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<P><BR>> I have a good friend who moved from working in the public defenders office <BR>(as a PD) to working in the DA's office (as an ASA). She felt she could do <BR>more good there. She held to the belief that hundreds of innocent people <BR>were being prosecuted and not getting proper defense council so she went to <BR>work as a PD. After three years she realized that an innocent person being <BR>prosecuted is rare. </P>
<P>Took her three years -- a real idealist! Most of my (left and liberal) friends in LS learned in in a summer interning with the PD or doing crimianl defense work. I have encountered --maybe -- three probably actually innocent defendants in my own work as a judicial law clerk and a lawyer. </P>
<P>> Most persons prosecuted for a crime were guilty of many <BR>more that they were not charged for.</P>
<P>Generally the cops and the ASA are too busy to go after innocent. Of course here in Illinois we do have a tendency to put actually innocent people on death row, so when we goof, it's a doozy. Luckily the S. Ct has held that actual innocence without a constitutional violation is no obstacle to an execution. (Herrera v. Collins, one of the most evil opinions I have ever read).</P>
<P>> She moved to the DA's office and <BR>although she does plea bargains she believes that she generally gets a <BR>better deal for people from this side of the argument than she did from the <BR>defense side. I am not in a position to judge so I will defer to her <BR>judgement unless I find out otherwise later.</P>
<P>She's probably right. And I do criminal defense work.</P>
<P>> It seems that if you are a <BR>prosecutor trying to screw people this is a pretty powerful position from <BR>which to do it very effectively. These seem to be the people most often <BR>rewarded in the DA's office.</P>
<P>Well, convictions are rewarded. But not screwing people per se. </P>
<P>> The flip side seems to be that as a prosecutor <BR>if you are genuinely trying to help people in trying circumstances this <BR>also a pretty powerful position from which to do some good. </P>
<P>Yes, but this is individual, the problem is systematic.</P>
<P>> She handles way <BR>too many cases to give everyone a really fair shake however, a problem she <BR>readily concedes but has no practical solution for. Prosecutors it would <BR>seem are also given pretty skimpy resources in order to bring about the <BR>same effect as skimping on funds for the PD's office. Process poor people <BR>quickly through the system before anyone really has a chance to find out <BR>much about the case.</P>
<P>Yup. </P>
<P><BR>> Salary for an entry level position as an ASA in Cook County Illinois is <BR>$43,XXX. My friend makes about that, (after a few years on the job) but she <BR>isn't in Illinois. She also said the entry level pay was identical for <BR>either position where she lives, something that did surprise me.</P>
<P>Better than I thought. Still, that's a public interest salary -- I could have had a job at the ACLU for that a few years ago.</P>
<P>Why does it surprise you that PDs are paid the same as ASAs? </P>
<P>jks<BR></P></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV><p>__________________________________________________<br>Do You Yahoo!?<br>Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around <br>http://mail.yahoo.com