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77 Alb. L. Rev. 881 (2013-2014)
Prosecutorial Misconduct in the Digital Age

handle is hein.journals/albany77 and id is 903 raw text is: 







    PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT IN THE DIGITAL AGE

                         John G. Browning*

                         I. INTRODUCTION

  Prosecutorial misconduct, which this article defines as what
occurs when a prosecutor deliberately engages in dishonest or
fraudulent behavior calculated to produce an unjust result, is-
according to many legal scholars-seriously underreported. One
study utilizing a computer-assisted review revealed that there have
only been just over one hundred reported cases of professional
discipline of federal and state prosecutors in the past century-an
average of approximately one disciplinary case per year.1 Another
leading scholar in the area has concluded that prosecutorial
discipline is so rare as to make its use virtually a nullity.2
  Why is this? Many reasons emerge, not the least of which is a
practical, empirical obstacle to accurately assessing the problem:
prosecutors who engage in such misconduct presumably don't want
to be caught, and will take steps to conceal their actions. Another
reason is the autonomy enjoyed by prosecutors' offices insofar as
their internal policies are concerned. The considerable discretion
afforded to prosecutors over whom to prosecute and which offenses
to charge, coupled with a lack of external oversight of prosecutors'
offices, fosters an environment in which misconduct can remain
undetected and unchecked. Yet another reason is sheer volume:
most criminal cases in the United States result in plea bargains,
which   are  rarely   subjected  to judicial review    or  extensive



  * John G. Browning is a partner in the Dallas office of Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith,
LLP and the author of three books on social media and the law. He is a graduate of Rutgers
University and the University of Texas School of Law, and serves as an adjunct professor at
SMU Dedman School of Law, where he teaches the course, Social Media and the Law.
  1 See Fred C. Zacharias, The Professional Discipline of Prosecutors, 79 N.C. L. REV. 721,
744 & nn.80, 82 & 86 (2001); see also Monroe H. Freedman, Professional Discipline of
Prosecutors: A Response to Professor Zacharias, 80 HOFSTRA L. REV. 121, 124 (2001)
(observing that Professor Zacharias's study found just over one hundred cases dating back to
1886, which amounted to fewer than one per year).
  2 BENNETT L. GERSHMAN, PROSECUTORIAL MISCONDUCT § 1.8(d) (1998).

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