OldGrumpy wrote:In previous job I was involved with lots of civil litigation. Lawyers always plays lots of games with each other, and it is from both sides. Don't really see a big problem with that. Personal take is that they were doing the best they could with a case they were mandated to pursue but did not really believe in.
Prosecutors are under a special obligation to disclose all information in their possession to the defense, no holding back stuff especially if it is conceivably beneficial to the defense. Games are played but cheaters get caught and punished, sometimes severely. If there was really beneficial info that they alone had and did not disclose, there are in real trouble.
This whole thing kind of smells funny since apparently the normal prosecutor declined to file, whereupon they brought in a designator hitter. It happens that prudent, ethical experienced attorneys can disagree about the strength of a set of facts, I suppose, but it isn't usual.
Luckily, I have enough willpower to control the driving ambition that rages within me.