Police Moderator
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On The Job and Tangled Up In Blue
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Post by Police Moderator on Apr 5, 2013 0:43:20 GMT -5
Who Polices Prosecutors Who Abuse Their Authority? Usually Nobody by Joaquin Sapien, ProPublica, and Sergio Hernandez Special to ProPublica April 3, 2013 The murder case against Tony Bennett seemed pretty straightforward. Shortly before midnight on May 7, 1994, police found a 26-year-old man in the foyer of an apartment building near Flushing, Queens. Jake Powell was near death, blood pouring from a gunshot wound, but he managed to speak the name of the man who had shot him: "Tony Bennett." Bennett, a two-time felon, was eventually captured, convicted of murder, and sentenced to 25 years to life in prison. But Bennett never served anywhere near that sentence. He has, in fact, been free since 2008 because Claude Stuart, the former Queens assistant district attorney who handled his case, violated a basic rule of law by withholding critical evidence from Bennett's attorney. A state appeals court overturned Bennett's conviction and released him after 13 years in prison. Read more: pro publica
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