Falling From Grace
According to a story today in the Daily Report in Fulton County, G.A., where she was a prosecutor from 1987-1996, her ethical standards leave something to be desired:
Nancy Grace, the host of a self-titled legal show on CNN Headline News, "played fast and loose" with her ethical duties as a Fulton County, Ga., prosecutor in 1990, a federal appeals panel has declared.The defendant's lawyer in the case called the court's description of Grace as playing "fast and loose" with ethical rules "an understatement." Apparently, this was part of a longer pattern:
The three-judge panel on Monday criticized Grace for not following her obligations to disclose to the defendant's lawyer information about other possible suspects. The 11th Circuit also agreed with a magistrate who found it hard to believe that Grace did not knowingly use a detective's false testimony that there were no other suspects.
This is the third time Grace's conduct as a prosecutor has been criticized by an appellate court.Sounds like she'd do just about anything to get a conviction. Is this who we want representing our system of justice on TV?
In 1997, the Georgia Supreme Court skewered Grace for her actions in prosecuting Weldon Wayne Carr for allegedly setting fire to his house and murdering his wife ... [T]he justices said Grace withheld evidence entitled to the defense and made improper opening statements and closing arguments.
"We conclude that the conduct of the prosecuting attorney in this case demonstrated her disregard of the notions of due process and fairness, and was inexcusable," wrote then Chief Justice Robert Benham.
In 1994, the Georgia high court voted 6-1 to reverse a heroin trafficking conviction won by Grace because she "exceeded the wide latitude of closing argument" by referring to drug-related murders and serial rape, which were not at issue.


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