I’m not entirely sure why I’m still reading this thread other than the wife is all into watching Hell’s Kitchen tonight and to me it’s only slightly more tolerable than fingernails on a chalkboard.
So, real question on a real scenario that happened to me about 25 years ago. I was working as an investigator for an insurance company. The company had paid one of our insureds for several long guns that were stolen. The sheriff dept recovered the guns and charged some guy with the larceny. He pled not guilty and went to trial. There were some other charges tied into it and by the time it was fully adjudicated a couple of years had passed. The company had paid the insured for the guns before they were recovered so basically the insurance company owned the recovered guns at that point. (We could argue about that if someone wants to, but that’s how it works, at least here.) Anyway, so a bit shy of two and a half years since they were stolen and about two years since they were recovered and checked into the sheriff dept evidence room, I have to pick up about a dozen long guns from the sheriff dept. I show up and meet a detective who I knew, respected, and was also a friend. Much of the time, guns coming back from LE on recovery have zip ties through the action but not always, and these didn’t. Since there were a bunch of them he rolled them out on a cart, we signed our respective chain of custody forms, and he asked if I wanted him to cart the guns out to my car so I wouldn’t have to make a bunch of trips. I said sure as I picked up a AR, dropped the clip out, opened the bolt, and checked the chamber. He flew hot asking me what the hell I thought I was doing. Told him I didn’t mean to insult anyone but if I’m taking the guns, I’m clearing them; just habit . He told me I better cut it out and started in on how they’re professionals and they’re cleared when checked into the evidence room and what I was doing was insulting and… Not sure what else he planned to say because while he was laying in to me I had put the AR down, picked up some sort of lightweight bolt action hunting rifle in 300 Win Mag, slammed the bolt open, and a live round flew across the room. That shut him up temporarily. As I picked up the next gun to clear, I told him again no offense to anyone, that’s exactly why I have that habit. He didn’t respond so I looked at him and it looked like he was about to pass out. He told me to stop as I was clearing the third gun, but this time it was a polite request, so I stopped. He said that gun had been in evidence that whole time, taken into a court room, exhibited in court as evidence, handled by attorneys in court, checked back into the evidence room, and if it had a live round in the chamber it must have been there the whole time they had it: through all that handling and checking in, out, and back in. Past that first evidence clerk that checked it in and was supposed to clear it, no one that handled it had checked it again. Together, we finished clearing all of them. The rest were clear. We rolled them out to my car and all was well. No harm, no foul.
But… what if I had taken possession of that rifle and trusted the multiple trained experts who had handled that gun several times, assured me all those guns were clear, treated it like it was safe, and had an accidental discharge that killed someone? Should I be charged with involuntary manslaughter?
How about the ADA that was handling that loaded rifle in court after the evidence clerk assured him it was properly processed on intake and cleared. If they had an accidental discharge and killed a couple of people in the courtroom, should they be charged with anything?
Or do the ADA and I both skate by laying all the blame on the evidence clerk that screwed up multiple times as that gun went in and out of his evidence room?
I have a pretty good suspicion I would have lost my career and pulled some time for involuntary manslaughter. And if it happened to the ADA they would have gotten a transfer to some backwater county in the mountains or swamplands but no charges (prosecutorial discretion and whatnot) albeit after monetary settlements with the heirs.
And I think that’s what gnaws at some people a bit (or a lot) about this type situation. Does a celebrity, or local politician who’s “connected”, or someone rich enough to hire the OJ Dream Team Part 2: do they get the same treatment as some average guy like me?
Do they (or I) get the same treatment as someone who sits in jail for a year awaiting trial because they can’t afford $2000 bail and their public defender hardly ever talks to them?
If Baldwin has a fair trial and the outcome is in keeping with the actual evidence applied to the laws of the jurisdiction in which the incident occurred, I personally don’t care if that means he goes to jail or is acquitted or what. He has the money to defend himself as well as anyone, and he’d be a fool not to do so. If he’s exonerated based on the evidence objectively applied to the law, fine. If he’s acquitted or gets preferential treatment BECAUSE he’s Alec Baldwin, that’s not fine.