What do you want cops to emphasize?

June 1, 2022

Should prosecutors and cops emphasize arrests and convictions, or something else?

Laws are just words on paper without enforcement. Laws are better with better enforcement. Better law enforcement begins with improving the incentives involved.

Right now, cops and prosecutors focus too much on arrests and convictions. They use these measurements to demonstrate that they are performing well.

They should be measuring something else.

Emphasize justice!

Promoting justice should be the true focus of both laws and law enforcement. Measuring arrests and convictions creates bad incentives for cops and prosecutors to plant or withhold evidence. This creates more victims instead of more justice.

Here’s a case in point: Livingston Parish District Attorney Scott Perrilloux and Sheriff’s Detective Marlon Foster strong-armed teenager Jeffrey Ashton into providing false testimony. This testimony was used to convict Michael Wearry of the 1998 murder of Eric Walber.

Perrilloux and Foster had leverage over Ashton because he was being charged with a crime of his own as part of a separate incident. Perrilloux and Foster…

  • lied to Ashton about the results of a witness line-up.
  • coerced him into claiming he had witnessed the crime.
  • failed to divulge that Ashton could not have been a witness because he was elsewhere at the time of the murder.

In any other line of work, Perrilloux and Foster would be fired for such crimes. They’d face jail time too. But because they are “made men” in The State crime family, they can get away with murder – literally!

Wearry was sentenced to death, even though Perrilloux and Foster knew he was innocent.

Sadly, this is not a rare event, because…

Cops emphasize arrests

Prosecutors emphasize convictions. And both de-emphasize justice in the process.

Fortunately, in this case, the wrong-doing by Perrilloux and Foster came to light. As a result, Wearry has been released. Better yet, a federal court has ruled that he can now sue Perriloux and Foster. But…

It shouldn’t have required a court ruling

You don’t have immunity from losing your job if you perform badly at work. In other words, you are held accountable for your actions. Certainly, the same should be true of cops and prosecutors.

Sadly, the court-created doctrine of qualified immunity protects them from accountability.

A federal court peeled away this protection in the Wearry case. Good! But we need a more general reform. We have a congressional bill that would address this need.

Emphasize justice through legislative reform

We are working to pass HR 1470 – the Ending Qualified Immunity Act. Please become one of The 300 for this bill in your community!

Emphasize Justice

You won’t waste your time. With our Option Activism strategy, you won’t be activated until there are 300.

If you are already a member of The 300 for this bill, please ask your friends to join you, and/or contribute or start a monthly pledge so we can recruit more people.

Set your own agenda,

Jim Babka, President
Agenda Setters by Downsize DC

Today’s Action: Pass the Ending Qualified Immunity Act

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