.
Well well well. who couldda knowd?? Acute prosecutorial foul play has ended the big Roger Clemens perjury trial at it’s gestation. From ESPN:
The judge presiding over Roger Clemens’ perjury trial declared a mistrial over inadmissible evidence shown to jurors.
U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton said Clemens could not be assured a fair trial after prosecutors showed jurors evidence against his orders in the second day of testimony.
He will hear a motion on whether a new trial would be considered double jeopardy.
Whooo boy, Judge Walton must have been a little upset. Why yes, yes, he was:
.
“I don’t see how I un-ring the bell,” he said
Walton interrupted the prosecution’s playing of a video from Clemens’ 2008 testimony before Congress and had the jury removed from the courtroom. Clemens is accused of lying during that testimony when he said he never used performance-enhancing drugs during his 24-season career in the major leagues.
One of the chief pieces of evidence against Clemens is testimony from his former teammate and close friend, Andy Pettitte, who says Clemens told him in 1999 or 2000 that he used human growth hormone. Clemens has said that Pettitte misheard him. Pettitte also says he told his wife, Laura, about the conversation the same day it happened.
Prosecutors had wanted to call Laura Pettitte as a witness to back up her husband’s account, but Walton had said he wasn’t inclined to have her testify since she didn’t speak directly to Clemens.
Walton was angered that in the video prosecutors showed the jury, Rep. Elijah Cummings, D-Md., referred to Pettitte’s conversation with his wife.
“I think that a first-year law student would know that you can’t bolster the credibility of one witness with clearly inadmissible evidence,” Walton said.
Well, yes, Reggie Walton is exactly right. It was not only an inappropriate attempt at backdoor admission of what was, at the time, hearsay but, much, much, more importantly flew directly in the face of a direct and specific previous order of the court on this EXACT issue. You just do not that, and if you do you cannot whine when the court spanks your ass. You got said ass whuppin the old fashioned way, you earned it.
So, now the germane question is where do we go from here; i.e. what about a new trial. Well, that depends on a fair amount of pretty complicated things that are not going to be self evident to those not more than intimately experienced in the nuances of technical trial law are going to understand. I will get into that in detail, and discuss the legal implications and situation, when the pleadings are filed. Judge Walton has scheduled a Sept. 2 hearing on whether to hold a new trial, or dismiss the case permanently due to double jeopardy. clemens’ defense team will have until July 29 to file the motion to dismiss with prejudice and the prosecution has until Aug. 2 to respond.
A lot of judges would have tried to paper over this bogosity by the prosecution. Reggie Walton is PISSED. He may well say they are done based on double jeopardy. Those are gonna be fun briefs, and a very interesting oral argument.
One further thing, despite the incredibly short tenure of this jury trial – literally really in the first day of evidentiary presentation – today’s antics were NOT the first instance of prosecutorial misconduct. Oh no, the government was acting maliciously and unethically from the get go in the opening statements.
[Judge Walton] said it was the second time that prosecutors had gone against his orders — the other being an incident that happened during opening arguments Wednesday when assistant U.S. attorney Steven Durham said that Pettite and two other of Clemens’ New York teammates, Chuck Knoblauch and Mike Stanton, had used human growth hormone.
Walton said in pre-trial hearings that such testimony could lead jurors to consider Clemens guilty by association. Clemens’ defense attorney objected when Durham made the statement and Walton told jurors to disregard Durham’s comments about other players.
Yes, boy howdy, that is precisely right.
I think that the Laura Pettite bit, coupled with the improper attempt at prohibited guilt by association in the openings makes a fast pattern to malicious prosecution. If Reggie wants, he can dismiss and ground it upon both mistrial and sanction for malicious.
I’ve been telling people for years that it was NOT just former IRS goon come FDA stoolie agent Jeff Novitsky (although it all starts with him) that was malfeasant in the BALCO cases, including the Mitchell report kerfuffle, it was the AUSAs too.
This mendaciousness is just bogus and deplorable. Congratulations to Judge Reggie Walton for fingering it for what it is. Now dismiss this bunk forever please.




