Equal Justice? Not So Much!
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If the parents did this to their daughter (and it sure looks as though they did - or they were mentally residing on another planet), I wouldn't wince if they were flogged and hung in Foley Square - and I'm against the Death Penalty.
However, I don't believe I've ever read such a biased, singularly one-sided piece of journalism in my life.
I realize America is in a state of transition. I can smell the brimstone and I see the torture and explosive death we're now so proud of dealing.
And I sure know the Times is not above using its pages to help foster the new agenda. (Say "Judy Miller!")
But come on!
I doubt that, even just a few short years ago you could have gotten the prosecutor in a case like this to write such a blistering attack on the defense attorneys.
In most cases, if the defense gets unusual delays granted, you'll find some prosecutorial flaws helped sway the judge.
Here, you'd think the Sainted prosecutors were sent directly from heaven to garner justice in the case, and were still losing to Satan's third team legal group.
This reporter must have been blushing when writing "Outside the courtroom, neither prosecutors nor defense lawyers would openly discuss their strategies." Because, I wouldn't be surprised if the prosecution team was having pizza at the reporter's place while this piece was put together.
It's part of our decline, I guess. Now we find comfort in not only denying innocent detainees in secret foreign prisons any human rights; we now deride our court system for abiding those silly dictates of that oh-so-old and irrelevant Constitution.
But for the wealthy - take Ken Lay for instance - we're satisfied to let him steal thousands of people's retirements while raping the tax payers and rate payers for California electricity, and spend years living in his castle until he dies a free man.
But when we find poor felons, EVEN THOSE RESIDING IN PRISON, getting trial delays, it is "Off With Their Heads" we scream in the streets.
Let's face it folks. If you've kept aware of this case, you know that damn near everyone failed this little girl. Including many people who belong to the same bureaucracy as the prosecutors here.
So, by throwing such an emotion stirring barrage of words against the defense, a lot of city workers can gain coverage from a storm they helped bring about.
Luckily for them, our citizens are so caught up in the debate about whether water boarding should replace time outs in our schools and homes, granting fair trials is an anathema to our Zeitgeist.
"Amerika, Amerika, God shields his gaze from thee!"
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[/BREAK]
If the parents did this to their daughter (and it sure looks as though they did - or they were mentally residing on another planet), I wouldn't wince if they were flogged and hung in Foley Square - and I'm against the Death Penalty.
However, I don't believe I've ever read such a biased, singularly one-sided piece of journalism in my life.
I realize America is in a state of transition. I can smell the brimstone and I see the torture and explosive death we're now so proud of dealing.
And I sure know the Times is not above using its pages to help foster the new agenda. (Say "Judy Miller!")
As Time Stands Still in Court, Justice for a Broken Girl Waits - New York Times By MICHAEL BRICK Published: September 23, 2006 The friendless death of Nixzmary Brown in Brooklyn last January demanded a reckoning. She was broken and starved, 7 years old, left in a den her brothers and sisters called “the dirty room.” Child welfare workers, teachers, the police and the parents all came under scrutiny. In some quarters, consequences were swift. A week after Nixzmary was found, the child welfare agency suspended or reassigned six city workers. Soon hundreds of children were placed in foster care, the police commissioner was summoned before the City Council, and the mayor created and filled a new position for the protection of children.More Here- - - SNIP At a hearing on Feb. 1, Ms. Santiago was ordered held without bail, but after that her case slowed considerably. Ever since, she has been joined in court by Robert W. Abrams, leader of an expanding, contracting, secretive and highly combative defense team. His rhetorical specialty is the considered restatement. “I’ve tried to get her to change her mind by writing her and saying, ‘Please change your mind,’ ” Mr. Abrams said of one potential witness. “Well, I didn’t say, ‘Please change your mind,’ but I asked her to reconsider.” Mr. Abrams wears a floppy fedora and, over his right eye, a black patch under his glasses. He enlivens legal memorandums with sarcastic quotation marks.
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At a hearing on Feb. 1, Ms. Santiago was ordered held without bail, but after that her case slowed considerably. Ever since, she has been joined in court by Robert W. Abrams, leader of an expanding, contracting, secretive and highly combative defense team. His rhetorical specialty is the considered restatement. “I’ve tried to get her to change her mind by writing her and saying, ‘Please change your mind,’ ” Mr. Abrams said of one potential witness. “Well, I didn’t say, ‘Please change your mind,’ but I asked her to reconsider.”
Mr. Abrams wears a floppy fedora and, over his right eye, a black patch under his glasses. He enlivens legal memorandums with sarcastic quotation marks.
