Hiring former jurors is a destructive path
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If our senses hadn’t been shocked enough in the case of Gregory
Haidl, the teen accused of joining his two friends in a gang rape of
a 16-year-old girl at his father’s house two years ago, we just
weren’t prepared for what was next.
What was next came as Haidl was arrested again on suspicion of
statutory rape with another 16-year-old, who he met at a party his
assistant-sheriff father, Don, threw for him. And then came the
stunning announcement by his on-again, off-again attorney, Joseph
Cavallo, that some jurors from the rape trial that resulted in a hung
jury would be hired by the defense as consultants.
“I’ve been handling criminal cases for 30 years,” said Dist. Atty.
Tony Rackauckas. “I’ve been a judge. But I’ve never seen or heard of
a defense team hiring jurors.”
Nor have we.
But as we’ve learned time and time again in the Haidl case, lots
of things we see are unheard of.
Cavallo is by most accounts a shrewd and talented lawyer. The
ending result of the trial in a hung jury is evidence of that alone.
With the prosecution in possession of a graphic videotape of the
three boys having sex with a seemingly unconscious 16-year-old known
as Jane Doe and using objects such as Snapple bottles, pool cues and
cigarettes on her in a sexual manner, it seemed that a conviction was
imminent.
When that ended up an acquittal vote of 11-1, leading to a
mistrial, the brashness and cunning of Haidl’s legal team, which
included Cavallo, Pete Scalisi and the well-known John Barnett,
deserved much credit.
But do we need to be taken down such dubious and circus-like
paths?
Cavallo brought multiple calls for mistrials, each one of them
dismissed. He leveled a ferocious, verbal attack on Jane Doe that
left many observers inside and outside the courtroom queasy.
His character also was called into question as he was accused of
offering an internship to a defense witness, and was barred from
bringing in another defense witness who was an admitted porn star.
We don’t have a problem with the younger Haidl and the other
defendants, Kyle Nachreiner and Keith Spann getting the best defense
possible. But the idea that a best defense means making a mockery of
our justice system is plain over the top.
As we move toward the next trial, we’d like to make a plea for a
little less shock and sensationalism and a little more civility and
decorum.
Discontinuing the practice of hiring jurors as consultants would
go a long way toward that goal.
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