In a justice system built upon the ideals of fairness, accountability, and constitutional protection, one legal standard has quietly eroded public trust and constitutional integrity: the Strickland standard. Established in *Strickland v. Washington* (1984), this two-pronged test was intended to serve as a safeguard against ineffective assistance of counsel, a right guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment. Instead, it has become a powerful shield—protecting systemic failures, excusing attorney misconduct, and undermining the very rights it was supposed to defend.
Under Strickland, a defendant seeking post-conviction relief must demonstrate two things: first, that their attorney's performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness; and second, that there is a reasonable probability that, but for the attorney's errors, the outcome of the proceeding would have been different.
This second prong—the "prejudice" requirement—is where the standard becomes deeply problematic. Courts often interpret "reasonable probability" as near certainty, demanding defendants to prove hypothetical outcomes without the resources or legal expertise to do so. As a result, even egregious errors—such as failing to investigate alibis, refusing to object to unconstitutional searches, or neglecting to meet with a client—can be excused so long as a judge or appellate court deems that the conviction was likely inevitable anyway.
The implications are stark. A defendant’s constitutional rights can be violated, and unless they can show that the violation would have changed the verdict, no legal remedy exists. This turns constitutional protections into mere formalities—acknowledged on paper, but denied in practice.
What makes this even more troubling is the subjectivity embedded in the Strickland process. Judges hold vast discretion in determining what constitutes “reasonable” performance and “prejudice.” There is no uniform metric. One judge’s idea of ineffective assistance may be another judge’s idea of acceptable strategy. This variability injects inconsistency into constitutional enforcement, disproportionately affecting poor defendants and people of color, who already face systemic disadvantages in the courtroom.
Moreover, the standard itself fails to acknowledge a critical truth: constitutional rights are individual rights. They are not collective goals, nor are they subject to outcome-based assessments. A violation of rights—such as the right to a fair trial, to remain silent, or to confront witnesses—is inherently harmful. The notion that a right must be “prejudicial” to matter departs from the foundational principle that these rights belong to each person, regardless of how they impact the state’s ability to secure a conviction.
This framework incentivizes misconduct. Attorneys who fail to zealously advocate for their clients are rarely held accountable unless their failure is catastrophic and outcome-altering. Prosecutors and judges, in turn, are less motivated to ensure defendants receive competent representation when the bar for proving harm is so insurmountably high. And when misconduct goes uncorrected, it becomes normalized. This silent pattern of unaccountability erodes the presumption of innocence and distorts the adversarial system into a performance where outcomes are predetermined and rights are optional.
What results is a self-perpetuating system of injustice. Defendants—many of whom are indigent, mentally ill, or marginalized—bear the burden of proving legal failures they never had the resources to avoid in the first place. Courts frequently rely on procedural finality over substantive justice. And constitutional violations, unless coupled with provable prejudice, are disregarded as inconsequential.
Critics argue that the Strickland standard has created a culture of immunity for bad lawyering and judicial apathy. It prioritizes convictions over fairness and undermines public faith in due process. Worse, it distorts legal reasoning by treating the Constitution as a conditional framework—binding only when courts determine it matters enough.
If justice is to mean anything, then legal safeguards like the Sixth Amendment must be enforced as rights, not privileges. The presumption of innocence must be paired with the presumption of competent and ethical representation. And the courts must stop measuring constitutional violations by their impact on conviction rates rather than their impact on liberty and dignity.
The Strickland standard, once envisioned as a shield for the wrongfully convicted, has become a barrier to their freedom. Until this standard is reformed or replaced with one that respects constitutional ownership and demands accountability from legal professionals, it will remain an obstacle to justice, protecting institutions rather than people—and sustaining the very systemic harm it was meant to prevent.
I am aware of several men that are being held and their rights are being abused. Once a man proved tha this arraignment didn't happen in a timely manner. The DA said there isn't any repercussion. Defendents have body cams or local shops cam that show their innocents.
ReplyDeleteDA will take the word from a deputy verse allowing the videos to prove the deputy lying. I recently heard a lawyer (defense) said all the deputies in the area lies except one. That is horrible. It is not about justice. It is about money. Judicial system wants to destroy the wrongfully accused so they will plea.
DA in Joshua has a near 100% conviction rate when the average is about 75%. There is no justice in the basin. It is to break a man down until he agrees to anything for freedom.
A man was held inside of Stater Bros because the employees felt they had the right to do it. When the man wanted out and was refused. He did like any reasonable man would do and try to break out. He is now being held as attempted arson and destroying property.
Stater Bros knows their employees were wrong and has not wanted charges. The DA is trying to send the man to prison. If anyone that should go to prison are the employees of Stater Bros.
It appears most of white deputies are racist. I am white so don't think different. I have been given examples besides observing it in person. We don't believe people are innocent until proven guilty.