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The Special Responsibilities of Prosecutors -- and Other Local Government Attorneys
An
article on the front page of today's New York Times presents us with an
opportunity to focus on the special ethical responsibilities of prosecutors, and other local
government attorneys.
An assistant district attorney in Manhattan, Daniel Bibb, was asked to
reinvestigate a murder where the conviction of two men was put into
question by new evidence. Bibb came to believe that the two men were
not guilty, but he was told by superiors to defend the case anyway. He
recently admitted that he aided the defense by tracking down witnesses
who pointed to other suspects and preparing them to testify for the
defense. He also talked strategy with defense lawyers.
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The New
York Lawyer's Code of Professional Responsibility makes it clear
that public prosecutors, as well as other government lawyers, have
different responsibilities than private lawyers. Ethical Consideration
7-13 states, "The responsibility of a public prosecutor differs from
that of the usual advocate; it is to seek justice, not merely to
convict." The ethical consideration goes on to say, "With respect to
evidence and witnesses, the prosecutor has responsibilities different
from that of a lawyer in private practice: the prosecutor should make
timely disclosure to the defense of available evidence, known to the
prosecutor, that tends to negate the guilt of the accused, mitigate the
degree of the offense, or reduce a punishment. Further, a
prosecutor should not intentionally avoid pursuit of evidence merely
because he or she believes it will damage the prosecutor's case or aid
the accused." Disciplinary Rule 7-103B requires that public prosecutors
"make timely disclosure to counsel for the defendant ... of the
existence of evidence, known to the prosecutor or other government
lawyer, that tends to negate the guilt of the accused..."
This flies in the face of what lawyers are taught about the adversary
process and zealous advocacy. The ethical consideration makes it clear
why: "the prosecutor represents the sovereign and therefore should use
restraint in the discretionary exercise of governmental powers." The
parties are not equal. They may both have legal representation,
but their resources, not to mention their credibility, are not nearly
equal.
Ethical Consideration 7-14 sets forth the duty of someone in Bibb's
position: "A government lawyer not having such discretionary power who
believes there is lack of merit in a controversy submitted to the
lawyer should so advise his or her superiors and recommend the
avoidance of unfair litigation." This is exactly what Bibb did.
When he was told to pursue the case despite his belief that the two men
were innocent, he had a choice. He could have withdrawn from the
case, which would have allowed another assistant district attorney with
none of his knowledge of the case to have zealously defended the
convictions. He could have gone public with his beliefs, thereby making
it almost impossible for his office to defend the convictions. This
would likely have led to his firing (there's no whistleblower protection where there has been no wrongdoing) and being disciplined by the
bar. Or he could have done what he did, which was to zealously
fulfill his ethical requirements by following their spirit and going
beyond their words.
Bibb was told to present the government's case and let a judge decide,
which is the ordinary view of how the adversary system works.
It's not up to the lawyer to decide, that's what judges and juries are
for. However, for prosecutors and other government lawyers, this
isn't true. Their goal isn't to win, but to do justice. If
they have evidence showing that a defendant is not guilty, then how can
they try to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt? Or as Bibb said, "If
the evidence doesn't convince me, then I'm never going to be able to
convince a jury."
What interested me most about the story is not how Bibb went beyond his
duties, but how, apparently, others fall short of their duties. The
attorney for one of the defendants told the Times, "If there's a piece of
evidence that bears on another piece of evidence I'm talking about,
he'll remind me of it. That's not something that a prosecutor
typically does." Even when the prosecutor has a much greater grasp of
the evidence than court-appointed counsel. Yet I doubt that
disciplinary action is ever taken in such instances.
After the testimony was over, Bibb went to his superiors again, and
they did agree to drop the conviction against one of the
defendants. At this point, Bibb withdrew from the case, allowing
another prosecutor to make the final written arguments. A new
trial was ordered for the remaining defendant, and Bibb resigned a few
months later.
This is an extreme situation, but I think there are lessons to be
learned from it. And I think it should cause local government lawyers
to consider what their special duties are, whether they are involved in
litigation or not. The government is not a typical client. It has
special rights, powers, and responsibilities. And so does any lawyer
who represents it.
Robert Wechsler
Director of Research-Retired, City Ethics
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