Jim -
With that said...
A person should not break the law and then try to get out of it on a "technicality". If a person is cited for speeding (let's say 85 in a posted 70), then he should NOT try to "weasel" his way out of it. I have never advocated turning oneself in for every violation one may commit
I violated the law yesterday because I stopped about 1 foot past the limit line while the light was green...it turned red while I waited so I was in violation at that point. I did NOT receive a citation - lucky me! It doesn't change the fact that I broke the law.
Your above post seems to contradict itself. You preach personal accountability, yet apparently it only applies to others. Seems to me that being charged could be construed as a "technicality".
Also, I don't really know what you mean by "technicality". I wish you would be more specific. I don't view anything I have promoted as being a "technicality". I view it as "the law".
For example:
I have promoted the use of discovery. The penal code uses the imperative "SHALL" when describing the prosecuting attorney's obligation to providing discovery. However, the Government Code offers the prosecuting attorney the discretion of deciding which cases to prosecute and not prosecute. Since I believe the prosecuting attorney would not intentionally violate the law, I think it is a reasonable assumption that his ignoring a discovery request could be interpreted as him exercising his discretion not to prosecute. In other words, the prosecuting attorney does not intend to "charge" the defendant.
You have criticized that this would constitute a "technicality". However, if the prosecuting attorney doesn't choose to prosecute, I don't see how that is any different than a cop who doesn't choose to write a ticket! Therefore, if a defendant who asks for a dismissal because the prosecuting attorney ignored his discovery request is "weasling" out of a ticket, then you have "weasled" out of your red light violation due to the "technicality" of a cop not writing a ticket. You broke the law and now you are using a "technicality" to avoid accountability.