• Re: Fact check: Did Kamala Harris block evidence that would have freed

    From Harris the pole smoker@21:1/5 to All on Sun Dec 31 07:51:51 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.nationalism.black, sac.politics XPost: talk.politics.guns

    On 30 Dec 2023, Tranny Trump <elonx@protonmail.com> posted some news:umqou0$1kcc4$1@dont-email.me:

    Two crooks in the same office. What could go wrong?

    Update: Joe Biden’s choice on Aug. 11 of Sen. Kamala Harris brings to
    the Democratic ticket a woman who has won three times statewide in
    California — but has also been a polarizing figure. Read more here:
    Kamala Harris in California: Big winner but a polarizing figure. During Wednesday night’s Democratic presidential debate, former Vice President
    Joe Biden and Hawaii Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard went after California
    Sen. Kamala Harris over her record as the state’s attorney general and
    San Francisco’s district attorney. Biden alluded to a crime lab scandal
    that involved her district attorney’s office and resulted in more than
    1,000 drug cases being dismissed. Gabbard claimed Harris “blocked
    evidence that would have freed an innocent man from death row until the
    courts forced her to do so.” Biden’s claim that 1,000 drug cases had to
    be dismissed when Harris was D.A. is accurate, although Harris has
    denied knowing about the problems with the crime lab that triggered
    those dismissals until the issue became public. Gabbard is correct that
    Harris did not pursue all evidence in the case she referenced, but the innocence of the inmate in question has yet to be determined. Longtime
    San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi criticized Harris’s handling
    of the crime lab situation back in 2010 and during a January interview
    with The Sacramento Bee. The San Francisco drug lab was shut down after
    a lead technician, who testified on behalf of prosecutors on drug cases,
    was found to have systematically mishandled the drug samples seized from suspects, even consuming some herself. While the San Francisco Police Department was responsible for running the lab, not Harris’s district
    attorney office, a court ruled in 2010 that the district attorney’s
    office violated defendants’ constitutional rights by not disclosing what
    it knew about the tainted drug evidence. Judge Anne-Christine Masullo
    wrote in her decision that prosecutors “at the highest levels of the
    district attorney’s office knew that Madden was not a dependable witness
    at trial and that there were serious concerns regarding the crime lab.”
    And the Wall Street Journal reported in June that Harris ignored staff recommendations back in 2005 urging her office to establish a defendants
    rights policy, known as the Brady doctrine, that would have mandated her
    staff to disclose such information to defendants. Harris has denied
    being aware of the drug lab issues at the time and also noted that her
    office implemented a Brady policy after the drug lab scandal came to her attention. Her office dismissed an estimated 1,000 cases as a result.

    KEVIN COOPER CASE In February, California Gov. Gavin Newsom ordered new
    DNA testing in the 1983 murder case of Kevin Cooper. Cooper came within
    hours of execution in 2004 after being charged with the murders of an
    adult couple and two children. Harris opposed the testing when she was
    the state’s attorney general. She has since said she supports DNA
    testing and encouraged Newsom to approve Cooper’s request. She did not
    offer specifics on why she did not approve the testing during her
    tenure. In response to a request for comment, Harris’s campaign pointed
    to a past statement where the senator called a New York Times columnist
    last year, telling him, “I feel awful about this.” The testing is not
    yet complete. Whether Gabbard’s claim that the testing “would” have
    exonerated him remains an open question. Harris defended her criminal
    justice record Wednesday night. “As elected attorney general of
    California I did the work of significantly reforming the criminal
    justice system of a state of 40 million people, which became a national
    model of the work that needs to be done, and I am proud of that work.”
    Editor’s note: This story has been updated to add more detail on the
    Kevin Cooper and crime lab cases.

    https://www.sacbee.com/news/politics-government/capitol-alert/article2333 75207.html

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