Tag Archives: prosecutorial misconduct

Ten days vs 25 years

Ken Anderson lost his law license and is pretty well disgraced in Central Texas now. But 10 days in jail for prosecutorial misconduct (hiding exculpatory evidence in a murder trial) is insulting to his victim Michael Morton who has spent 25 years in prison.

If the judge can’t bring himself to slap a fellow member of the “justice” system elite by handing Anderson a sentence that matches Morton’s, at least Anderson should be made to pay restitution to Morton, if it takes the rest of Anderson’s life.

Via Instapundit.

The Zimmerman Lynching

Poor George Zimmerman’s ride through the biased media and now the legal system looks more and more like the Duke LaCrosse case. Which was a previous example of media and prosecutorial misconduct.

It’s poop like this, where the legal fraternity puts an innocent man through the wringer for their own political aggrandizement that makes people loath our so-called “justice” system. They already despise the media. We can only hope that Zimmerman’s prosecutor winds up like the one who beat-up on the Duke LaCrosse team: disbarred, doing jail time, and bankrupt!