NEW: These two prosecutors resigned after a Queens judge found they wrongfully sent 3 Black men to prison for 20+ years.

Now a new group is going after their law licenses + those of 19 other current/former Queens prosecutors with histories of misconduct:
gothamist.com/news/prosecuto…
2/ The two prosecutors in that case failed to turn over evidence pointing to credible alternative murder suspects + made numerous false statements to the court. They were subsequently promoted by the DA. Neither were ever disciplined by the courts. See this thread for more:
3/ Because NY prosecutors have routinely failed to impose discipline internally (see our dive below), this group is filing complaints en masse to the court-appointed grievance committees which are tasked with investigating complaints about all attorneys:
gothamist.com/news/top-queen…
4/ It’s a new strategy. Historically, defense attorneys in the field have been reluctant to file complaints for fear of retaliation against clients. So this group of law professors “Accountability NY”
is filing them, despite not being party to these cases:
accountabilityny.org
5/ Whether the strategy will lead to more discipline is a matter of politics/resources. Grievance committees have long been criticized for largely operating in secret + doing little to prosecutors who break the rules (See this by @jbsapien)
propublica.org/article/who-po…
6/ Law professors/former grievance committee members we spoke to say the committees will likely distinguish between violations that vary in severity (summation misconduct vs Brady) + in intent. They’ll also be likely to look more at those with multiple misconduct incidents.
7/ Some are also skeptical that the grievance committees will go back + review flagged prosecutors’ whole careers—a resource-intensive demand that Accountability NY has made. Rohan Bolt, one of the 3 wrongfully convicted men in Queens, thinks they should:
8/ Before his arrest + murder conviction, Rohan Bolt was a happily married Jamaican restaurant owner in East Elmhurst with four kids. He had no criminal history except for minor marijuana violations. After his imprisonment, his wife left + he missed watching his kids growing up.
9/ For Bolt, disbarment is the very least that should happen to the trial prosecutor who wrongfully convicted him. On the very day Bolt was sentenced to fifty years to life, the Queens DA promoted that prosecutor, per public records we obtained:
10/ Accountability NY says it filed its 1st raft of complaints in Queens because of the late DA’s reputation for cultivating a culture of winning at all costs. As we previously reported, internal docs show DA Richard Brown was aware of internal misconduct but rarely took action:
11/ In the coming months the group of law professors plans to file dozens more complaints against current/former prosecutors in Brooklyn, the Bronx, Manhattan, and Long Island.

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More from @georgejoseph94

5 Apr
George Bell spent 24 years in prison because Queens prosecutors withheld evidence tying other men to the murders he was accused of—@QueensDAKatz calls the prosecutors' conduct "inadvertent"+ does not plan to review their other cases. This is Bell's story:
gothamist.com/news/he-spent-…
2/On Christmas eve in 1996, George Bell was just another 19 year old from Corona. By day, he folded clothes at Old Navy. By night, he pursued his real passion—DJing at local parties +going to shows to pass out his mixtapes. It was a golden age of hip hop in Queens. He wanted in.
3/ But that night, NYPD officers showed up to his house and dragged him to a nearby precinct. The teenager was handcuffed to a wall for hours by himself, then at around 4:30 am detectives took him to a room where they began a 5 hour interrogation. They chose not to record.
Read 75 tweets
17 Feb
NEW: For months, New Yorkers have awaited a flood of NYPD misconduct records, but so far they’ve only got data on civilian complaints. We obtained hundreds of secret NYPD misconduct findings + are making them public here:
gothamist.com/news/staten-is…
2/ The 800+ findings show relatively light penalties, like lost vacation days, routinely handed down even for the NYPD’s most consequential violations—false statements, excessive force, DWIs etc. (@lucapowellCUNY led the data analysis here)
3/ We extracted the findings manually by pouring through 4K FOIL documents from the Staten Island DA’s office, which for some reason didn’t redact these findings 🤷‍♂️ The data is thus skewed towards Staten Island officers + represents a small slice of the 36K uniformed NYPD force.
Read 5 tweets
16 Feb
SCOOP: After nearly 2 years of public records battle with @Gothamist/@WNYC, Queens prosecutors partially release their secret database on NYPD cops with criminal convictions + court findings of dubious testimony:
gothamist.com/news/queens-pr…
This disclosure is one of the biggest by city prosecutors thus far in response to our Freedom of Information Law appeals for DA data on NYPD misconduct. One officer pled guilty to DWI, another to harassment. Both stayed on the force:
Most of the docs concern judicial findings that officers’ testimony is not believable. For example, in a gun case, one detective said a man admitted to having a gun and signing a search consent form. His colleague couldn’t“remember” this. The judge tossed the gun evidence.
Read 5 tweets
29 Jan
New: Last year, NY’s DA association blocked the roll out of a commission to investigate prosecutorial misconduct. Now Brooklyn Assemblyman @NNickPerry is pushing for a vote on it again:
gothamist.com/news/brooklyn-…
The defense bar has long criticized the courts’ ability to rein in ADA misconduct. An ex Suffolk county prosecutor recently had his law license suspended for just 2 years despite working on two murder cases in which key evidence was withheld.
newsday.com/long-island/ku…
And District Attorney’s Offices themselves have been willing to keep and even promote employees despite egregious violations that result in convictions being vacated. Queens under Richard Brown is a prime example:
gothamist.com/news/top-queen…
Read 4 tweets
19 Nov 20
Over the last year, we've investigated claims in secret tapes that cops in Mount Vernon, NY allied with favored drug dealers—while assaulting, robbing or framing others. Now, several Black residents want their convictions tossed. Here are their stories:
gothamist.com/news/mount-ver…
2/ Many of the allegations in the tapes and from residents involve a narcotics detective, who has racked up over 500 arrests in his career. For years, civilians filed complaints against him resulting in little to no discipline:
gothamist.com/news/corruptio…
3/ A whistleblower cop secretly-recorded his colleagues making more allegations about this detective. They claimed that he assaulted residents in handcuffs + pushed other cops to frame people. When the whistleblower lost faith in the DA—he gave them to us
gothamist.com/news/mount-ver…
Read 12 tweets
15 Sep 20
STARTING NOW: Police unions are in the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals continuing to fight NYC's planned release of police misconduct records. In June, Albany voted to repeal a longstanding ban on the release of these records, prompting this months-long court saga...
2/ The city got a favorable decision from the district court last month, which the unions chose to appeal. Let's see if this court tinkers with the parameters set in that preliminary decision. More context here from a colleague:
gothamist.com/news/federal-j…
3/ We have a missing judge... hence the awkward banter among the parties on the call.
Read 34 tweets

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