offices treasures
convictions, and an attorney’s conviction rate may serve as a barometer of that
person’s stature within the organization and a key factor in determining that
person’s chances for internal advancement. This professional incentive for
prosecutors to obtain and maintain convictions may be bolstered by profound
psychological and personal bases for believing in the soundness of the verdicts
and pragmatic reasons for discounting the possibility that there may be some
creditable claims within the heap of post-conviction filings.
Likewise, there are a series of political incentives for prosecutors to resist
post-conviction innocence claims, even potentially meritorious ones, with zeal.
Candidates vying for the office of chief prosecutor typically campaign on a
general tough-on-crime platform, strewn with references to their overall winloss record and reminders about specific successes in high-profile cases.
296

See Fisher, supra note 29, at 214-15.
The American Prosecutors Research Institute is currently conducting a study to
ascertain adequate performance measures for prosecutors, specifically, to uncover methods
to account for decisions not to prosecute in evaluating on-the-job contributions. See Nugent
Telephone Interview, supra note 77; see also Glazer, supra note 248, at 11 (stating that
“[t]he focus on arrests and convictions diminishes the role that prosecutors can play as
problem solvers,” and observing that prosecutors should take advantage of opportunities to
handle cases as part of “a broader crime reduction strategy”).
298 See Felkenes, supra note 29, at 105 (finding that “a tendency exists . . . to utilize the
office of the prosecutor as a training ground for legal and trial experience”); see also
Richman, supra note 70, at 787-88 (observing that “a great many view the job [of
prosecutor] as a way station, a means of acquiring human capital (litigation experience,
familiarity with local legal practices and personalities) that will facilitate their representation
of private clients thereafter”).
299 See Fisher, supra note 29, at 215.
300
See, e.g., Kreimer & Rudovsky, supra note 3, at 555 (“For many prosecutors, the
possibility of freeing wrongly convicted prisoners is as important an element of the
emerging DNA technologies as the possibility of finding and convicting the guilty.”).
297

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RESISTANCE TO POST-CONVICTION INNOCENCE CLAIMS

183

Appearing “soft” on criminals, such as by accepting the possible validity of a
prisoner’s innocence claim, detracts from that tough-on-crime rhetoric and is
largely anathema to prosecutors. The major exceptions to this general rule are
when political considerations suggest that openness to the innocence claim
may be advantageous, which is of little consolation to the prisoner whose claim
happens to surface at a time when the political stars are not so perfectly
aligned.
Evaluating areas for reform and implementing suitable changes may
increase the odds that actually innocent prisoners receive justice. Ultimately,
however, there needs to be greater communication between prosecutors and
members of the criminal defense bar about the issues raised in this article.301 A
dialogue between these traditional adversaries may help to show that, despite
any differences between the two camps generally, they stand on common
ground when it comes to post-conviction innocence claims: no one wins when
an innocent person remains in prison. Instead of the “zeal deal,” the real deal
for prosecutors and defense attorneys operating in the domain of postconviction innocence claims should be a willingness to work together, on
occasion, and a mutual recognition that actually innocent people are
languishing in our prison system.

301

Conversations between prosecutors and defense lawyers about the problems
surrounding wrongful convictions are beginning to occur across the country. See, e.g.,
National Briefing South: North Carolina: Trying to Protect the Innocent, N.Y. TIMES, Nov.
28, 2002, at A33 (describing the appointment of a commission in North Carolina, composed
of a prosecutor, a public defender, and judges, among others, “to review how innocent
people are convicted and how to free them when it happens”).

 

 

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