BRIAN NICHOLS CASE IS A PERVERSION OF JUSTICE
William Gladstone,
British prime minister in the late 1800s, said, “Justice delayed is
justice denied.” He could have been talking about the American judicial
system today. More specifically, he could have been talking about the
Brian Nichols case.
You may recall that
two years ago, in March 2005, Nichols was on trial for rape in Fulton
County when he allegedly overpowered a guard, took her gun and walked to
the courtroom where he was being tried. He is accused of fatally
shooting Fulton County Superior Court Judge Rowland Barnes and court
reporter Julie Ann Brandau. Sgt. Hoyt Teasley, a Fulton County sheriff's
deputy, was killed while chasing the gunman from the building. Nichols
is charged also with killing U.S. Customs Agent David Wilhelm in North
Atlanta while trying to hijack his car. He finally gave up while in the
company of a brave young woman named Ashley Smith, who talked him into
surrendering after he had broken into her apartment.
Of course, Nichols
is innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. This presumes that
the Nichols case is ever going to trial, which at this point seems about
as likely as a bullfrog sprouting wings.
As a matter of fact,
the Nichols trial has gone absolutely nowhere. Nichols is the
beneficiary of something called the Indigent Defense Fund, which was
passed with much self-congratulation by the Legislature four years ago.
A prominent member of the legal community told me at that time that we
would come to rue its passage. The law was, he said, an invitation for
abuse. It was, and it is. At last count, Nichols’ public defenders have
spent $1.4 million, bleeding the public indigent defense system dry, and
now they want more. I would call that abuse.
Trial Judge Hinton
Fuller has called the proceedings to a halt until somebody — i.e., the
Georgia General Assembly — gives the defense attorneys more money,
although the judge has not been very forthcoming on costs, having
sealed
specific financial information in the case. Fuller says it is his job to
see that Nichols gets an “adequate defense.” He has been true to his
word. The state law requires two defense attorneys in indigent defense
cases. Fuller has granted Nichols four attorneys.
While members of the
incestuous legal community praise Judge Fuller as just a mere step away
from sainthood and rattle on about the defendant’s right to a fair
trial, the rest of us unwashed are left to wonder how fair is fair? Has
anyone factored in the families of the victims whose lives were changed
forever by those horrific events of two years ago?
With Judge Fuller
having told the Legislature, “No money, no trial,” the lawmakers are not
happy campers — to put it mildly. Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle observed, “It’s
wrong for an indigent to be getting better defense than an individual
who would be paying for it. I think that creates an unfair balance.”
Amen.
Sen. Preston Smith
(R-Rome), who chairs the Senate Judiciary Committee, said, "This is
taxpayer money. And if anybody is spending money like a drunken sailor
on shore leave, we have to wake up and pay attention to that."
And, as always,
House Speaker Glenn Richardson got right to the point: “It is a gross
abuse of the system by this judge to tell us how we are going to
appropriate [money]. He is way out of his league.”
Let your humble
scribe offer a radical suggestion for everyone’s consideration that
might solve the problem: Why don’t the judge and the lawyers return from
La-La Land and get on with the trial? Strike a jury of Nichols’ peers,
call witnesses, hear testimony, get a verdict and then render a
sentence. This is not rocket science, folks. Do I have to think of
everything?
And a message to all
the lawyers out there: Please don’t patronize me with the “fair trial”
lecture. A trial is fair only when the victims get the same
consideration as the accused. That is not happening in the Brian Nichols
trial. This is not just a case of justice delayed. This is a case of
justice perverted.
Download
Printer-Friendly Version Here
((Must have Acrobat Reader
installed... click
here for a free download!)