Prisoners Awarded Millions as Victims of Kamala Harris Frame-Ups While She Was Prosecutor
Not all of the men prosecuted by Harris have been so fortunate as to have their fair day in court. George Gage is a name that should haunt Kamala Harris.
In 1998 the mother of Gage’s alleged victim, his stepdaughter who said he had raped her, told mental health workers while Gage was being prosecuted, that the daughter was “a pathological liar [who] lives her lies.” Neither the defense nor the jury were ever allowed to see these words, which would have impeached the testimony of the daughter, as her story changed continually and was filled with inconsistencies. Harris’s prosecutors fought to suppress the mother’s words at trial....
Lara Bazelon, law professor and the former director of the Loyola Law School Project for the Innocent in Los Angeles, wrote for the New York Times in January 2019:
“In 2015, when the case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco, Ms. Harris’s prosecutors defended the conviction. They pointed out that Mr. Gage, while forced to act as his own lawyer, had not properly raised the legal issue in the lower court, as the law required.
The appellate judges acknowledged this impediment and sent the case to mediation, a clear signal for Ms. Harris to dismiss the case. When she refused to budge, the court upheld the conviction on that technicality. Mr. Gage is still in prison serving a 70-year sentence.”
In 2018, a civil jury in California found that police and prosecutors working under then-San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris had deliberately fabricated evidence and failed to disclose exculpatory material in the malicious prosecution of Jamal Trulove, for the shooting murder of his friend Seu Kuka.
Carla Bell at the Miami Herald writes:
“For years, AKA Harris has delivered a ruthless brand of “service.” Under Harris, the New York Times recounted, prosecutors “unlawfully held back potentially exculpatory evidence” in the case of George Gage, resulting in a 70-year sentence at San Quentin on charges of sexual abuse. Those charges were later proven false and dismissed by the trial judge, but upheld under appeal on technicality. Because Harris declined to withdraw prosecution, Gage, now 80 and partially blind, remains incarcerated, still, 20 years later.”
In February 2010 29-year-old Jamal Trulove was convicted of killing 28-year-old Seu Kuka based on the testimony of a lone witness
In March 2019, Mr. Trulove was awarded a $13.1 million settlement for his wrongful prosecution and conviction. San Francisco DA Kamala Harris showed up twice at his trial. Once at his conviction, and the second at his sentencing, during which Trulove says that he looked back and they “locked eyes,” and she began laughing at him as he was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison."
Below source: NPR
Caramad Conley
The Washington Examiner wrote in September 2019 in “Five times prosecutor Kamala Harris got the wrong guy”:
“In 1992, Caramad Conley was arrested for a drive-by gang shooting that killed two men in San Francisco. After the prosecution’s key witness testified that 18-year-old Conley had privately confessed to the murder, Conley was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Although the witness denied under oath that he had been compensated as part of the case, a subsequent investigation found that a detective had paid the witness. ... He later received a $3.5 million settlement from the city for wrongful conviction.
Prisoners Awarded Millions as Victims of Kamala Harris Frame-Ups While She Was Prosecutor
Not all of the men prosecuted by Harris have been so fortunate as to have their fair day in court. George Gage is a name that should haunt Kamala Harris.
In 1998 the mother of Gage’s alleged victim, his stepdaughter who said he had raped her, told mental health workers while Gage was being prosecuted, that the daughter was “a pathological liar [who] lives her lies.” Neither the defense nor the jury were ever allowed to see these words, which would have impeached the testimony of the daughter, as her story changed continually and was filled with inconsistencies. Harris’s prosecutors fought to suppress the mother’s words at trial....
Lara Bazelon, law professor and the former director of the Loyola Law School Project for the Innocent in Los Angeles, wrote for the New York Times in January 2019:
“In 2015, when the case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco, Ms. Harris’s prosecutors defended the conviction. They pointed out that Mr. Gage, while forced to act as his own lawyer, had not properly raised the legal issue in the lower court, as the law required.
The appellate judges acknowledged this impediment and sent the case to mediation, a clear signal for Ms. Harris to dismiss the case. When she refused to budge, the court upheld the conviction on that technicality. Mr. Gage is still in prison serving a 70-year sentence.”
In 2018, a civil jury in California found that police and prosecutors working under then-San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris had deliberately fabricated evidence and failed to disclose exculpatory material in the malicious prosecution of Jamal Trulove, for the shooting murder of his friend Seu Kuka.
