Posted on 04/28/2002 4:32:37 PM PDT by JulieRNR21
Reno owes the public answers
© St. Petersburg Times, published April 28, 2002
Janet Reno's reputation as a state attorney, the foundation for her eight years as the nation's attorney general and her present candidacy for governor of Florida, was built in significant part by her aggressive prosecution of three sensational child abuse cases in Miami-Dade County. She pioneered a controversial technique for eliciting intimate details from young children and inspired passage of a law allowing them to testify by closed-circuit television, out of the possibly intimidating presence of their suspected molesters. It is open to dispute, however, whether this is a record of which she should be proud.
Janet Reno's reputation as a state attorney, the foundation for her eight years as the nation's attorney general and her present candidacy for governor of Florida, was built in significant part by her aggressive prosecution of three sensational child abuse cases in Miami-Dade County. She pioneered a controversial technique for eliciting intimate details from young children and inspired passage of a law allowing them to testify by closed-circuit television, out of the possibly intimidating presence of their suspected molesters. It is open to dispute, however, whether this is a record of which she should be proud.
One of the defendants, a 14-year-old boy, was acquitted after his attorneys discredited the children's persistent interrogations by a psychologist who called herself the "yucky secrets doctor." Another was freed by a federal appeals court after 12 years in prison. Only the first, Francisco Fuster Escalona, remains behind bars, serving 165 years on 14 counts of abusing children at the Country Walk day care center in southwest Dade. His 18-year-old wife, Ileana Flores, had pleaded guilty and testified against him.
The 17-year-old Fuster case was the focus of a PBS Frontline documentary Thursday night which broke the news that Flores, who later signed a document recanting her testimony and then repudiated that, is now saying once again that he was innocent, she was innocent and that she was coerced by Reno and others into denouncing her husband. She said she was kept naked in a suicide watch cell and given cold showers and that Reno visited her late at night in pursuit of her confession and damning testimony. If true, that detail would be particularly troubling. No suspect should be interrogated by anyone under such degrading circumstances, and in the absence of her attorney, no matter how sincerely the prosecutor believes in what she's doing.
There are, of course, two sides to the story. The jury believed the state's. Fuster's plea for exoneration depends in large part on the word of his ex-wife, who has contradicted herself three times. But there can be no ambiguity about the implications of Reno's refusal to discuss her role in the case.
"I haven't looked at the file in 15 years, I would need you to bring me all the files, and I don't foresee having the time to go through the files," Reno told Frontline. This has become a familiar form of stonewalling with her. When Times political editor Adam Smith tried to ask her whether she is comfortable with Florida's death penalty, she answered, "I have not reviewed all the cases within the system, so I can't answer that." One of those death cases, among the 100 or so she prosecuted at Miami-Dade, was so flimsy that the Florida Supreme Court not only reversed the conviction but dismissed the charge.
Many politicians duck and weave, as she does, to avoid saying how they'd finance their campaign promises. To refuse to discuss one's record in office is a different, more serious matter. It suggests arrogance of power, a trait that becomes less and less tolerable in inverse proportion to the importance and authority of the office sought.
In Florida, it is the governor, not the attorney general, who oversees the 20 state attorneys. When they err, courts can correct them; on many occasions, however, the governor is the only person who can ensure that justice is eventually served. Reno knows this from personal experience. On assignment by then-Gov. Bob Martinez in 1989, she documented that James Richardson, a fruit-picker, had been unfairly convicted for the poisoning deaths of his seven children, and he was freed after 21 years in prison. On that occasion, she did not shrink from faulting the work of another prosecutor. With her own record now under attack, she serves herself poorly by refusing to discuss it. The voters will not let it go at that.
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Gee Janet, sorry about you not having the time to look into this case. Meanwhile Francisco Fuster has 165 years worth of time due to your bogus charges.
And judging from the pictures of Reno NOW one may well understand why a nude 17-year old girl might well be afraid.
I'm very superstitious and think that I must repeat exactly what I did in 2000 for Jeb to win. So will this mean that right after voting, I will have to walk over to the Japanese restaurant and gorge myself on sushi followed by getting drunk on Lagavullin scotch as I did in the last election?
Sounds like a good plan to me....and perhaps gonzo would like to 'gather the FL Eagles' for an election night vigil ala 2000? That night was a roller coaster of emotions from champagne, cheers & kisses when GWB was declared the winner to screams, tears and disgust when Gore withdrew his concession.
I'll always remember Gene's accrate prediction that it would go 'all the way to the Supreme Court' and everyone's resolve to 'get out in the streets' to support Bush/Cheney!
But if Reno goes down in flames next election (and we know it the same night, heheh) the celebration will rock around the clock!
Leni
The St Pete Times is a very partisan very left wing Democrat publication that tries hard to be the NYT of the Southeast. If they can't handle the idea of Reno as governor it quit possibly means that they fear her campaign and/or election will ultimately do a lot of damage to The Party.
Where is Gonzo's? It sounds like something I missed.
Leni
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