Dissent Calls Out Appeals Court, New York Prosecutor For Denying A Prisoner His Right To Challenge His Conviction

The operative word in the phrase criminal justice system" isn't justice." As much as we tip our hats to enshrined rights and ideals like innocent until proven guilty," the operative word remains system." And like any system, the justice system is mostly there to process those accused of crimes, rather than act as a check on government power.
Every so often, someone in the justice system will recognize an injustice and raise their voice. But this rarely changes things. And some of the loudest voices calling out violations of civil rights are limited to dissenting opinions. Sure, the opinion may be heard but because it's only a dissenting opinion, it ultimately doesn't matter.
But that doesn't mean we should ignore dissenting judicial voices. They sometimes have the most to say and raise the best arguments. Just because they've been regulated to the back half of court opinions doesn't mean they're not worth hearing.
That's the case here in a Second Circuit Appeals Court decision [PDF] dealing with a denial of a prisoner's claim his rights were violated during his rape trial.
In this case, Terrence McCray was accused of raping a woman. She claimed rape. He claimed consensual sex. She claimed he pinned her down and sexually assaulted her. He claimed she tried to steal his pants and his money and he was able to reclaim them after a brief struggle. The physical evidence - bruises and bite marks on McCray's arm - supported both narratives.
Before the trial, the prosecution informed McCray the victim had a history of mental illness. He requested documents pertaining to her mental state. Prosecutors obtained 5,000 pages related to the alleged victim's mental health. The trial court said McCray was only entitled to a 28-page sample" it deemed representative." After a jury trial, McCray was convicted of first-degree rape and sentenced to twenty-two years in prison.
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals says this is fine. Despite the fact that the entire amount of information provided to the prosecution detailed multiple aspects of prior mental health diagnoses that may have called into question the victim's account of the incident, the court said a small percentage was all the defendant deserved.
The dissent disagrees. While Judge Dennis Jacobs agrees the 28-page sample was representative of some of the victim's mental health issues, the sampling did not contain certain crucial information that could only be found in the files held (but not turned over) by the prosecution.
In a word-against-word rape case, the State turned over to the defense documents reflecting a variety of mental disorders of the complainant that rendered her vulnerable; but the State did not turn over documents reflecting her distortions of memory and reality, and an earlier report of rape. The withheld documents put the case in a wholly different light, raise powerful doubts about what happened, and would have opened the only promising avenues for investigation and trial strategy.
Just because McCray's challenge of his conviction doesn't follow the expected procedural path is no reason to dismiss it entirely... unless the Second Circuit is trying to send the message that it simply doesn't care about prosecutorial evidence obligations in criminal trials.
The majority deems it critical to McCray's case" that Brady is a general rule" that entails judgment" in deciding what specific materials" must be turned over, and therefore may not be a viable ground for seeking relief under the habeas standard. Maj. Op. at 12-13. That principle would foreclose habeas relief even when-as here-the Brady violation is complete, flagrant, and consequential, which cannot be the law.
In sum, the court knew things and the prosecution knew things about the accuser the accused was never made aware of. On top of this being a Brady violation, this was a violation of the accused's right to confront his accuser on equal footing.
The facts of the case are horrific. But they're also disputed. To prevent the person whose freedom is on the line from fully engaging in a dispute of the facts suggests those simply accused of crimes have fewer rights than other citizens. The handling of the mental health information has been heavily disputed at every level of the court system. And even though many judges at the state and federal level have seen problems with the way this evidence has produced, a very slim majority have decided it's not worth a retrial. The disadvantages McCray experienced during his trial continue to be compounded by subsequent examination. Not only that, they're becoming precedent that create even more hurdles for prisoners hoping to challenge their convictions.
The judge isn't happy about the trial court's decision the defendant was only entitled to 28 pages of 5,000 pages of documents given to the prosecution. But he's even less happy the state of New York continues to wholeheartedly defend this apparent miscarriage of justice.
The State now doggedly defends a conviction that it obtained thanks to a violation of due process. True, the initial mistake here was made by the trial judge. With 5000 pages of a medical file, the process of review somehow broke down. The critical documents were withheld from the prosecution as well as the defense. But after the trial, the successive state courts and the district court-and now my chambers found documents that put the whole case in . . . a different light" and undermine confidence in the verdict." A prosecutor who knowingly did what the trial judge did would be a menace. But good faith is irrelevant under Brady, and functionally, there is no difference between an error by the trial judge and a dirty deed by a prosecutor: the State has deprived the defendant of a fair trial. To McCray, in jail for 22 years, it is all one.
Even a judge did the dirty work, the prosecution went along with it. Both had the power to undo this during the trial stage. Neither did. But it's the prosecution that scored an unearned win. And now, 13 years later, it still believes it's entitled to this illegitimate conviction. The dissent will not sign off on the Second Circuit majority's willingness to give its blessing to secondhand prosecutorial misconduct. And the judge is even less thrilled with the prosecution's willingness to spend public money actively arguing in favor of an apparent rights violation.
A prosecutor who continues to enjoy a misbegotten victory is as much a menace as one who contrives it. Here, the Attorney General knows from successive appellate opinions that McCray, who is still in prison, was wholly denied the right to defend himself. Yet the Attorney General labors hard to maintain the advantage. The result here is that a person is more than halfway through a 22-year prison sentence, without a trial that anyone can now deem fair, and he is still without the opportunity to see the documents that could have acquitted him. I don't know what happened in that abandoned house; but it is clear what is happening here. This is a sinister abuse. The last-ditch defense of such a conviction by the Attorney General is disreputable. Were I a lawyer for the State, I would not have been able to sign the brief it filed on this appeal.
Strong words. But still, just a dissenting opinion. The majority rules. And the part of the system that cares only about being a process to convert the accused into the convicted will continue to take all the wins it can get, whether or not it's actually earned them.