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The level of incompetence seems blatant, maybe purposeful? As much as I despise the Texas Con Man, I hope he slithers back to Houston and is not heard about again.
While Federal Judges from one district to another may not be able to see or act on the depth and breadth of prosecutorial misconduct and connect the dots, if any, I’d sure like to see sanctions imposed more often (at all?).
Thanks for the explanation of this. Assuming the prosecutors weren’t trying to throw the case (which wouldn’t make any sense), WTF were they thinking? I don’t know much about this stuff, but just what I’ve read about Reggie Walton here on this blog would be enough for me to know not to try something this stupid. When Judge Walton says you can’t do something, trying to backdoor it in is guaranteed to piss him off. I would expect a lawyer trying a case in his court would know what kind of risk they were taking.
Is it simple hubris? Total incompetence? Just not knowing anything about Walton? Just trying to bolster a weak case (so thinking they didn’t have anything to lose)?
Judge Walton made the right move.
The real question is did Roger take steroids or vitamin B-12?
I have no clue as to your questions in the second paragraph of your comment. As to the first paragraph, you are dead on the money.
What I wonder is who this prosecutor is, who was he appointed under, etc. I’m sure there are really incompetent people who come in under Dem regimes but this just tastes like left-overs from the Gonzales.
Reggie and I (and some other folks from the Libby trial) did a panel in December. Everyone in the audience was pretty critical about his decision to hold Locy in contempt. He fired back pretty seriously about how important it was for Hatfill to get a settlement.
He takes justice pretty seriously. It’s almost quaint, really.
Any relation between AUSA Steven Durham and John (Bull) Durham of torture gloss-over fame, besides both working for DO(in)J?
Trade Durham for Fitzy?
Don’t forget the other NY trainer
KIRK RADOMSKI: Former Mets clubhouse attendant who says he supplied PEDs to more than 300 major leaguers. Said he turned over receipt for HGH shipment to Clemens’ home to federal investigators.
Is he stoolie number 2?
Is he lying too?
Oh, and bmaz?
Nice title.
One more thing.
“I don’t know how I unring that bell” is one of Reggie’s favorite comments. I can totally HEAR him saying that, as he did a number of times in the Libby trial.
Nice post. I despise abuse of power even more than cheating ballplayers (if we have both in this case).
well, it sounds like these particular federal prosecutors figured they were going to lose anyway, so what the hell, try to slip one by walton on the inside corner.
you know, it seems to me that federal prosecutors over the last decades have really been cruising for a comeuppance.
on every front i see them operating – gov conduct on terrorism, political speech, corruption prosecution of politicians (sielgelman, stevens), whistleblower trials (o.k., this is teeny bit of double counting here), baseball drug use (aka doping) – some federal prosecutors can be counted upon to withhold evidence, lie to a judge, misrepresent govt actions, misrepresent facts, claim state’s secrets where none exist, and ignore the judge’s instructions?
as a class, these bastards seem ruthless and arrogant.
not only that, they really do not appear to give a rat’s ass for the rights of a defendant.
a conscientious prosecutor does not just want to win; she wants to prove thru legitimate evidence and honest argument that the defendant’s conduct merits depriving him of liberty, property, or life.
where the hell is the conscience of the u.s. dept of justice?
i think we need patrick fitzgerald in charge of ethics and fairness tutoring at the doj.
the general answer to my questions about the (mis)conduct of prosecutors is that they face far too many soft, easily, willingly bamboozled federal judges. but didn’t these guys know that judge walton wasn’t that kind of judge?
The Radomski gambling ties to organized crime were the serious part, and will likely never see the light of day.
It is only quaint in the chattering classes. And that includes a great many on what is identified as “the left” as well. You can see it everywhere. Justice and the rule of law run both ways; it is what it is, and does not always run in favor of the latest cause celebre, or popular meme. But that is the beauty of it, really. Reggie Walton gets it. We all need to.
Superb fucking question. I thought that earlier and had forgotten.
