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Letting the DA skate

By DAVID S. BERNSTEIN  |  June 20, 2007

Earlier this year, the National District Attorneys Association even produced a report — which contains a quote from Conley, who is on the board of directors — arguing that a DA should be judged not just on conviction rates, but also on arrest rates and crime prevention.

In other big cities, including New Orleans, Washington, DC, and Philadelphia, district attorneys have come under fire when violent crime has risen and arrest rates have dropped. San Francisco’s DA has endured intense public criticism — from high-ranking police officials, no less — for those reasons. And candidates in this past year’s DA election in Dallas debated means of reversing similar trends.

Yet those cities haven’t suffered anything close to the setbacks Boston has since Conley took office in February 2002.

Boston has averaged 62 murders a year during Conley’s tenure, up 45 percent from the previous five years. Meanwhile, only 40 percent of murders committed in Boston have ended with an arrest — down from 55 percent before Conley took office, and well below the national average of more than 60 percent — and that number’s falling. But the failures in Boston courtrooms keep piling up. (See sidebar.)

Conley insists on being included in any positive press conference, but is nowhere to be seen when bad news arises, city insiders say.

Other detractors maintain that Conley — while honest and well-intentioned — plays it safe to avoid controversy that would be bad for his career.

That caution has its price. According to some BPD detectives, his office leaves dangerous criminals on the street by being gun-shy about bringing charges without rock-solid evidence. And tough-on-crime community activists say Conley’s office pleads too many murder charges down to manslaughter in order to avoid the embarrassment of acquittals. Meanwhile, defense attorneys and civil-liberties advocates say Conley has been unwilling to criticize police and force them to change their worst habits. And close observers claim he rewards loyalty over competence in his office — he cleaned house of Ralph Martin loyalists early on, regardless of their skills, and has rarely cut anyone loose since then, despite his office’s anemic results.

‘Second-luckiest person’
One local officeholder calls Conley “the second-luckiest person in public life in Boston,” following only Menino. Even his fans agree that Conley is a poor politician. He lacks charisma, is a barely adequate public speaker, and, in all his years of public service, has yet to do anything that stands out in voters’ minds. Yet he has handily, and fortuitously, climbed to the top of the local law-enforcement ladder.

It was in 1993, when Menino had the mayor’s office dumped in his lap by a departing Ed Flynn, that Conley first won elected office, staving off weak opposition to replace Menino as Hyde Park’s Boston city councilor. That followed a quiet career trajectory that he began as a Suffolk County prosecutor in what is now seen by many as the worst of times in that office — a period in the late 1980s and early ’90s under glad-hander Newman Flanagan that saw the overzealous prosecution of black suspects, and a number of wrongful prosecutions that came to light much later.

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  Topics: Talking Politics , Deval Patrick, Elections and Voting, Maureen Feeney,  More more >
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Comments
Letting the DA skate
Most of the twenty-three innocent men released from Massachusetts prisons in 2004 were from Suffolk County. AG Tom Reilly, DA Conley and the rest of the DAs then spent over two years before they issued their worthless whitewash of the false imprisonments. By the way, what public officials were ever held accountable for the false imprisonments? The miasma of corruption and cover up is now resulting in an inability to even staff juries in Suffolk County. Until the Commonwealth begins to cope with the corruption of its own legal system and holds those responsible accountable, the problem will only continue to get worse. The next step in this process is jury nullification, signaling the total collapse of the legal system in Massachusetts. Is it any wonder Conley’s office pleads so many murder charges down to manslaughter in order to avoid the embarrassment of acquittals? Is it any wonder so many people refuse to put their own lives on the line and “snitch” on the criminals for a corrupt and inept legal system, more likely to botch the case than win it?
By Krogy on 06/20/2007 at 9:29:09
Letting the DA skate
Once again, we see Suffolk County and the commonwealth attempting to address the symptoms instead of the problem. For exmaple, Write & wrong: Police get creative to battle surge in graffiti, http://news.bostonherald.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=1008025 How dare these gang members start acting like cops? For as long as I can remember, cops have always taken great pride in never snitching on another cop. Perhaps the cops should consider leading by example. I suggest that every cop and law enforcement agency in the commonwealth take a snitch pledge. I doubt if there is a cop in the state who does not know of unethical or illegal misconduct by another cop or law enforcement official in the state that should not be reported for investigation and prosecution. The whole legal system in Massachusetts reeks of hypocrisy. The breakdown in law enforcement in the commonwealth begins with law enforcement. The only cure for corruption is integrity. The only way the commonwealth will restore the trust of the people is to start holding themselves accountable to the same standards as everyone else.
By Krogy on 06/25/2007 at 8:47:01
Letting the DA skate
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=070628135531.31cukrus&show_article=1 US juries get verdict wrong in one of six cases: study Jun 28 09:55 AM US/Eastern It is comforting to know that only seventeen percent of the defendants are actually innocent.
By Krogy on 06/28/2007 at 1:14:12
Letting the DA skate
Where’s Conley amid Hub chaos? http://news.bostonherald.com/localRegional/view.bg?articleid=1011518&chkEm=1 Clearly, DA Conley is not doing his job.
By Krogy on 07/16/2007 at 11:08:58

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 See all articles by: DAVID S. BERNSTEIN

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