1. There's a lot of prosecutorial misconduct in the Southern District of Florida. But get a load of this case out of Texas (via the AP):
Texas’ highest criminal court on Wednesday overturned a death row inmate’s capital murder conviction because one of the prosecutors in his 2003 trial was moonlighting as a clerk for the judge in the case.
The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals ruled that the arrangement between Midland County State District Judge John Hyde and then-prosecutor Weldon Petty clearly violated Clinton Young’s right to a fair trial. Young was convicted and sentenced to death in the shooting of a man during a 2001 drug-related crime rampage across Texas.
Hyde died in 2012, but Midland County prosecutors in 2019 discovered the paid arrangement between the judge and Petty, who had also been working on the side for other district judges for years.
The appeals court noted that as a prosecutor, Petty would oppose defense motions while also drafting recommendations of denial for judges to sign. As part of the legal team prosecuting Young, Petty drafted the legal motions submitted during the trial and sometimes participated in oral arguments.
Petty’s side agreement with Hyde was to perform “legal work” as a judicial clerk outside of his official duties. It paid him more $9,000 over the time spanning Young’s initial indictment, trial and post-conviction appeals, which Petty handled both as prosecutor and as clerk for the judge, the appeals court noted.
“Judicial and prosecutorial misconduct, in the form of an undisclosed employment relationship between the trial judge and the prosecutor appearing before him, tainted (Young’s) entire proceeding from the outset,” the court wrote. “As a result, little confidence can be placed in the fairness of the proceedings or the outcome of (Young’s) trial.”
Alrighty then.
2. Here's an interesting case out of the 9th Circuit that will, I'm sure, be heard by the Supreme Court. From the intro:
We once again consider the application of the Fourth
Amendment’s warrant requirement to new forms of
communication technology. See, e.g., United States v. Cano,
934 F.3d 1002 (9th Cir. 2019); cf. Carpenter v. United
States, 138 S. Ct. 2206 (2018). “When confronting [such]
concerns wrought by digital technology, th[e] [Supreme]
Court [and this court] ha[ve] been careful not to uncritically
extend existing precedents.” Id. at 2222.
Our question this
time concerns the private search exception to the Fourth
Amendment—specifically, the intersection between
electronic communications providers’ control over material
on their own servers and the Fourth Amendment’s restriction
of warrantless searches and seizures, which limits only
governmental action. See Burdeau v. McDowell, 256 U.S.
465 (1921); Walter v. United States, 447 U.S. 649 (1980);
United States v. Jacobsen, 466 U.S. 109 (1984).
The events giving rise to Luke Wilson’s conviction and
this appeal were triggered when Google, as required by
federal law, reported to the National Center for Missing and
Exploited Children (NCMEC) that Wilson had uploaded
four images of apparent child pornography to his email
account as email attachments. No one at Google had opened
or viewed Wilson’s email attachments; its report was based
on an automated assessment that the images Wilson
uploaded were the same as images other Google employees
had earlier viewed and classified as child pornography.
Someone at NCMEC then, also without opening or viewing
them, sent Wilson’s email attachments to the San Diego
Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force (ICAC), where
an officer ultimately viewed the email attachments without
a warrant. The officer then applied for warrants to search both Wilson’s email account and Wilson’s home, describing
the attachments in detail in the application.
Our question is whether the government’s warrantless
search of Wilson’s email attachments was justified by the
private search exception to the Fourth Amendment. See
Walter, 447 U.S. at 655–56; Jacobsen, 466 U.S. at 113–14.
For the reasons that follow, we hold that it was not. We
therefore reverse the district court’s denial of Wilson’s
motion to suppress and vacate Wilson’s conviction.