Carla Bell at the Miami Herald writes:
“For years, AKA Harris has delivered a ruthless brand of “service.” Under Harris, the New York Times recounted, prosecutors “unlawfully held back potentially exculpatory evidence” in the case of George Gage, resulting in a 70-year sentence at San Quentin on charges of sexual abuse. Those charges were later proven false and dismissed by the trial judge, but upheld under appeal on technicality. Because Harris declined to withdraw prosecution, Gage, now 80 and partially blind, remains incarcerated, still, 20 years later.”
In February 2010 29-year-old Jamal Trulove was convicted of killing 28-year-old Seu Kuka based on the testimony of a lone witness
In March 2019, Mr. Trulove was awarded a $13.1 million settlement for his wrongful prosecution and conviction. San Francisco DA Kamala Harris showed up twice at his trial. Once at his conviction, and the second at his sentencing, during which Trulove says that he looked back and they “locked eyes,” and she began laughing at him as he was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison."
Below source: NPR
Caramad Conley
The Washington Examiner wrote in September 2019 in “Five times prosecutor Kamala Harris got the wrong guy”:
“In 1992, Caramad Conley was arrested for a drive-by gang shooting that killed two men in San Francisco. After the prosecution’s key witness testified that 18-year-old Conley had privately confessed to the murder, Conley was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Although the witness denied under oath that he had been compensated as part of the case, a subsequent investigation found that a detective had paid the witness. ... He later received a $3.5 million settlement from the city for wrongful conviction.
Scary that you had to post this.What you fail to understand is that Harris, as the prosecutor, does not investigate cases.
Mistakes are made by investigators and the police all the time, all over the country.Scary that you had to post this.
Prisoners Awarded Millions as Victims of Kamala Harris Frame-Ups While She Was Prosecutor
Not all of the men prosecuted by Harris have been so fortunate as to have their fair day in court. George Gage is a name that should haunt Kamala Harris.
In 1998 the mother of Gage’s alleged victim, his stepdaughter who said he had raped her, told mental health workers while Gage was being prosecuted, that the daughter was “a pathological liar [who] lives her lies.” Neither the defense nor the jury were ever allowed to see these words, which would have impeached the testimony of the daughter, as her story changed continually and was filled with inconsistencies. Harris’s prosecutors fought to suppress the mother’s words at trial....
Lara Bazelon, law professor and the former director of the Loyola Law School Project for the Innocent in Los Angeles, wrote for the New York Times in January 2019:
“In 2015, when the case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco, Ms. Harris’s prosecutors defended the conviction. They pointed out that Mr. Gage, while forced to act as his own lawyer, had not properly raised the legal issue in the lower court, as the law required.
The appellate judges acknowledged this impediment and sent the case to mediation, a clear signal for Ms. Harris to dismiss the case. When she refused to budge, the court upheld the conviction on that technicality. Mr. Gage is still in prison serving a 70-year sentence.”
In 2018, a civil jury in California found that police and prosecutors working under then-San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris had deliberately fabricated evidence and failed to disclose exculpatory material in the malicious prosecution of Jamal Trulove, for the shooting murder of his friend Seu Kuka.
Carla Bell at the Miami Herald writes:
“For years, AKA Harris has delivered a ruthless brand of “service.” Under Harris, the New York Times recounted, prosecutors “unlawfully held back potentially exculpatory evidence” in the case of George Gage, resulting in a 70-year sentence at San Quentin on charges of sexual abuse. Those charges were later proven false and dismissed by the trial judge, but upheld under appeal on technicality. Because Harris declined to withdraw prosecution, Gage, now 80 and partially blind, remains incarcerated, still, 20 years later.”
In February 2010 29-year-old Jamal Trulove was convicted of killing 28-year-old Seu Kuka based on the testimony of a lone witness
In March 2019, Mr. Trulove was awarded a $13.1 million settlement for his wrongful prosecution and conviction. San Francisco DA Kamala Harris showed up twice at his trial. Once at his conviction, and the second at his sentencing, during which Trulove says that he looked back and they “locked eyes,” and she began laughing at him as he was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison."
