Across the country, police have undermined and resisted reform. To protest a prosecutor, one detective was willing to let murder suspects walk free, even if he’d arrested them and believed that they should be behind bars.

  • Jaysyn@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    Police officers should have their pensions removed when they knowingly obstruct justice in this fashion.

    Do your fucking job, or GTFO.

    EDIT: Also, I’d bet any amount of money I can guess, 100% correctly, who this jackass voted for in the past 4 elections.

  • logicbomb@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    The most relevant part of the article:

    In 2019, Gardner added [St. Louis police detective Roger] Murphey to a list of police officers who would not be allowed to apply for criminal charges because of questions about their credibility, and she said her office would evaluate whether those officers could testify in court. Although the identities of those officers were not made public, one of Murphey’s supervisors notified him that his name was on Gardner’s list.

    Weeks later, a prosecutor in Gardner’s office notified Murphey that the office not only would actually let him testify in the cases he had led that were heading to trial — it expected him to.

    Murphey, who retired in September 2021, said he felt stuck in a Catch-22. If Gardner was going to impugn his character and question his credibility, he decided, he wouldn’t cooperate with her prosecutors. He believed that if he went to court, defense lawyers would use his inclusion on Gardner’s list to attack him on cross-examination, making the trials more about him than the defendants.

    Since that time, he has refused to testify in at least nine murder cases in which he served as lead detective. He said he told prosecutors that, if they subpoenaed him to testify, “I’m going to sit on the stand and I’m not going to answer any questions.”

    My response is…

    First of all, how would defense lawyers know he was on the list if the list wasn’t made public? This seems like an obvious lie to me. He wasn’t stuck in a Catch-22. This was not about the outcome of the trial, but about him getting revenge for the prosecutor essentially ending his career of arresting criminals. He’d probably be stuck with a desk job or something like that.

    He was mad that his past actions had finally caught up with him, but blamed the person who finally held him accountable. It’s not like the prosecutor was randomly adding names to the list of officers without credibility.

    And if you needed any proof to back up his character, it’s that he was willing to let nine murderers go free in revenge. Nine deaths he was willing to let the murderer get away for personal reasons. It sounds like the prosecutor made the right call.

    • NightGaunts@kbin.socialOP
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      9 months ago

      That’s a good point. My first read I thought maybe it wasn’t entirely black and white, maybe he had a reason (however unethical his reaction was). But you are right, he was probably on the list for good reason, and his actions show that he probably belongs on it.

  • quindraco@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    This article can’t be true, because you can’t just refuse a prosecutor demanding you testify. That’s literally why we have subpoenas. Gonna google this.

    EDIT: I missed the part where he straight-up said he’d refuse to apeak if subpoenad. That’s how you get contempt charges. Prosecutor should have called his bluff.

  • snownyte@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    You know, I cannot wait to be off this god forsaken world. Death can’t come enough. What’s it gone to, when the very people we’re to “trust” are thrown into their own chaos like this.

    What good is justice when we have assholes like this guy? A convicted murder is on the stand, guilty as charged but…“YOUR HONOR…I…I HAPPEN TO NOT LIKE YOU AND BECAUSE I DON’T LIKE YOU, THIS GUY SHOULD BE SET FREE AND IN FACT, I WILL SABOTAGE MY CASE TO MAKE SURE HE IS FREE!” fuckstick comes up in defense.

    • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      In the U.S. the first publicly funded police force was formed in Boston, to protect economic interests. The company that started it argued that police should be a publicly funded thing (even though they were just protecting their shipping yards) because it was for a common good.

      So from the beginning it was nothing more than protection of the wealthy. There’s been little change from that today. They just pretend they’re here to help.

  • Hairyblue@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    At work, I work with people I don’t like and sometimes hate to get the job done. It is called being a professional and having honor in the job I do.