50th Anniversary of Brady v. Maryland

Today is the 50th Anniversary of Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), the case with so much promise, yet so willfully ignored by police and prosecutors nationwide, and courts often let them get away with it.

NACDL Press Release:

Dear Fellow NACDL Members,

Fifty years ago today, the United States Supreme Court held in Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963), that the government must disclose to the defense all information favorable to the accused. This obligation — which applies to both the determination of guilt and the imposition of sentence — is too often ignored. The list of victims of the government’s failure to comply with this constitutional requirement continues to grow. Summaries of stories like those of former U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens, Lindsey Manufacturing, Edgar Rivas, and Anthony Washington are available in NACDL’s “Human Cost of Brady Violations” paper.

The systemic violation of Brady must stop. Towards this end, NACDL seeks codification of the government’s obligation to provide to the defense all information favorable to the accused. On March 15, 2012, with NACDL support, leading U.S. Senators introduced bipartisan legislation to achieve needed discovery reform in criminal proceedings – The Fairness in Disclosure Act of 2012. This Act was introduced on the heels of Special Counsel Schuelke’s Report to Judge Emmet Sullivan on Prosecutorial Misconduct in the late Sen. Ted Stevens case. And the NACDL Task Force on Discovery Reform is developing model state disclosure legislation to aid legislators in 50 states to ensure due process for those accused of crime.

The May edition of The Champion will celebrate the 50th anniversary of Brady. It will focus on the critical subjects of Brady and discovery in criminal proceedings. More information about NACDL’s work in the area of discovery reform is available at www.nacdl.org/discoveryreform. Enforcing the constitutional obligation to disclose favorable information to our clients is central to NACDL’s mission.

I hope I will see you this week at NACDL’s spring meeting and seminar in New York City, next month in Lake Tahoe, Nevada, on June 6 & 7 for NACDL’s Third Annual White Collar Conference, and in San Francisco for NACDL’s annual meeting and seminar from July 24th to 27th. I promise that each of these meetings will be special in its own way. This week in New York, for example, the NACDL Board of Directors will debate the issue I raised last fall in a President’s Column: What is the role of the truth in the criminal defense function?

My term as your president is almost complete, yet there are so many of you I have yet to meet and thank for your service to criminal justice. Please attend a meeting of your choice. Let me acknowledge your work. Let NACDL assist you in what you do. That is why we are here.

Yours,

Steven D. Benjamin
NACDL President

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