Below source: NPR
Caramad Conley
The Washington Examiner wrote in September 2019 in “Five times prosecutor Kamala Harris got the wrong guy”:
“In 1992, Caramad Conley was arrested for a drive-by gang shooting that killed two men in San Francisco. After the prosecution’s key witness testified that 18-year-old Conley had privately confessed to the murder, Conley was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Although the witness denied under oath that he had been compensated as part of the case, a subsequent investigation found that a detective had paid the witness. ... He later received a $3.5 million settlement from the city for wrongful conviction.
Prisoners Awarded Millions as Victims of Kamala Harris Frame-Ups While She Was Prosecutor
Not all of the men prosecuted by Harris have been so fortunate as to have their fair day in court. George Gage is a name that should haunt Kamala Harris.
In 1998 the mother of Gage’s alleged victim, his stepdaughter who said he had raped her, told mental health workers while Gage was being prosecuted, that the daughter was “a pathological liar [who] lives her lies.” Neither the defense nor the jury were ever allowed to see these words, which would have impeached the testimony of the daughter, as her story changed continually and was filled with inconsistencies. Harris’s prosecutors fought to suppress the mother’s words at trial....
Lara Bazelon, law professor and the former director of the Loyola Law School Project for the Innocent in Los Angeles, wrote for the New York Times in January 2019:
“In 2015, when the case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco, Ms. Harris’s prosecutors defended the conviction. They pointed out that Mr. Gage, while forced to act as his own lawyer, had not properly raised the legal issue in the lower court, as the law required.
The appellate judges acknowledged this impediment and sent the case to mediation, a clear signal for Ms. Harris to dismiss the case. When she refused to budge, the court upheld the conviction on that technicality. Mr. Gage is still in prison serving a 70-year sentence.”
In 2018, a civil jury in California found that police and prosecutors working under then-San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris had deliberately fabricated evidence and failed to disclose exculpatory material in the malicious prosecution of Jamal Trulove, for the shooting murder of his friend Seu Kuka.
Carla Bell at the Miami Herald writes:
“For years, AKA Harris has delivered a ruthless brand of “service.” Under Harris, the New York Times recounted, prosecutors “unlawfully held back potentially exculpatory evidence” in the case of George Gage, resulting in a 70-year sentence at San Quentin on charges of sexual abuse. Those charges were later proven false and dismissed by the trial judge, but upheld under appeal on technicality. Because Harris declined to withdraw prosecution, Gage, now 80 and partially blind, remains incarcerated, still, 20 years later.”
In February 2010 29-year-old Jamal Trulove was convicted of killing 28-year-old Seu Kuka based on the testimony of a lone witness
In March 2019, Mr. Trulove was awarded a $13.1 million settlement for his wrongful prosecution and conviction. San Francisco DA Kamala Harris showed up twice at his trial. Once at his conviction, and the second at his sentencing, during which Trulove says that he looked back and they “locked eyes,” and she began laughing at him as he was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison."
Below source: NPR
Caramad Conley
The Washington Examiner wrote in September 2019 in “Five times prosecutor Kamala Harris got the wrong guy”:
“In 1992, Caramad Conley was arrested for a drive-by gang shooting that killed two men in San Francisco. After the prosecution’s key witness testified that 18-year-old Conley had privately confessed to the murder, Conley was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Although the witness denied under oath that he had been compensated as part of the case, a subsequent investigation found that a detective had paid the witness. ... He later received a $3.5 million settlement from the city for wrongful conviction.
Prisoners Awarded Millions as Victims of Kamala Harris Frame-Ups While She Was Prosecutor
Not all of the men prosecuted by Harris have been so fortunate as to have their fair day in court. George Gage is a name that should haunt Kamala Harris.
In 1998 the mother of Gage’s alleged victim, his stepdaughter who said he had raped her, told mental health workers while Gage was being prosecuted, that the daughter was “a pathological liar [who] lives her lies.” Neither the defense nor the jury were ever allowed to see these words, which would have impeached the testimony of the daughter, as her story changed continually and was filled with inconsistencies. Harris’s prosecutors fought to suppress the mother’s words at trial....
Lara Bazelon, law professor and the former director of the Loyola Law School Project for the Innocent in Los Angeles, wrote for the New York Times in January 2019:
“In 2015, when the case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco, Ms. Harris’s prosecutors defended the conviction. They pointed out that Mr. Gage, while forced to act as his own lawyer, had not properly raised the legal issue in the lower court, as the law required.
