mistermack wrote:I thought it was a good decision by this jury. I'm making the point about how the death penalty can have an effect on a verdict. Not particularly in this case, but how it can happen that the possible death penalty CAN sway the balance in a case that maybe SHOULD have resulted in a guilty verdict.
It's highly probable that some people walk free who should be convicted, because of the chance of the death penalty.
In death penalty cases they always ask the jurors whether they would be willing to impose a death penalty, if it's legally warranted. If the juror says no, he's excused. So if the case is sufficiently clear - if there's 100% certainty - the person will still be convicted.
Given that, what I interpret you to be saying is that there may be a level of doubt where a jury would be willing to convict with life imprisonment but not with a death penalty. In that case, my opinion is the same. If there's enough doubt that the jury wouldn't convict in a death penalty case, then they shouldn't convict in a life imprisonment case either. You're still taking the rest of the person's life away from him.
I think this doesn't apply to Florida anyway, because the same jury makes both the decision to convict, and the decision on whether or not to assign the death penalty. If the jury wants to, they can convict and still refuse to recommend the death penalty, in which case it can't be imposed.
mistermack wrote:Warren Dew wrote:The situation would have been different, but not necessarily worse for the defendant. If it hadn't been for the publicity, the prosecutor would not have felt obligated to maintain the murder charge, and the whole thing would likely have been plea bargained down to manslaughter, or maybe even just child neglect given her insistence that she was innocent. The defendant's legal team would have had a lot less resources, but the prosecutors would have devoted a lot less resources, too.
That seems to be and opinion and nothing more. The opposite might be true. The prosecution may have seen it as a chance to get an easy murder conviction on their cv.
If there's no publicity, I don't think there's that much benefit to the prosecution.
After a bit of searching, I found a somewhat similar case with a black mother and daughter. The mother's current story is that she found the girl dead after a weekend away from the house and put her in the garbage. As with Caylee, there's no clear evidence whether the girl was killed or died of starvation and dehydration on her own. The mother originally claimed the girl had been abducted and was missing, but unlike Casey, she broke under police interrogation:
http://www.fox10tv.com/dpp/news/crime/l ... found_dead
http://blackandmissing.wordpress.com/20 ... hya-woods/
Well, there's definitely evidence that the authorities expended less effort on this case than with Caylee: this girl was right there in the garbage, but the police still didn't find her until the mother told the police where she was. Their initial search must have been pretty perfunctory.
They also didn't charge her with murder - just manslaughter and neglect. Looks to me like how the Caylee case would have been charged if the prosecutor hadn't decided to overreach due to the publicity.
As for her defense, we can't know exactly what resources have been expended, but two years later, it hasn't reached trial yet. And the defense did find about the boldest defense they could given the facts that are already known - "mental condition other than insanity":
http://www.escambiaclerk.com/xml/xml.as ... d=45850191
It hasn't been plea bargained away, but this mother is certainly facing less severe charges than Casey did, and the prosecution certainly didn't treat it as "an easy murder conviction".
There seems to be something fundamentally wrong, that a prosecution can be influenced in this way. The level of publicity, or the chances of career advancement for successful convictions should have no part in making decisions about prosecutions.
It's a fundamentally bad system if that can happen.
I certainly agree with that. I think the problem there is that, in most states, prosecutors are either elected or they are on a career path to elected office, so publicity is important to them. The federal system seems to be better because most federal prosecutors are career prosecutors, and they are appointed rather than elected.