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June 20, 2025

"Compassionate Undercharging"

The title of this post is the title of this new article authored by Michal Buchhandler-Raphael and available via SSRN. Here is its abstract:

Undercharging, a common prosecutorial tactic, refers to the strategic pursuit of lesser charges than the law permits. While undercharging is primarily used to facilitate plea agreements, prosecutors also bring lesser charges for other reasons — such as to mitigate the harshness of the criminal legal system.  To date, however, undercharging has largely been limited to nonviolent crimes, with prosecutors generally refusing to file reduced charges in murder cases.

This Article calls on prosecutors to adopt bolder practices that extend undercharging to include homicide offenses, including murder. It coins the term “compassionate undercharging” to describe this form of prosecutorial leniency.  The Article argues that prosecutors should refrain from bringing murder charges and instead pursue lesser charges against victimized offenders — defendants who kill their abusers or third parties under coercive pressures from abusive partners—because their actions are directly linked to their experiences of domestic violence, sexual abuse, or commercial sexual exploitation.  Legal literature has largely focused on female survivors of domestic violence who kill their abusers in perceived self-defense, leaving the broader scope of criminal culpability for other victimized offenders underexplored.  This Article centers the often-overlooked experiences of male victims of physical and sexual abuse, as well as abused individuals who kill third parties.

The Article offers three justifications for undercharging in such cases: First, it aligns with the purposes of punishment, second, it fulfills the prosecutor’s role to “seek justice” through proportionate charging decisions, and third, it reflects prosecutors’ legal and ethical obligations to crime victims.

This Article contributes to legal scholarship in three ways.  First, drawing on empirical studies and court decisions that examine the correlation between victimization in domestic settings and offending, it offers a typology of victimized offenders comprising of five common categories.  Second, it demonstrates that undercharging victimized offenders is consistent with existing prosecutorial practices involving charge reductions in other contexts.  Third, it advocates reducing the criminal culpability of victimized offenders rather than merely mitigating their sentences.

June 20, 2025 at 11:30 AM | Permalink

Comments

Funny we didn't see any "compassionate undercharging" in the Rittenhouse case. Those scumbag prosecutors wanted to see him go to prison for life for defending himself from threats after he retreated. I hope those prosecutors rot in hell.

Posted by: federalist | Jun 20, 2025 11:47:18 AM

“Compassionate undercharging” is right up there in inanity with “justice involved individual.”

Posted by: TarlsQtr | Jun 20, 2025 12:08:00 PM

"Compassionate undercharging" is what happened to deputies Andrew Buen and Kyle Gould in the case of Christian Glass in Colorado.

Thanks to that incident we now know that when a cop says to you, "it’s time to move the night on", that's a death threat.

Posted by: Frank Fosdick | Jun 21, 2025 1:57:57 PM

Yeah, FF, a tragedy. Horrifying.

When I lived in Chi-town, I was out walking with my three (then young) children. Some young guy, barefoot, made threatening gestures to us, but it was painfully obvious that he was not in his right mind. I called the cops--told them that it was a mental health incident, and they sent at least 10 cops AND and ambulance. Three or four burly cops secured him (without hurting him) and into the ambulance he went. Could have been a tragedy, but it wasn't due to the cops' professionalism.

Posted by: federalist | Jun 23, 2025 9:56:27 AM

federalist,

Sounds like in that instance, the notoriously corrupt (just ask Bill Otis) Chicago PD showed that it knew how to handle a mental health crisis better than seven officers from four different police agencies in Colorado.

The civil settlement with Glass's family requires the Clear Creek Sheriff's Department "to establish a crisis intervention team and train the entire force in crisis intervention". Sounds great on paper. It's a good opportunity to kick up a few cops' salaries and steer some money to a private sector training program boondoggle--perhaps one run by an in-law of the county sheriff--rather than achieve any improvements in practice.

Here's a contrasting example. https://freepressokc.com/mental-health-crisis-response-launches-within-okc-fire-dept/

Thus even red states are trying a different approach, sending unarmed non-cops to deal with "mental health incidents", as you put it. (Contrast with the police department's "Crisis Intervention Team.") I would think that conservatives and (g)libertarians can root for such programs reducing the amounts of violence and harm arising from individuals' encounters with state power.

I hope journalists and researchers can obtain the resources to objectively study outcomes and report them to the public. Unfortunately I fear that, for multiple reasons, the better such alternatives do, the less we'll hear about it.

Posted by: Frank Fosdick | Jun 23, 2025 4:08:46 PM

"even red states"---unless you're talking about state cops, pretty much all policing is local.

Posted by: federalist | Jun 24, 2025 9:18:05 AM

federalist --

A few years ago, some fellow just came through the back door of my house at 2 a.m. I was still up typing on some paper I was writing. I picked up my handy scissors and was ready (or as ready as I could get) for action. It turned out, however, that the intruder was some disoriented older guy who was mumbling to himself and barely noticed that I was there at all. I called 911 and described what was going on. By the time the police arrived, the intruder had left. I'm sure they found him (he didn't look either like he wanted to run, or could run), but I never found out what happened from then on in. I was never asked to press charges and wouldn't have in any event.

Posted by: Bill Otis | Jun 24, 2025 10:48:13 AM

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