The appellate judges acknowledged this impediment and sent the case to mediation, a clear signal for Ms. Harris to dismiss the case. When she refused to budge, the court upheld the conviction on that technicality. Mr. Gage is still in prison serving a 70-year sentence.”
In 2018, a civil jury in California found that police and prosecutors working under then-San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris had deliberately fabricated evidence and failed to disclose exculpatory material in the malicious prosecution of Jamal Trulove, for the shooting murder of his friend Seu Kuka.
Carla Bell at the Miami Herald writes:
“For years, AKA Harris has delivered a ruthless brand of “service.” Under Harris, the New York Times recounted, prosecutors “unlawfully held back potentially exculpatory evidence” in the case of George Gage, resulting in a 70-year sentence at San Quentin on charges of sexual abuse. Those charges were later proven false and dismissed by the trial judge, but upheld under appeal on technicality. Because Harris declined to withdraw prosecution, Gage, now 80 and partially blind, remains incarcerated, still, 20 years later.”
In February 2010 29-year-old Jamal Trulove was convicted of killing 28-year-old Seu Kuka based on the testimony of a lone witness
In March 2019, Mr. Trulove was awarded a $13.1 million settlement for his wrongful prosecution and conviction. San Francisco DA Kamala Harris showed up twice at his trial. Once at his conviction, and the second at his sentencing, during which Trulove says that he looked back and they “locked eyes,” and she began laughing at him as he was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison."
Below source: NPR
Caramad Conley
The Washington Examiner wrote in September 2019 in “Five times prosecutor Kamala Harris got the wrong guy”:
“In 1992, Caramad Conley was arrested for a drive-by gang shooting that killed two men in San Francisco. After the prosecution’s key witness testified that 18-year-old Conley had privately confessed to the murder, Conley was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Although the witness denied under oath that he had been compensated as part of the case, a subsequent investigation found that a detective had paid the witness. ... He later received a $3.5 million settlement from the city for wrongful conviction.
Prisoners Awarded Millions as Victims of Kamala Harris Frame-Ups While She Was Prosecutor
Not all of the men prosecuted by Harris have been so fortunate as to have their fair day in court. George Gage is a name that should haunt Kamala Harris.
In 1998 the mother of Gage’s alleged victim, his stepdaughter who said he had raped her, told mental health workers while Gage was being prosecuted, that the daughter was “a pathological liar [who] lives her lies.” Neither the defense nor the jury were ever allowed to see these words, which would have impeached the testimony of the daughter, as her story changed continually and was filled with inconsistencies. Harris’s prosecutors fought to suppress the mother’s words at trial....
Lara Bazelon, law professor and the former director of the Loyola Law School Project for the Innocent in Los Angeles, wrote for the New York Times in January 2019:
“In 2015, when the case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco, Ms. Harris’s prosecutors defended the conviction. They pointed out that Mr. Gage, while forced to act as his own lawyer, had not properly raised the legal issue in the lower court, as the law required.
The appellate judges acknowledged this impediment and sent the case to mediation, a clear signal for Ms. Harris to dismiss the case. When she refused to budge, the court upheld the conviction on that technicality. Mr. Gage is still in prison serving a 70-year sentence.”
In 2018, a civil jury in California found that police and prosecutors working under then-San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris had deliberately fabricated evidence and failed to disclose exculpatory material in the malicious prosecution of Jamal Trulove, for the shooting murder of his friend Seu Kuka.
Carla Bell at the Miami Herald writes:
“For years, AKA Harris has delivered a ruthless brand of “service.” Under Harris, the New York Times recounted, prosecutors “unlawfully held back potentially exculpatory evidence” in the case of George Gage, resulting in a 70-year sentence at San Quentin on charges of sexual abuse. Those charges were later proven false and dismissed by the trial judge, but upheld under appeal on technicality. Because Harris declined to withdraw prosecution, Gage, now 80 and partially blind, remains incarcerated, still, 20 years later.”
In February 2010 29-year-old Jamal Trulove was convicted of killing 28-year-old Seu Kuka based on the testimony of a lone witness
In March 2019, Mr. Trulove was awarded a $13.1 million settlement for his wrongful prosecution and conviction. San Francisco DA Kamala Harris showed up twice at his trial. Once at his conviction, and the second at his sentencing, during which Trulove says that he looked back and they “locked eyes,” and she began laughing at him as he was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison."
