By John Hollway, an attorney, writer, and health care entrepreneur.
Can prosecutors with a history of misconduct ever be held accountable for Brady violations? We'll know when Connick v. Thompson is decided this spring.
The most frightening thing about John Thompson's story isn't the eighteen years he spent in prison in Louisiana, or the fourteen of those years he spent on Death Row in the State Penitentiary at Angola. It isn't that he lost the years from 22 to 40, or that he missed every night of his two sons' childhood.
The most frightening thing about John's unjust incarceration is that it was constructed by the deliberate actions of the New Orleans DA's Office. And unless the U.S. Supreme Court does the right thing in the recently argued case of Connick v. Thompson, they just might get away with it.