I can honestly say that is a part that is severely under-discussed (both pro significance and contra; and there are both sides) in the general public arena. That same gross misunderstanding and lack of appropriate discussion applies to the pass through for the supposed Radomski material, Jason Grimsley. I can assure that the ridiculous pressure, indeed what could easily be alleged as criminal extortion, that was applied to Grimsley, Greg Anderson, Knoblaugh and several others is outrageous. There is a VERY dark, malicious and craptastically unethical side of all of the BALCO investigations than is known by the public or acknowledged by the supposed pundits.
Man, we have had to wait so many years for a Blue Jay pix on this blog …
*Ducks and runs*
Echoing Marcy … Superb title, Sir !
“That is the beauty of it.”
Which ALL of the people of this nation must truly come to understand, to respect, and to cherish.
Thank you, bmaz.
Lady Justice doth glow when the rule of law is so.
DW
DeeDub !
How’s things ?
Your comment, bmaz, that, “A lot of judges would have tried to paper over this bogosity by the prosecution.” leads one to suspect that Roger Clemens was LUCKY to have gotten Walton as the judge in his case.
That fact does much to dim the glowing pulchritude of “Justice and the rule of law” … and suggests that ’tis not merely the chattering classes who’ve not quite grasped the need of truth and honorable behavior regarding those two beautiful things, which are inseperable, if the lady is to be given her full due and appreciation.
DW
Beyond the outrages of the day, Petro, things be ranging from good to ’bout excellent.
How be all things, great and small, treating you and yourn?
Great to “see” you, in real time, always.
;~DW
He was lucky to get Walton in that sense. However, had the trial proceeded appropriately and the government played it clean, Walton is long known for bering brutally tough on sentencing impositions. So, luck with Walton would be a matter of timing and perspective.
We’ll have 8 years of Neocon rule in Canada, thanks to the incompetent Left. Besides that, things are great and we’re in the middle of BBQ season …
At least there is the chance of “luck” with Walton.
You imply, bmaz, or I infer, that there would have been even less of a chance with a “lot” of other judges, at least in terms of the chief officer of the court noticing untoward “patterns” of unacceptable behavior.
With better “luck”, all around, there might be consideralbly less question extant regarding the behaviors of the government … and not merely in a courtroom.
An over played “role” for “luck” in the “procedings” must diminish the credability of both Lady Justice and her rule of law, unless she is closer to Lady Luck than seems, somehow, seemly to me.
;~DW
Petro!!!
Want you to know that since my wife brought it home last night about 5 pm PST time, I have been relentlessly chowing like a giant fucking pig on Honey Bear’s “You don’t Need No Teeth To Eat Our Meat” BBQ.
Greatest fie upon the rulers and wonderful, great good upon you, Petro!
DW
Bmaz, the news article said that Judge Walton will decide in the Fall if a new trial should proceed. Does the Prosecutor have any valid arguments or just more of this tripe ?
Yes, a lesser, less confident, and less principled, judge than Reggie Walton would have given the jury some half assed instruction to “disregard” that evidence and move along.
The Obama DoJ must hate it when they have to stop devoting their full energies to protecting the president and his corporate sponsors. Devoting their full attention to criminal defense deprives them of the skills and correct behavior needed to prosecute. Spending so much time protecting lawlessness, they come to believe that everyone else thinks the way they do. It gets hard to distinguish misconduct from incompetence; both seem to be fully on display here.
I will have to see the transcript. It gets into very technical law, that is why I did not go further today. We shall see; but there is a decent chance this case is just done. Forever. Again, we shall see….
Wow … that looks amazing !
The Rotarians are taking their U.S. BBQ Masters through Toronto for fundraising and they’re in the West End this weekend. The Jack Daniels BBQ is something to behold …
For the bbq fanatic, forget the napkins; wait until you’re finished and use the shower or the garden hose.
Well, this one is a very special case, seeing as how at the same time as they’re spending big $$ to prosecute Clemons, they’re also trying every trick they can think of to get Scott Bloch off the hook for the very same crime.
Semi-off-topic to Oops, that testimony should not have been presented:
Benjamin Wittes, over at lawfare points out a Washington Post story that Oops, once again, the government has released a document they now want back.
