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OPINION

When Prosecutors Become Politicians

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
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AP Photo/Julio Cortez, File

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan recently criticized Baltimore State's Attorney Marilyn Mosby for her egregious mishandling of cases and her allowing of criminals to return to the streets, unsupervised and unpunished, with the potential to add more victims to Baltimore's growing list of victims of preventable criminal activity. What is occurring in Baltimore is unilateral justice, and it is wrong for a variety of reasons.

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Prosecutors are effectively taking the law into their own hands in cases such as these, superseding the whims of the legislature that wrote the laws to protect citizens, preventing the courts from delving into the evidence, discovering facts and doing justice, denying the public the right to know the specific types of crime that occur in their city, as well as the names and faces of those who commit those crimes, and denying the public the right to be aware of the specific types of crime that occur in their city and places and activities to avoid. This isn't justice; it is politics infiltrating what is meant to be an apolitical part of our system of government.

The office of Mosby has declared that nine distinct sorts of offenses would not be prosecuted. Prostitution, drug possession and urinating and defecating in public are just a few of them. These kinds of activities are completely deserving of punishment. Drugs devastate lives and families and have contributed to a nationwide overdose crisis in the United States. It is laughable to say that these people aren't deserving of punishment. It is easy to dismiss drug distribution as a way to make money, but until these people see the devastation that these drug distributors, both big and small, cause in their communities, they'll never understand how despicable a crime it is.

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Another frightening subject is prostitution. By neglecting to pursue prostitution, the state is effectively encouraging the degradation of young girls' morality and putting them at risk by allowing them to work side by side with pimps and go home with strangers whose actual intentions are often unknown.

Baltimore is now seeing an increase in homicides, to the point that it now ranks second in the "murders per capita" category. What we need to ask today is what kind of ludicrous political leanings one would need to refuse to prosecute the sorts of people Mosby has refused to prosecute. Their far-left political leanings appear to have driven them to utilize race as the major motivator for punishing or not punishing.

The main problem, it appears, is that prosecutors like Mosby have prosecuted selectively through glasses that only see race. The concept that has persisted in their minds is a combination of the following: Colored people commit crime because society has placed them in a precarious position, forcing them to commit the crimes that they do, and colored people are disproportionately targeted by police. All of this contributes to the creation of a climate in which a perceived racial gap is the primary motivating factor in the criminality of people of particular races, if not the only one.

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Each individual who commits a crime is a human being, regardless of race, and just as we should not condemn others based on the color of their skin, we should not neglect to judge others when they commit heinous crimes based on the color of their skin. It is not difficult to realize that a white man who attacks his wife is equally as blameworthy and deserving of prison as a black man who does the same. The weight that political prosecutors place on a defendant's skin is inconceivable.

The Kyle Rittenhouse trial is an excellent illustration of this; while it did not take place in Baltimore, it demonstrates prosecutors' propensity to utilize race and politics to thrust themselves into the public eye and further their political careers and objectives. At a riot in which thousands of people looted, ransacked and destroyed small businesses and terrorized innocent people, Rittenhouse, a white teenager, shot and killed two individuals in self-defense. But who comes to mind now when we think of the riots in Kenosha, Wisconsin? Rittenhouse, because he was the one who was punished.

We need fewer prosecutors who seek to punish others and imprison them for personal gain and more prosecutors who seek to punish others in the name of justice. People who do horrible things need to be punished in the most appropriate way possible for the crimes they commit; they should not be released back onto the streets to produce new victims and crimes for the courts to deal with and for prosecutors to waste their time on. Citizens, after all, have no ability to punish others; our responsibility is simply to report crimes to those who are in charge of prosecuting individuals for those crimes.

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How can we trust prosecutors who refuse to effectively discharge their duties in the best interests of the public when ordinary citizens lack the ability to do the same?

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