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defense strategy typically emerges as a defense
lawyer finds out about the prosecution's evidence
and the defendant's version of events. The process
of developing a defense strategy is usually fluid,
and it varies from one case to another. For example,
the attorney's tentative theory of defense will
influence the topics the attorney asks about. The
defendant's answers to those questions may in turn
affect the attorney's defense strategy.
This does not mean that defendants and their attorneys
collaborate to make up false stories. For a number of reasons,
defendants usually benefit from telling their attorneys the
truth as the defendants perceive it. However, multiple versions
of truth can coexist in the defense of criminal charges. For
instance, assume that a woman is charged with murdering her
boyfriend. The "truth" may consist of the woman's
acting in self-defense, or it may consist of the boyfriend's
physical and verbal abuse of the woman in the months preceding
the killing, or it may consist of both. A defense strategy is a
product of a defendant and defense attorney fitting together the
version of the truth that is most likely to produce a
satisfactory defense outcome--a verdict of not guilty, a verdict
of guilt of a lesser charge, or an acceptable plea bargain.
Truth is a Many-Splendid Thing
The fact that a story may be told in a variety of ways does not
prevent each version from being accurate. By way of analogy,
consider two maps of the United States, one in which the states
are depicted according to geographical boundaries, the other in
which the states are depicted according to density of
population. The maps will look different, yet both will be
accurate. It's up to an attorney and a defendant to develop
together the most legally helpful, accurate version of events
relevant to the case. The result should have such
characteristics as:
- consistency with objectively verifiable evidence (for
example, if the police found the defendant's fingerprints at
the scene of a crime, the defendant's version should account
for the presence of the fingerprints)
- the potential to gain the sympathy of a judge or jury (for
example, the defendant's version may demonstrate that the he
or she tried to withdraw from the criminal activity in
question and prevent it from happening)
- explaining why events took place as the defendant claims
(for example, if the defendant claims to have been out of
town on the date of the crime, the defendant's version
explains why).
As may be apparent, the account of events a defendant might
tell spontaneously could omit these and other elements that are
both accurate and helpful. This is why defendants and their
attorneys have to work together to develop a version of events
that will best benefit the defense.
Admissions and Denials of Guilt
While no two defendants will ever come up with a factually
identical version of events, a defendant's account almost always
falls into one of three broad categories.
- "Confession" story. Defendants who tell
their lawyers confession stories admit that they did what
the prosecution claims: "Yes, I did break into the
house through a window and steal the computer."
- "Complete denial" story. Defendants who
tell their lawyers complete denial stories assert that the
prosecution's claims are totally false. An "alibi"
is a familiar type of complete denial story: "I was out
of town with a friend when the burglary they say I committed
took place. I have no idea what they're talking about."
- "Admit and explain" story. This story
falls between the "confession" and "complete
denial" stories. Defendants who tell "admit and
explain" stories agree that part of the prosecution's
claims are accurate, but assert legally critical
differences: "I did go into the house and take the
computer, but I went in through the front door with a key
after the person who lived there gave me permission to
borrow the computer."
Creating the Defense Strategy
The ultimate defense strategy grows out of, but is not the same
as, a defendant's version of events, regardless of which of the
three broad categories above it falls into. When formulating a
defense strategy, an attorney also considers such factors as the
reliability of defense and prosecution witnesses, community
attitudes toward crime and the police, and a defendant's
"moral culpability." A defense attorney uses such
factors to develop a "theory of the case" that is
consistent with provable facts and explains events in a way that
favors the defense.
For example, assume that a defendant is charged with
burglary. The prosecution's evidence consists of the defendant's
confession to the police shortly after the defendant's arrest,
and an eyewitness who "is pretty sure that the defendant
was among the burglars." The defendant has told his
attorney that a couple of the defendant's friends planned and
carried out the burglary; he had never been in trouble but
stupidly went along with them so as to look good in their eyes;
and that the police didn't tell him that he had a right to
remain silent or have an attorney present during questioning.
This is in essence a "confession" story.
Nevertheless, the defendant and the defense attorney may adopt a
defense theory that "overzealous police officers tried to
paper-over weak eyewitness identification evidence by improperly
extracting a confession from a naive suspect." This theory
is consistent with the defendant's version of events, and it
describes events in a way that favors the defense.
Pursuing this strategy, the defense attorney might file a
pretrial motion seeking to bar the prosecution from offering the
confession into evidence because the police failed to comply
with Miranda procedures. In addition, the defense attorney might
develop arguments that the eyewitness identification evidence is
too weak to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The goal of
this strategy may be either to achieve a not guilty verdict at
trial, or to weaken the prosecutor's case enough to persuade the
prosecutor to agree to the defense's desired plea bargain. Even
if the defendant is convicted, the defense attorney may rely on
the defendant's lack of a prior criminal record, and the fact
that he was a dupe who passively participated in a crime
orchestrated by others, to argue for minimum punishment.
Coaching the Defendant
Defense lawyers have a duty to help defendants formulate the
strongest defense story possible. To that end, lawyers can and
do coach defendants in a variety of ways. For instance,
attorneys can:
- use interviewing techniques that stimulate memory, such as
asking defendants to relate events chronologically
- conduct interviews at the scene of important events, and
- ask defendants to write down in their own words their
versions of important events.
In addition, attorneys can coach defendants by fully
explaining the charges against them, and by imparting as much as
is known of the prosecution's story, before starting to question
them about a version of events. Defendants need such information
if they are to tell an accurate version that does not leave out
information potentially helpful to the defense.
For example, assume that Rhoda is charged with the crime of
"receiving stolen goods." Before seeking to elicit
Rhoda's version, Rhoda's lawyer ethically may tell her something
along these lines:
"Rhoda, you're charged with receiving stolen property.
What that means in plain English is that you personally are not
charged with stealing anything; the claim is that you obtained
property even though you knew for a fact that someone else had
stolen it. Now, I'd like to find out from you as much as you can
tell me about what happened. But first let me tell you that the
police report and a brief talk I had with the D.A. indicate that
they claim you are a middleperson in a ring that deals in stolen
watches. A couple of guys named Bernie and Chuck supposedly
steal watches from warehouses, drop some of the cartons off in
your garage, and you later distribute them to jewelry stores
around town. They've got the names of some of the stores you
supposedly deal with. Unless you have any questions, why don't
you tell me what you know about all this?"
Once Rhoda has this information, she will be in a good
position to help her attorney by making sure she gives him
whatever details she has that will shed a more favorable light
on the facts being alleged by the prosecution.
| How
It's Possible to Be Guilty and Still Come Out
Ahead |
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Another reason to
tell attorneys the truth is that the truth may
reveal the defendant to be guilty, but only of
a less-serious offense. For example, a
defendant's truthful story may reveal that a
defendant charged with assault with a deadly
weapon is at most guilty of simple assault, a
much less-serious crime. If the defendant lies
and insists on complete innocence, the defense
attorney may be unable to arrive at a
realistic plea bargain. And if the case goes
to trial, the defense attorney may not be able
to ask the jury to convict on the lesser
offense rather than the greater offense,
because the defendant did not disclose any
facts suggesting such a result.
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