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103 Minn. L. Rev. 844, *856
group), and favoritism toward the class of perpetrators, law enforcement officers. 4° In the ordinary organization of criminal
justice systems, those cases call on officials from one law enforcement agency to assess the evidence against officials from
another, even when the agencies regularly work together. +! As in the context of local public corruption, conflict-of-interest
rules 7
are far from adequate to prevent prosecutors from making judgments in light of such professional relationships and
circumstances. 44 The possibility of partiality is inevitable. When [*857] that possibility combines with the long history of
racial disparities in U.S. criminal justice administration, widespread suspicion of non-prosecution decisions in cases of police
violence against minority civilians is hardly surprising, as the Black Lives Matter movement demonstrates. 4
4. Other Underenforcement Contexts
Corruption, sexual assaults, and police violence illustrate the key causes and effects of failures to enforce criminal law, but the
same forces are recognizably at work in other social contexts. Scholars and advocates have pointed to biases as explanations for
inadequate law enforcement responses to offenses against undocumented aliens, sex workers, institutionalized persons, and
targets of anti-LGBT hate crimes. * Complaints that police ignored wrongdoing against racial-minority victims in minority
communities were prominent in the 1970s and 1980s. 4° Some of [*858] the remedies, however - which included harsher
drug laws adopted with substantial support from African American politicians and communities - have proven deeply
problematic for those same communities. 47
Finally, less pernicious biases and favoritism are suspected explanations for lenient enforcement patterns in lower-visibility
contexts, such as bicyclists killed by motor vehicle drivers, ** employees injured on the job due to workplace safety violations,
and bystanders shot by recreational hunters. +? Even critics of those enforcement decisions in those settings view them as
products of subtle or unconscious empathy with vehicle drivers, employers, and recreational gun users, which incline officials
40 Prison guard assaults on inmates raise the same concerns, although they get less public attention. For a notorious failure to prosecute
prison guards and law enforcement officials for unjustified lethal force, see generally Heather Ann Thompson, Blood in the Water: The Attica
Prison Uprising of 1971 and Its Legacy (2016).
41 Cf. Paul Cassell, Who Prosecutes the Police? Perceptions of Bias in Police Misconduct Investigations and a Possible Remedy, Wash. Post:
Vololkh Conspiracy Blog (Dec. 5, 2014), Attps:/Awww.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh -conspiracy/wp/2014/12/05/Awho-prosecutes-the-
police-perceptions-of-bias-in-police-misconduct-investigations-and-a-possible-remedy (describing the problem of local prosecutors! handling
police cases as a "perception of bias" rather than a "conflict of interest" and recommending state attorneys general handle police cases). One
solution, followed in Wisconsin, is to assign investigation of deaths involving law enforcement officers to a state-level investigative agency
unconnected to the local agency of the officer under investigation. Vis. Stat.§ $175.47, 950.04(1v) (do), 950.0822) (h) (2014).
# E.g., Criminal Justice Standards 3-1.3 (A.B.A. 2015); ef. Braman v. Corbett, 19 A.3d 1151, 1154 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2011) (describing a
situation where a district attorney's office recused itself from decision to prosecute on a private complaint alleging the district attorney
committed rape, and the state attorney general investigated and made the decision not to prosecute).
3 For a disturbing account of prosecutorial deference to police, see Nicole Gonzalez Van Cleve, Crook County: Racism and Injustice in
America's Largest Criminal Court 127-56 (2016); David A. Harris, The Interaction and Relationship Between Prosecutors and Police Officers
in the United States, and How This Affects Police Reform Efforts, in The Prosecutor in Transnational Perspective 54, 55, 60-63 (Erik Luna &
Marianne Wade eds., 2012) (describing reasons why the prospect of police reform through the efforts of state prosecutors is "bleak"); Nicole
Gonzalez Van Cleve, Chicago's Racist Cops and Racist Courts, N.Y. Times (Apr. 14, = 2016),
https ://www.nytimes.com/2016/04/15/opinion/chicagos-racist-cops-and-racist-courts.html; see also Kate Levine, The Ultimate Conflict, Slate
(Sept. 11, 2014), Attp:/Awww.slate.com/articles/news and_politics/jurisprudence/2014/09/local_prosecutor_bob_meculloch_should_
not_be_the_one_to_decide_whether_to.html. For a harrowing account of a federal prosecutor who did not show deference to fellow law
enforcement officials and faced apparent retaliation for it, see Paul Butler, Let's Get Free: A Hip-Hop Theory of Justice 1-21 (2009).
DAVID SCHOEN
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