The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Tom Reilly’s latest screw up

The Attorney General doesn’t give a damn about justice
By EDITORIAL  |  September 7, 2006

060908_reilly_main
Tom Reilly
Attorney General Thomas Reilly, who wants to be elected governor, is a proven master at chasing — and capturing — headlines. He nosed his way into the Catholic Church’s sex-abuse scandal, the sale of the Red Sox, and the outrage that ensued when local radio slime-masters engaged in racially offensive banter. Never mind that Reilly’s office had no jurisdiction. That’s politics, Massachusetts-style: so much hot hair so much of the time.

Time, of course, wounds all heels. Reilly paid the piper in spades with his flip-flops on the death penalty and same-sex marriage. More painful still were the well-deserved black eyes he received for inappropriately meddling in a Worcester County drunk-driving investigation and ineptly naming the admirable but nevertheless income-tax delinquent state representative Marie St. Fleur as his running mate. But hey, at least the dailies spelled his name correctly.

Now comes a case that is a bit more difficult to get one’s mind around, but shows — in all its hollowness — how Reilly as a leader tackles a particularly difficult and philosophically challenging issue. If you are wondering what we’re talking about, don’t feel bad. Trying to follow a shell game is no easy matter. In this instance the shell game concerns the number of people wrongfully convicted of serious crimes.

Two-and-a-half years after he garnered headlines statewide by promising action in 90 days (oops), Attorney General Reilly and the Massachusetts District Attorneys Association (MDAA) last week proudly released their “Justice Initiative” report. Well, perhaps not proudly. They released it at 4:45 pm on the Friday of Labor Day weekend, without a press conference, press release, or comment. And they did not post the report on the MDAA or Attorney General’s office’s Web sites.

If they are ashamed of the report, they should be. It sheds no light on the causes of known wrongful convictions; concludes that the problems lie in the past, rejects almost every reform that has been suggested — including those of the New England Innocence Project, which was the only outside entity asked to provide input; and spends much of its meager 25 pages praising the state’s current prosecutorial offices.

Rather than pressing for change at local police stations, it tells them to adopt reforms only when “practical” — including those called for by the courts, like taping interrogations. Many of the scant calls for change are for pet AG projects that are almost wholly irrelevant to the issue of why people are wrongfully convicted, such as expansion of the Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner program and eliminating the statute of limitations for child molestation. Now those particular recommendations may have some merit, but coming as they do on the eve of a closely fought Democratic primary (in which Reilly trails), they smack of political opportunism that is base — even by the elastic standards that prevail on Beacon Hill.

If Reilly had kept to his own self-proclaimed 90-day timetable, his report would have been ready sometime in August of 2004. When he launched the initiative, he acted as though he knew what he wanted to do. The press release and accompanying materials suggested as much. Reilly made clear that he rejected out of hand all calls for an independent “innocence commission,” as well as mandatory tape-recording of police interrogations. And while that might have been a bad start, even cynics expected some sort of progress after the show Reilly staged.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: Gore a bore?, Skell of the year 2008, Old fart at play, More more >
  Topics: The Editorial Page , U.S. Government, U.S. State Government, Baseball,  More more >
| More

[ 02/20 ]   "Optical Noise: American & British Prints/Films from the 1960s-1970s:  @ David Winton Bell Gallery
[ 02/20 ]   Third Annual Providence Children's Film Festival  @ Cable Car Cinema
[ 02/20 ]   "The Providence Postcard Project"  @ Brown University's Granoff Center, Martinos Auditorium
ARTICLES BY EDITORIAL
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   WHY THE REPUBLICAN EMBRACE OF JUST ONE CATHOLIC ISSUE IS THE HEIGHT OF HYPOCRISY  |  February 15, 2012
    We like men in dresses as much as the next person.
  •   'IT'S HALFTIME IN AMERICA'  |  February 08, 2012
    Karl Rove is pissed off, and for once we can understand why.  
  •   OBAMA'S VISION: ''AN AMERICA BUILT TO LAST''  |  January 25, 2012
    By any measure, President Barack Obama's State of the Union speech would have been considered a political winner, but coming just one day after the Republicans' constipated Florida-primary debate, Obama scored an undeniable triumph.
  •   STOPPING SOPA  |  January 18, 2012
    You can almost breathe a sigh of relief, though the fight is long from over. As of this writing, it looks increasingly as if Congress will — miraculously — fail to break the Internet.
  •   ROMNEY'S SECRET FORMULA  |  January 12, 2012
    The Republican nomination thing may not be as complicated as the media is making it out to be, but it sure is fun.

 See all articles by: EDITORIAL



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group