Below source: NPR
Caramad Conley
The Washington Examiner wrote in September 2019 in “Five times prosecutor Kamala Harris got the wrong guy”:
“In 1992, Caramad Conley was arrested for a drive-by gang shooting that killed two men in San Francisco. After the prosecution’s key witness testified that 18-year-old Conley had privately confessed to the murder, Conley was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Although the witness denied under oath that he had been compensated as part of the case, a subsequent investigation found that a detective had paid the witness. ... He later received a $3.5 million settlement from the city for wrongful conviction.
Is today an odd numbered day or an even numbered day? That question has to be answered before yours can.“Vice President Harris vigorously prosecuted cases of sexual assault and murder while in her former professions”
Doesn’t seem to match up so much with she’s really someone completely in favor of open borders that has and wants to let rapists, drug dealers and murderers into the US because she’s some sort of communist or something?
Which one is it?
Is today an odd numbered day or an even numbered day? That question has to be answered before yours can.
Prisoners Awarded Millions as Victims of Kamala Harris Frame-Ups While She Was Prosecutor
Not all of the men prosecuted by Harris have been so fortunate as to have their fair day in court. George Gage is a name that should haunt Kamala Harris.
In 1998 the mother of Gage’s alleged victim, his stepdaughter who said he had raped her, told mental health workers while Gage was being prosecuted, that the daughter was “a pathological liar [who] lives her lies.” Neither the defense nor the jury were ever allowed to see these words, which would have impeached the testimony of the daughter, as her story changed continually and was filled with inconsistencies. Harris’s prosecutors fought to suppress the mother’s words at trial....
Lara Bazelon, law professor and the former director of the Loyola Law School Project for the Innocent in Los Angeles, wrote for the New York Times in January 2019:
“In 2015, when the case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco, Ms. Harris’s prosecutors defended the conviction. They pointed out that Mr. Gage, while forced to act as his own lawyer, had not properly raised the legal issue in the lower court, as the law required.
The appellate judges acknowledged this impediment and sent the case to mediation, a clear signal for Ms. Harris to dismiss the case. When she refused to budge, the court upheld the conviction on that technicality. Mr. Gage is still in prison serving a 70-year sentence.”
In 2018, a civil jury in California found that police and prosecutors working under then-San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris had deliberately fabricated evidence and failed to disclose exculpatory material in the malicious prosecution of Jamal Trulove, for the shooting murder of his friend Seu Kuka.
Carla Bell at the Miami Herald writes:
“For years, AKA Harris has delivered a ruthless brand of “service.” Under Harris, the New York Times recounted, prosecutors “unlawfully held back potentially exculpatory evidence” in the case of George Gage, resulting in a 70-year sentence at San Quentin on charges of sexual abuse. Those charges were later proven false and dismissed by the trial judge, but upheld under appeal on technicality. Because Harris declined to withdraw prosecution, Gage, now 80 and partially blind, remains incarcerated, still, 20 years later.”
In February 2010 29-year-old Jamal Trulove was convicted of killing 28-year-old Seu Kuka based on the testimony of a lone witness
In March 2019, Mr. Trulove was awarded a $13.1 million settlement for his wrongful prosecution and conviction. San Francisco DA Kamala Harris showed up twice at his trial. Once at his conviction, and the second at his sentencing, during which Trulove says that he looked back and they “locked eyes,” and she began laughing at him as he was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison."
Below source: NPR
Caramad Conley
The Washington Examiner wrote in September 2019 in “Five times prosecutor Kamala Harris got the wrong guy”:
“In 1992, Caramad Conley was arrested for a drive-by gang shooting that killed two men in San Francisco. After the prosecution’s key witness testified that 18-year-old Conley had privately confessed to the murder, Conley was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Although the witness denied under oath that he had been compensated as part of the case, a subsequent investigation found that a detective had paid the witness. ... He later received a $3.5 million settlement from the city for wrongful conviction.
What you fail to understand is that Harris, as the prosecutor, does not investigate cases. She goes by the evidence presented and gathered by police.
Each example above shows the errors were made by the police and investigators.
It’s whatever fits their narrative at the time.“Vice President Harris vigorously prosecuted cases of sexual assault and murder while in her former professions”
Doesn’t seem to match up so much with she’s really someone completely in favor of open borders that has and wants to let rapists, drug dealers and murderers into the US because she’s some sort of communist or something?
Which one is it?
