约束斯特里克兰

Michael D. Cicchini
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引用次数: 0

摘要

当一个被定罪的被告在上诉中寻求无效的律师协助(“IAC”)索赔时——例如,通过声称辩护律师未能在审判中传唤重要证人——被告必须满足思特里克兰德的两部分测试。这需要证明(1)辩护律师的行为有缺陷,(2)这种缺陷的行为对被告的案件产生了偏见。斯特里克兰测试故意让被告难以满足,法院几乎拒绝了所有IAC的索赔。这样做的主要理由是,检察官和法官不应该因为辩护律师的错误而不得不重审被告,因为这些错误完全不在政府的控制范围之内。然而,奇怪的是,法院已经大大扩展了斯特里克兰的两部分测试,超出了其最初的目的。除了用它来分析辩护律师的表现,法院也用它来指责辩护律师的起诉和司法不当行为。当检察官作弊或法官不称职时,法院就会把思特里克兰德对辩护律师的两部分测试用于回答未能反对检察官的不当行为或未能在审判过程中当场教育法官的问题。实际上,斯特里克兰现在要求辩护律师做三件事:他或她自己的工作,检察官的工作和法官的工作。斯特里克兰的这种怪异的扩张没有法律或逻辑支持,它给辩护律师带来了严重的问题。此外,通过思特里克兰德的视角来看待起诉和司法不端行为——这个框架从来都不是为了保护检察官和法官免受他们自己的不当行为——法院也损害了被告上诉的机会,破坏了刑事司法系统的完整性。本文论证了法院如何不当地扩大了斯特里克地,解释了由此产生的危害,并主张进行明确、简单和理论上合理的法律改革。也就是说,法院必须让检察官和法官为自己的不当行为负责,而不是通过斯特里克兰不合适的IAC框架将责任转移到辩护律师身上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Constraining Strickland
When a convicted defendant pursues an ineffective assistance of counsel (“IAC”) claim on appeal—for example, by alleging that the defense lawyer failed to call an important witness at trial—the defendant must satisfy Strickland’s two-part test. This requires a showing that (1) defense counsel performed deficiently, and (2) this deficient performance prejudiced the defendant’s case. The Strickland test is intentionally difficult for a defendant to satisfy, and courts reject nearly all IAC claims. The primary justification for this is that prosecutors and judges should not have to retry defendants because of defense counsel’s errors, as such errors are completely outside the government’s control. Strangely, however, courts have dramatically expanded Strickland’s two-part test beyond its original purpose. In addition to using it to analyze defense counsel’s performance, courts also use it to blame defense counsel for prosecutorial and judicial misconduct. When a prosecutor cheats or a judge is incompetent, courts turn Strickland’s two-part test on the defense lawyer to answer for the failure to object to the prosecutor’s misconduct or to educate the judge on the spot, in the middle of trial. Strickland, in effect, now requires the defense lawyer to do three jobs in one: his or her own, the prosecutor’s, and the judge’s. This bizarre expansion of Strickland is not supported by law or logic, and it creates serious problems for defense lawyers. Further, by viewing acts of prosecutorial and judicial misconduct through Strickland’s lens—a framework that was never intended to protect prosecutors and judges from their own misdeeds—courts are also harming defendants’ chances on appeal and damaging the integrity of the criminal justice system. This Article demonstrates how courts have improperly expanded Strick- land, explains the resulting harms, and advocates for clear, simple, and theoretically sound legal reform. That is, courts must hold prosecutors and judges accountable for their own misconduct, rather than diverting blame to the defense lawyer through Strickland’s ill-suited IAC framework.
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