Forty-nine
A criminal trial is not a search for truth. It is much too circumscribed for that. Rather, a trial is a formalized contest for the hearts and minds of a panel of twelve. It is a quest for a verdict, in which information is selected and screened (we can almost say "processed") before it is allowed to reach jurors.
A trial jury sees two competing products that each side has gathered and arranged and artfully presented. The verdict goes to the more convincing product. We hope that any verdict is correct—which is to say, that it is grounded in truth and reality. But a verdict can only be as true and real as the evidence-product that the jury receives. An incompetent investigation cannot produce a competent verdict. A bad-faith prosecution precludes a good-faith judgment.
In the shorthand of computer hackers: garbage in, garbage out.
The extensive documentation of Florida v. Zeigler allows us to trace the investigation and follow the work of those who brought the case to trial. It is disturbing. It suggests that the means by which the crime was investigated and the case was prosecuted—the entire process by which Tommy Zeigler was convicted—are so flawed as to render the verdict invalid by any reasonable measure of fairness or justice, if not under the law.
This is an important distinction. As individuals, and as a society, we often stake out moral boundaries that are much more stringent than what statutes allow. To be legal is not necessarily to be right; otherwise attorneys would be the ultimate arbiters of morality.
What happened to Tommy Zeigler is wrong, by the standards that most of us accept. The public officials whose duty it was to bring the case to justice, and to bring justice to the case, long ago failed their trust. I include police, prosecutor, and judiciary. They failed Zeigler, they failed the victims and the victims' families, they failed the system, they failed their state. Florida v. Zeigler began to go wrong within the first few hours after sheriff's deputies took control of the crime scene, and it never got back on course. To this day, it has not been put right.
THE CRIME SCENE
Beginning on Christmas Eve and continuing for as long as they held the store, the crime scene investigation by the Orange County deputies was fundamentally marred by a series of errors and omissions, many of which violate accepted police