If it is a topic in our sensitive bilateral discussions, the document should be returned, because release of it complicates our sensitive bilateral discussions. And if it isn’t a topic in our sensitive bilateral discussions, the document should be returned, because release of it complicates our sensitive bilateral discussions.
Amen … I hope it’s over if all the Prosecution have is more hooey.
The Rocket came to Toronto after the Jays won Back2Back World Series Title. I’ve seen lots of great pitchers and he was the very best.
Sweet point that is. The stupid, it just hurts.
Perfect summation and absolutely correct … as always, Marcy !
Not to mention the fact that it comes just after we’ve gotten proof that the US held an Afghan citizens when the Afghans knew there was no evidence against him.
I saw Clemens too and he was great striking out 20K in Seattle.
However, you forget about the players who avoided steroids and played by the rules. Let’s not forget them….
Again, the question is did he take steroids or Vitamin B-12?
I’ll take door #1
Mark McGwire once retired and off the juice shrank like a cotton shirt in a hot dryer. Clemens is STILL the same. I got news for ya, men get bigger as they get older (I have personal experience here). So, I think the common wisdom, while maybe still likely, is by NO means necessarily true.
The Wikileaks Guantanamo documents clearly show intelligence exploitation value being used as reason to continue to hold them, with combatant status determinations being a charade.
Abdul Rahim al Janko being a good example. Since he was being held in a Taliban prison, the idea that he was a combatant against us is just plain absurd. But they held him for intelligence exploitation value because he knew stuff about Taliban prisons.
But then, this too is a charade. People assessed as having low intelligence value, and obviously held long after they could have intelligence value, were held for having exploitable intelligence value anyway.
I’d wonder if some sort of “Pacha Wazir had exploitable knowledge of hawala banking” “determinations” were made.
At any rate, the charades behind charades, with known-false information being presented in determinations and legal filings, and the real reasons being withheld, all lies behind lies behind lies, is a deep government fraud on our legal system, and a very sad state of affairs.
LMAO – that happening to you also?
Yea, Roger’s workout routine is pretty legendary. Here is what I don’t understand. Why is Pettitte’s wife testimony important? Doesn’t the video in question simply say that she remembered AP talking to her about it the day it happened? I’m not a lawyer but if the prosecutors think they have to have someone vouch for AP and that’s their main witness aren’t they in a lot of trouble anyway? Are they expecting the defense to portray him as a liar?
Saw AP about a month ago at the grandaughter’s volleyball tournament. Smug SOB.
True, but whatabout Roger’s competitive instinct?
If he knew others were taking steroids for an advantage, he might say
why not me?
As my English prof said “One never knows”.
My gut, from following the issue, is that Roger did in fact partake, but it’s only my opinion….
I just find it hard to believe that performance enhancing drug use by major league baseballers is the most pressing criminal matter that the president and his DoJ could devote massive resources to addressing. It’s one of the crimes that wide publicity and social disdain can still regulate.
Higher on my list would be the high crimes and misdemeanors among the political elite. Next might come the high crimes and misdemeanors of the financial elite. Following that would come the high and low crimes of government contractors. Given the trillion dollars spent on them and the complete lack of regulatory, DoJ or congressional oversight, the likelihood that fraud and other crimes have cost us billions seem quite high.
Then there are the high crimes and misdemeanors of corporations, from environmental pollution that would make Love Canal look like a game show in Vegas, to rampant abuse of employment laws, the harm to American lives and communities is massive. Related to that would be organized crime, in the boardroom and on the streets, from tax cheats to gun and drug runners, to financial frauds.
Serial fraud among entertainer-athletes probably wouldn’t make my top ten or top twenty, especially when its prosecution ignores the owners who most profit by it. The DoJ really isn’t the Department of Justice any more.
Interesting point. Anyone noticed the size of Nolan Ryan lately?
That was what I was thinking.
The story in the LA Times about it said that the video was visible to the jurors while the judge and the lawyers were consulting in another room.
Is this prosecutor a Bush/Goodling hire?
No, these were senior experienced AUSAs.