Judges and jurors are also skeptical when police officers invoke counsel by way of the prosecutor when being interviewed by defense investigators when they are not criminal or civil defendants. This is also the case when prosecutors interfere with and/or obstruct the defense's attempts to uncover exculpatory physical evidence and witness statements. Each side should be provided equal and unobstructed access to witnesses. The only way to accomplish this goal is through transparency and equal access.
Examples of a lack of prosecutorial and defense transparency and evidentiary access include, but are not limited to: police advising witnesses not to speak with the defendant's investigators and experts; not making investigating officers available for interviews; prosecutors encouraging investigating officers to invoke their right to counsel in criminal cases not jointly involved in civil litigation (also referred to as "lawyering up"); prosecutors invoking counsel on behalf of officers and civilian forensic staff without their permission; not providing timely access to forensic evidence for examination; prosecutors interfering with defense investigators' interviews of witnesses; defense attorneys, investigators or experts concealing statements and evidence; and opposing attorneys being deceptive or overtly lying to each other, investigators, and experts to thwart, obstruct, or deny the ability to investigate, examine and/or present evidence in court.
The discovery, analysis, and proper presentation of a theme of investigative and/or prosecutorial malpractice is critical to the defense of any wrongfully accused and prosecuted civilian defender forced to resort to the use of deadly force to save the life of themselves or others.
The author wishes to thank Chief Craig Miller; Homicide Lt. Robert Prevot (Ret.); Ballistic Scientist Lance Martini; Psychologist Douglas Johnson, Ph.D.; Trial Attorney Mark Jarmie, Esq.; Trial Attorney Jason Davis, Esq.; and Appellate Attorney and constitutional law professor Stephanie Dean, Esq. for their assistance with this article.
Ron Martinelli, Ph.D., is a nationally renowned forensic criminologist and expert qualified in federal and state courts in areas of police practices, forensic investigations, and uses of force. He is a retired police detective with more than 20 years of field experience. He directs the nation's only multidisciplinary civilian Forensic Death Investigations Team at Martinelli & Associates, Justice & Forensic Consultants Inc. in Temecula, Calif. He can be reached at (951) 719-1450 and at
www.martinelliandassoc.com
.