On Tue, Aug 04, 2015 at 11:17:38AM -0700, Scott Hotes wrote:
> Inline...
Thanks :) I find it a good bit easier to follow threads of
conversation in-line than via top posting. *AHEM!*
> On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 8:07 AM, David Fetter <
da...@fetter.org> wrote:
>
> > > Scientific or not, fundamental rights like the right to confront
> > > your accuser are critical.
> >
> > Are you alleging that they are preserved in some meaningful way at the
> > moment? The bail system, coercing pleas as it does, would suggest
> > otherwise.
>
> I never said that the process was perfect, or that there were not
> areas that could use improvement.
When you're poor, as increasingly many Americans are, and we'll leave
the science of that to another day, the bail system isn't in
"imperfect," or "could use improvement" territory.
The bail system rigs things in such a way that your ability to dig out
some wad of money, probably one most people on this list would
consider trivial, determines:
- What infraction(s), if any, you'll be charged with, where "can't
make bail" means "more severe."
- The chance that you'll plead out, and this is really, really
important, WHETHER YOU HAD ANYTHING TO DO WITH THE ALLEGED
INFRACTION OR NOT.
- Custody of your children, as CPS is ever eager to jump in if you
happen not to be around to take care of them for any reason or none,
and of course differentially if you're black or brown. Any guesses
which way this difference goes? See above re: pleading out under
enormous time pressure.
- Your future criminal record. Pleading out means you will have one
for the rest of your life modulo a presidential pardon, than which
you have a better chance of winning SuperLotto.
- Your ability ever to have a job. Cf. "ban the box".
> I was speaking in the context of the proposal of moving to a digital
> format, where for example the accuser may not even be physically
> present.
There are a good many situations where the accuser isn't physically
present. Not happening to have enough ready money for bail is a
gigantic contributor to this.
> My argument is that moving away from this, while possibly
> increasing the statistical effectiveness of the process, has
> potential downsides such as not allowing the accused to directly
> confront their accuser, in person, in court.
You'll pardon me if I'm a lot less concerned about theoretical
niceties for people who are on this list than the harsh and terrible
realities of a good many of my neighbors. We have real and
substantive problems with our criminal "justice" system, of which
insufficient facing of accusers is not likely in the top 20.
> So yes, I guess I am saying that, aside from coercing pleas and
> other imperfections in the system, does in fact preserve this
> important aspect in a meaningful way.
See above. It does not.
> > > Yes, of course there can be intimidation, etc., but we also need to
> > > be careful what side we err on, and the values of society we want to
> > > protect. By accusing me you are potentially taking away my personal
> > > liberties, you must be willing to confront me, and have a jury see
> > > face-to-face the interaction. I would be very nervous about taking
> > > away this basic legal right.
> >
> > You're eliding two very different matters here, I hope accidentally.
> >
> > Confronting your accuser is one thing. Having a jury look at your
> > physical appearance is a totally different thing. If you're asserting
> > that these things are inseparable, you need to explain why not rather
> > than simply asserting it.
>
> Yes, my mistake. I was trying to say that I believe both may be
> important, and for different, albeit related reasons. At a more
> general level, I suppose my point is that the direct human
> interaction, while potentially reducing scientific fidelity, may be
> something intrinsic to our understanding of justice.
Here's where the science and our "understanding of justice" collide.
The long and the short of it is that "direct human interactions," as
you put them, have often had the effect over long stretches of time of
perpetuating, and in many cases worsening, horrific injustices.
If you're a poor young black man, you're more likely to have police
contact, not because you're likelier to have done something illegal
than your wealthy white suburban counterpart, but because people have
decided, through "direct human interactions," to place a lot more
police patrols near you than near your counterpart.
You are a good bit more likely to be arrested, given a contact (hey,
Bayesian analysis!). Once arrested, you're more likely to be charged.
If charged, you're more likely to be charged with more severe
infractions for identical behavior. You're more likely to have to
plead out (daddy's friend who knows a good defense attorney doesn't
exist for you), more likely to be convicted if your case goes to
trial, more likely to serve more of your sentence, and on, and on, and
on.
And all this is really, really easy to show using data collected in
the real, physical world we inhabit.
> > > Regarding false confessions, this does seem problematic.
> > > Statistics show that false confessions are rampant, and it's
> > > right to get to the bottom of this. OTOH, are you suggesting we
> > > throw out confessions as material to a decision?
> >
> > Given the very long history and the science of cognition, among
> > other things, I think we should at least consider that as a
> > strategy.
>
> OK, certainly not averse to considering any strategy. I can
> certainly envision cases where a confession would seem very much on
> the face of it to be convincing. No, we do not want to allow
> coerced confessions, but can we address that more directly than
> simply disallowing all confessions? I committed a crime. I have
> guilt. I want to come clean. I am telling you about it now. Does
> this not hold some weight in coming to a decision?
I don't think that a confession by itself should have any legal weight
of any kind. Confessions like Hans Reiser's aren't important because
he fessed up, but because he showed authorities where he'd dumped his
wife's corpse after he murdered her in cold blood, and--this is the
biggie--they found her corpse there.
> > > That also seems very problematic. Or maybe you're suggesting
> > > that those detained be better protected with respect to
> > > aggressive police tactics. I think most people would get behind
> > > that, but exactly how do we do this? Take away police
> > > interrogation?
> >
> > Again, based on track records, it's a strategy we should at least
> > consider.
>
> I am no police expert, but I would argue you are taking away
> potentially the most valuable tool in solving crimes.
If you're going to make that case, please go ahead and dig up
evidence, not hearsay from cops, in its favor. Show the numbers.
This isn't complicated, and large bodies of hard evidence exist.
> This is indeed radical. The first place I'd likely start is: what
> is the cost to society to let X% of crimes go unsolved/unpunished,
> simply because the state cannot be trusted to interrogate potential
> suspects.
Wage theft, which is a bigger pot of stolen money than armed robbery,
goes largely unpunished.
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/09/13/1328744/-This-week-in-the-war-on-workers-Wage-theft-dwarfs-robberies-and-burglaries
Care to speculate as to why?
I will put it to you that we are already deciding that a bunch of
criminals will simply not be punished because we've decided that they
don't "look criminal," which goes back to that "direct human
interactions" thing above.
> > > Regarding false memories, that too has received a lot of attention
> > > recently. But what ideas does the author have here? How can we
> > > *not* rely on human memory, or the confidence people have? Yes,
> > > it's a problem, but relying on memory is not non-scientific, in many
> > > cases it is the best we have.
> >
> > The recall of a single person is unreliable enough that if it's all we
> > have, we should be exercising a good bit more systematic caution about
> > taking away people's liberty (or property, but frankly liberty is a
> > bigger deal) on that basis.
>
> I understand (at least some of) the weaknesses here, but am still
> confident that there are many instances in my memory where a single,
> particular fact is recalled with confidence. For example, I
> distinctly recall stopping to get gas yesterday. I distinctly
> recall that this happened in S. Berkeley on Telegraph Ave. Are
> recollections like this, because they come from one person (me) and
> not corroborated, simply to be thrown out because of the known
> deficiencies in human memory. I believe your blanket statement here
> is simply untenable.
Nobody is going to prison on the strength of that claim alone.
In this day and age, if prison were the stakes, that claim is almost
certainly falsifiable (or verifiable, whichever way you want to look
at it) using evidence gathered by the many security cameras and other
recording devices you'd have had to interact with one way or another
in the process of making it true.