The problem with her conflict of interest is that she and her husband both will profit from what she did by telling the police to target that specific location. You might call it an abuse of power even though it might be the right thing to do.
I have no problem with LE concentrating their efforts where the most crime is, so no, I don't call the initiative an abuse of power. But....
But when you issue such orders, and then go after those who were following them, that is where the conflict comes in.
Come on 645, you know better than that. They weren't following those orders when they refused medical attention to Gray for more than 45 minutes while they went on a joy ride around town when the arrest was made only five blocks from the cop-shop where they (finally) called in medics to transport to a trauma unit after their joy ride was over. Mosby surely didn't tell them to do that, so where's the conflict of interest on her part? Because the most serious charges flow from their refusal(s) to get him help, which is 100% on them and not on Mosby in any way, shape, manner or form.
I was thinking at the beginning of this thing that the initial injury(s?) to Gray's spine could be legitimately excused as an accident during a take-down when they caught up to him. Instead, the only excuse coming out of the cop-shop is that he did it to himself during that 45 minute joy ride. Even if that were true (as if), he would've had much less time to do it in if they'd gone the two or three-minute drive to the cop-shop and processed him into the jail. Again, Mosby had/has nothing to do with that, and neither does the initiative she ordered.
And yes, if the defendant's lawyers are smart, they will call her as a witness. Which means she cannot sit in the court room.
Like I said before, whether witness or not, she will likely have no part in prosecuting the case
in court. And considering that the crimes the officers are charged with have nothing at all to do with the lawful implementation of a lawful crime-prevention initiative, I find it hard to consider their defense attorneys "smart" for trying to change the subject from their alleged crimes to a conflict of interest case against Mosby in front of a judge. A case that could only be sustained if she actually
did order them to
unlawfully abuse prisoners and then deny them medical care. That didn't happen, and I'm dubious of the notion that a judge would take kindly to the defense thinking he's stupid enough to believe it happened, so I don't think such a tack would be smart at all.
Again, where's the conflict of interest? She told them to go fight crime, not
commit crimes!
Other politicians profiting, that is why our local mayor got canned and found guilty. Link Removed
After less than three hours of deliberation Monday, jurors found that ex-Homestead Mayor Steven Bateman broke the law when he took a secret job as a consultant for a health-care company that needed government approval in building a clinic in the city’s downtown.
What secret jobs or pay-offs is Mosby accused of taking? I mean, good for those jurors in Homestead, they had the courage to hold a public official accountable for
real crimes, but the way I see it, as much as I detest everything else about Mosby's politics, she is showing the same kind of courage by actually securing indictments against the Baltimore Six.
It's quite possible that there were uber-liberal, Democrat black jurors on your mayor's jury who benefited from affirmative action to get a law or some other kind of degree that affords them a good living, and maybe power and authority over others, at the expense of someone more qualified with better grades and all that stuff that people rightfully get frustrated over in this society. Are you second-guessing their decision in your mayor's guilty verdict? If not, then why second-guess Mosby's decision to do what very few prosecutors in this country
ever do in their entire careers -- prosecute cops who prima facie evidence shows (at the very least) committed the crime of denying a prisoner who badly needed it, medical care?
In any case, I see no relationship between the "conflict of interest" you're trying to manufacture concerning Mosby, and a case already proved to the satisfaction of 12 jurors. The former mayor is much more analogous to the Baltimore Six than to Mosby, because all of the former are either convicted or accused
criminals, and Mosby ain't never gonna catch a charge from anything she's said or done in the Freddie Gray
murder case.
Blues