The Color Book
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About this listen
It is April 25th. Welcome to yes to hell with.com. I’m gonna speak extemporaneously for a moment and share something that’s really just angers me. And that is what we’re talking about already, and that is prosecutors. Now I’m gonna give you an analogy. Imagine a child drawing coloring in his or her coloring book. Now the image has lines to the characters, to the images, and the child draws within the lines, colors the picture. And when the child goes beyond the picture, then obviously it is. Let’s just call it an error. The child did not stay within the lines. Now, if we applied the same concept to the prosecutor, every time he crossed the line would be a violation of, let’s say, the consideration of facts, evidence, ethics, responsibility, a moral standard to uphold all of the things. That a good prosecutor would honor, and here is how I view a prosecutor. When a prosecutor sees a case and they’re driven by incentives and ego and glory, and they seek to make a, make a name for themselves to maybe enter politics, become a judge. This is the breeding ground for the contemptible characters that eventually run the system. The evil. That rises to the top, and that’s not too strong a term because what the prosecutors do is they don’t color within the image on the page with the facts and the ethics and the law and the moral responsibility. No. What they do is they get a blank sheet of paper and they create an entirely different representation of the case than what is the truth. Okay, and that is contemptible. It’s evil. It’s a lie, and I despise it. It angers me. Orlando Carter is innocent because of these very dynamics. Now, I’ve shared this with you before, but this is a book, prosecutorial Misconduct. Look at this thing. Thousands and thousands of cases of prosecutors. Committing violations. Let me just read a, in the contents here, just an example. Investigative misconduct. Misconduct in grand juries. Abuse of process. Abuse of charging function. We talked about that the other day. Non-disclosure of evidence, misuse. Of the media misconduct in plea bargaining process, summation misconduct, delay misconduct in presentation of evidence, jury selection, mistrials convictions, and double jeopardy misconduct at sentencing, thousands and thousands of examples. So. We grow up thinking that the justice system is sound. We all believe that as children, we might hear an example here and there that’s a stray that’s wrong and that it was overturned. But daily in this country, in this free country supposedly, where truth is paramount, where justice is a prime concern, yet thousands and thousands of Americans are being penalized. And incarcerated. Why? Because of lawyers. And lawyers who become judges because the misconduct of judges is just as bad at times. And when we see this in its raw form, and if we do nothing, then we are certainly just as culpable. So it’s time. It’s time to educate ourselves and other people. This is not difficult. Prosecutors, lawyers in general are not. Worthy within their profession. It is not a worthy profession as it is operated now. I mean, there are a handful, I believe, of good attorneys, attorneys who actually understand the problem, who actually can withstand the peer pressure and maybe risk not being promoted. But it’s got to end and it begins with education. And as always, may truth reign supreme.
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