What do you mean meaningless? The police apparently framed this guy and somehow or other it became the doing of Harris and so she is guilty for....reasons.Lol
Thanks for the meaningless thread.
In the one case I read the conviction was upheld so evidently no suppression of evidence was found.Suppression of evidence is not an error. it is active criminal behavior. I have never seen more disgusing apologetics for knowingly putting innocent Black men in jail.
Prisoners Awarded Millions as Victims of Kamala Harris Frame-Ups While She Was Prosecutor
Not all of the men prosecuted by Harris have been so fortunate as to have their fair day in court. George Gage is a name that should haunt Kamala Harris.
In 1998 the mother of Gage’s alleged victim, his stepdaughter who said he had raped her, told mental health workers while Gage was being prosecuted, that the daughter was “a pathological liar [who] lives her lies.” Neither the defense nor the jury were ever allowed to see these words, which would have impeached the testimony of the daughter, as her story changed continually and was filled with inconsistencies. Harris’s prosecutors fought to suppress the mother’s words at trial....
Lara Bazelon, law professor and the former director of the Loyola Law School Project for the Innocent in Los Angeles, wrote for the New York Times in January 2019:
“In 2015, when the case reached the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in San Francisco, Ms. Harris’s prosecutors defended the conviction. They pointed out that Mr. Gage, while forced to act as his own lawyer, had not properly raised the legal issue in the lower court, as the law required.
The appellate judges acknowledged this impediment and sent the case to mediation, a clear signal for Ms. Harris to dismiss the case. When she refused to budge, the court upheld the conviction on that technicality. Mr. Gage is still in prison serving a 70-year sentence.”
In 2018, a civil jury in California found that police and prosecutors working under then-San Francisco District Attorney Kamala Harris had deliberately fabricated evidence and failed to disclose exculpatory material in the malicious prosecution of Jamal Trulove, for the shooting murder of his friend Seu Kuka.
Carla Bell at the Miami Herald writes:
“For years, AKA Harris has delivered a ruthless brand of “service.” Under Harris, the New York Times recounted, prosecutors “unlawfully held back potentially exculpatory evidence” in the case of George Gage, resulting in a 70-year sentence at San Quentin on charges of sexual abuse. Those charges were later proven false and dismissed by the trial judge, but upheld under appeal on technicality. Because Harris declined to withdraw prosecution, Gage, now 80 and partially blind, remains incarcerated, still, 20 years later.”
In February 2010 29-year-old Jamal Trulove was convicted of killing 28-year-old Seu Kuka based on the testimony of a lone witness
In March 2019, Mr. Trulove was awarded a $13.1 million settlement for his wrongful prosecution and conviction. San Francisco DA Kamala Harris showed up twice at his trial. Once at his conviction, and the second at his sentencing, during which Trulove says that he looked back and they “locked eyes,” and she began laughing at him as he was sentenced to 50 years to life in prison."
Below source: NPR
Caramad Conley
The Washington Examiner wrote in September 2019 in “Five times prosecutor Kamala Harris got the wrong guy”:
“In 1992, Caramad Conley was arrested for a drive-by gang shooting that killed two men in San Francisco. After the prosecution’s key witness testified that 18-year-old Conley had privately confessed to the murder, Conley was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole. Although the witness denied under oath that he had been compensated as part of the case, a subsequent investigation found that a detective had paid the witness. ... He later received a $3.5 million settlement from the city for wrongful conviction.
In the one case I read the conviction was upheld so evidently no suppression of evidence was found.
A prosecutor relies on the evidence collected by investigators and when new evidence comes up cases are reviewed.
George Gage conviction was upheld by the US Court of AppealsWhich case are you talking about?
And your evidence that Ms Harris was actually involved in that suppression of evidence is - what?Suppression of evidence is not an error. it is active criminal behavior. I have never seen more disgusing apologetics for knowingly putting innocent Black men in jail.
The voice of yet another person who believes that no woman ever actually achieves anything on their own and that the only way that they advance in society is by sleeping their way to the top is heard from.Yeah, but Willie Brown endorses Kamala. She was a good lay, and deserves everything she can get. Mrs. Willie Brown couldn't be contacted for comment.
The fact that a conviction is upheld is NOT actual evidence that the convicted person actually committed the crime.In the one case I read the conviction was upheld so evidently no suppression of evidence was found.
A prosecutor relies on the evidence collected by investigators and when new evidence comes up cases are reviewed.
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