Started By
Message
locked post

Prosecutors Are Reading Emails From Inmates To Lawyers

Posted on 7/23/14 at 9:48 pm
Posted by Sentrius
Fort Rozz
Member since Jun 2011
64757 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 9:48 pm
quote:

The extortion case against Thomas DiFiore, a reputed boss in the Bonanno crime family, encompassed thousands of pages of evidence, including surveillance photographs, cellphone and property records, and hundreds of hours of audio recordings.

But even as Mr. DiFiore sat in a jail cell, sending nearly daily emails to his lawyers on his case and his deteriorating health, federal prosecutors in Brooklyn sought to add another layer of evidence: those very emails. The prosecutors informed Mr. DiFiore last month that they would be reading the emails sent to his lawyers from jail, potentially using his own words against him.

Jailhouse conversations have been many a defendant’s downfall through incriminating words spoken to inmates or visitors, or in phone calls to friends or relatives. Inmates’ calls to or from lawyers, however, are generally exempt from such monitoring. But across the country, federal prosecutors have begun reading prisoners’ emails to lawyers — a practice wholly embraced in Brooklyn, where prosecutors have said they intend to read such emails in almost every case.

The issue has spurred court battles over whether inmates have a right to confidential email communications with their lawyers — a question on which federal judges have been divided.


quote:

“It’s very troubling that the government’s pushing to the margins of the attorney-client relationship,” said Ellen C. Yaroshefsky, a professor at the Cardozo School of Law.

Defense lawyers say the government is overstepping its authority and taking away a necessary tool for an adequate defense. Some of them have refused to admit even the existence of sensitive emails — which, they say, perhaps predictably, are privileged.


quote:

All defendants using the federal prison email system, Trulincs, have to read and accept a notice that communications are monitored, prosecutors in Brooklyn pointed out. Prosecutors once had a “filter team” to set aside defendants’ emails to and from lawyers, but budget cuts no longer allow for that, they said


LINK
Posted by Iowa Golfer
Heaven
Member since Dec 2013
10229 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 9:50 pm to
This is disturbing.
Posted by baybeefeetz
Member since Sep 2009
31634 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 9:53 pm to
I am guessing failure to read some "fine print" is at play here.
Posted by idlewatcher
County Jail
Member since Jan 2012
79032 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 9:55 pm to
Why is a criminal able to send emails from his jail cell? Is that something new?
Posted by FightinTigersDammit
Louisiana North
Member since Mar 2006
34639 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 9:55 pm to
Apparently federal prosecutors are big fans of the NSA.
Posted by Jcorye1
Tom Brady = GoAT
Member since Dec 2007
71369 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 9:56 pm to
Prosecutors don't care about justice, they care about winning cases.
Posted by TbirdSpur2010
ALAMO CITY
Member since Dec 2010
134026 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 9:56 pm to
That does not seem to be even remotely within the realm of fair play
Posted by Wolfhound45
Hanging with Chicken in Lurkistan
Member since Nov 2009
120000 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 10:02 pm to
quote:

This is disturbing.


Agreed.
Posted by Sentrius
Fort Rozz
Member since Jun 2011
64757 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 10:04 pm to
quote:

Why is a criminal able to send emails from his jail cell? Is that something new?


No idea if it's new but the feds do it with their inmates. No idea if the states do it.

From the article...

quote:

All defendants using the federal prison email system, Trulincs, have to read and accept a notice that communications are monitored, prosecutors in Brooklyn pointed out. Prosecutors once had a “filter team” to set aside defendants’ emails to and from lawyers, but budget cuts no longer allow for that, they said
Posted by CountryVolFan
Knoxville, TN
Member since Dec 2008
2969 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 10:08 pm to
quote:

The issue has spurred court battles over whether inmates have a right to confidential email communications with their lawyers — a question on which federal judges have been divided


It's amazing to me that a judiciary could be divided.

Let's check the precedent. Letters are confidential, phone calls are confidential, in person visits are confidential.

Logical conclusion --> E-mails are fair game

What kind of mental gymnastics do you have to do to make that conclusion.
Posted by CountryVolFan
Knoxville, TN
Member since Dec 2008
2969 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 10:10 pm to
BTW... This will not stop until an honest DA prosecutors the ADAs doing this.

At the very least they need a Bar Association sanction.
Posted by TerryDawg03
The Deep South
Member since Dec 2012
15690 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 10:45 pm to
quote:

All defendants using the federal prison email system, Trulincs, have to read and accept a notice that communications are monitored, prosecutors in Brooklyn pointed out. Prosecutors once had a “filter team” to set aside defendants’ emails to and from lawyers, but budget cuts no longer allow for that, they said



Seems like a dick move, but in all fairness, if they knew what they were agreeing to, they should have known better than to incriminate themselves.
Posted by CountryVolFan
Knoxville, TN
Member since Dec 2008
2969 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 10:47 pm to
quote:

Seems like a dick move, but in all fairness, if they knew what they were agreeing to, they should have known better than to incriminate themselves.


When they make phone calls they get a similar warning, but attorney phone calls are protected and can't be used.
Posted by Wolfhound45
Hanging with Chicken in Lurkistan
Member since Nov 2009
120000 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 10:48 pm to
quote:

All defendants using the federal prison email system, Trulincs...


Friend of mine was in a federal prison and not only does he have to register but those he is communicating also have to register. They own the system. Hence, the idea is if we own it, then everything on it belongs to us.

Problem with that thought is, they own the postal service as well. Cannot read my mail though.

Do not like this. At all.
Posted by Draconian Sanctions
Markey's bar
Member since Oct 2008
84839 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 10:58 pm to
this was happening in Austin too

there prosecutors (via the cops) were also listening in on conversations inmates had with their attorney
This post was edited on 7/23/14 at 10:59 pm
Posted by Iosh
Bureau of Interstellar Immigration
Member since Dec 2012
18941 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 11:04 pm to
quote:

What kind of mental gymnastics do you have to do to make that conclusion.
"They're criminals, frick them."

This is the default posture of pretty much every prosecutor, every worker in the correctional system, and most judges in places where judges are elected. That goes equally for inmates who are being tried on first impression, convicted and appealing, or convicted for good. Once you put that jumpsuit on the psychology is always against you.
This post was edited on 7/23/14 at 11:06 pm
Posted by Meauxjeaux
98836 posts including my alters
Member since Jun 2005
39907 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 11:13 pm to
quote:

Prosecutors once had a “filter team” to set aside defendants’ emails to and from lawyers, but budget cuts no longer allow for that, they said


Speaking just from an IT perspective, this is bs.

A few clicks of configuration and, voila, filtered!
Posted by Sentrius
Fort Rozz
Member since Jun 2011
64757 posts
Posted on 7/23/14 at 11:45 pm to
quote:

this was happening in Austin too


Past tense I presume?

How'd they fix that?
Posted by Negative Nomad
Hell
Member since Oct 2011
3173 posts
Posted on 7/24/14 at 8:39 am to

This post was edited on 3/26/15 at 1:24 am
Posted by genuineLSUtiger
Nashville
Member since Sep 2005
72929 posts
Posted on 7/24/14 at 8:40 am to
They should make a new statue of Lady Justice to place outside US courtrooms. She should have a pistol and have it placed executioner style next to the head of a kneeling prisoner.
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 2Next pagelast page

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram