Old_Blue wrote:vvoland wrote:Agree to disagree. The racial disparities in the criminal justice system are stark, to say the least, particularly in the South. Though I'm not sure if this girl is from OK, I think it was a SoCal case so she must be an LA resident. Regardless, when the 15 year old girl is white and the 21 year old is black, I don't think the money would matter as much as you think.
I've already provided this link twice before. It's worth reading if you want some background on Todd Spitzer - the District Attorney who handled the Giddey case. Some of the OCDA's problems appear to have preceded Spitzer's time in office:
https://www.aclusocal.org/en/press-releases/breaking-court-rules-ocda-todd-spitzer-unlawfully-concealed-prosecutorial-data-and
In a rebuke to Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer, an OC Superior Court judge ruled today that Spitzer unlawfully withheld crucial records related to the California Racial Justice Act (RJA)—a groundbreaking law designed to prevent racial bias in the criminal legal system.
The ruling comes after a 2022 lawsuit filed by Chicanxs Unidxs de Orange County, the ACLU Foundations of Northern and Southern California and the Peace and Justice Law Center challenged Spitzer’s refusal to release prosecutorial data, policies and training materials as a violation of the Public Records Act.
“Todd Spitzer dismissed this lawsuit as ‘frivolous’ and ‘completely divorced from reality,’ but the court has now made it clear—the only thing frivolous were his excuses for hiding the truth,” said Sean Garcia-Leys, executive director of the Peace and Justice Law Center and attorney for Chicanxs Unidxs. “Spitzer fought to keep this data from public view, but today’s ruling confirms what many in our community have long known: he is more interested in covering up racial injustice than correcting it.”
...
“The judge’s order exposes what Spitzer had long denied: that his office operated with a policy of violating transparency laws, which concealed evidence of racial disparities in prosecutions,” said Emi MacLean, senior staff attorney at the ACLU Foundation of Northern California and attorney for the plaintiffs in the case.
A 2022 ACLU Foundation of Northern California report on the OCDA’s prosecutorial practices previously revealed racial disparities in the office’s charging and diversion practices from 2017 to 2018, when former DA Tony Rackauckas led the office. The report also revealed that, despite DA Spitzer’s unwillingness to provide more recent office data, all available evidence suggested that the office’s racially disparate practices had not changed. Spitzer was the first district attorney in California to be personally found in violation of the RJA in 2022—a fact that underscores the urgent need for prosecutorial transparency.
I think Old Blue is right. But this issue has been disposed of by the courts. In the legal world, we don't try to change what has already happened. We try to make best decisions based on current info.