The Poor Reform Prosecutor: So Far From the State Capital, So Close to the Suburbs

37 Pages Posted: 8 Mar 2023

See all articles by John F. Pfaff

John F. Pfaff

Fordham University School of Law

Date Written: March 4, 2023

Abstract

Given the undeniable role that prosecutorial discretion has played in driving mass incarceration, it makes sense to turn to them to scale it back as well. This has certainly been a central motivation of the progressive/reform prosecutor movement that started in the late 2000s. And while this movement has had some notable successes, recent years have shed some important light on the limits it faces as well. In this essay, I want to focus on how the county-ness of prosecutors hems in their power from two different directions.

On the one hand, as county officials, prosecutors—at least in most major urban areas—have a large number of constituents who live in the suburbs and regularly oppose reforms … of policies that by and large do not affect them. It’s telling that many, if not most, reform prosecutors have been elected in counties that either have no suburbs at all within their borders (Philadelphia, Baltimore, St. Louis) or where the suburbs are a small fraction of the overall population (Boston, Portland). It’s clear across a wide range of cities that the core support for reform DAs comes from Black communities with high levels of violence, i.e., the communities that bear the brunt of DA decisionmaking. The more suburban voters in a county, however, the more diluted those voices become.

On the other hand, as county officials, prosecutors operate at the mercy of state officials, who have a wide range of powers for clipping their wings: legislatures can give state AGs concurrent jurisdiction, for example, and in many places governors can remove elected DAs or take their cases away from them. While states are shielded from (some) federal interventions by the 10th Amendment, county officials have no such protection, as reform DAs in GOP-controlled states are increasingly beginning to discover.

My argument here is not one for nihilism. Even with these limits, the so-called “progressive prosecutor” movement can (and has!) accomplish quite a lot. But these constraints are very much real constraints, and ones that defy any sort of easy (or perhaps just any) policy fix. It is essential to map out what these limits look like, the constraints they impose, and what they mean for reform efforts going forward.

Keywords: Criminal Law, Prosecutors, Local Politics, State and Local Government

JEL Classification: K14, H70, K42

Suggested Citation

Pfaff, John F., The Poor Reform Prosecutor: So Far From the State Capital, So Close to the Suburbs (March 4, 2023). Fordham Urban Law Journal, Forthcoming, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4378322

John F. Pfaff (Contact Author)

Fordham University School of Law ( email )

140 West 62nd Street
New York, NY 10023
United States

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