Unfortunately it's become important for prosecutors to get convictions by any means necessary in some judicial cases. The criminal justice function should be in place to provide equitable justice across the board for citizens of the United States. But if one has studied the historical development of this country equitable justice has existed in theory and not in practice.
Securing convictions while sacrificing justice just shows that our system of government has historically been substantially more criminal than it has just. It's important to examine where judicial inequality steemed from in order to begin to erdadicate the flawed system we all are subject to today. To properly understand why judicial inequities exist today one has to delve into history.
Lets take the institution of slavery for instance. In 1619 when the intial slaves were brought over to America to Jamestown, Virginia they first served as indentured servants. All indentured servants, African and white, where subject to strong measure of equitable justice up until the 1640's. During this time the judicial system began to render unjust verdicts on the basis of race where indentures from African descent were receiving longer sentences than whites for similar or identical offenses.
When the Constituion was ratified in 1791 Article One, Section Two Paragraph Three regarded as African decendants as three-fiths of a human being who didn't have any rights that were recognized by law. Slaves were regarded as commodities that could be exchanged for labor and goods and services and not citizens.
After the Emancipation Proclamation slaves were rhetorically set free yet experienced a new form of bondage via Jim Crow laws that was cemented by the Plessy vs. Ferguson decision in 1896 which sanctioned "separte but equal" doctrines in the mainstream. Hate groups like the KKK and White Citizens Council formed to keep African Americans cemented to second-class status.
The latter historical analysis is vital because it sets the stage for the judicial inequities that exist today. More importantly it sets the stage for understanding why procecutors often sacrifice justice for securing convictions by any means necessary.
In objectively analyzing the historical development of this country's judicial system it must be concluded this country has been substantially more criminal that it has just. How slaves were regarded in the legal system is reminiscent to how African Americans, women, poor whites,
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