The appellate system is widely understood as a safety net โ a place where mistakes get corrected, unfair trials get redone, and innocent people get their convictions overturned. The reality is more constrained. Appeals courts operate under rules that severely limit what they’re willing to correct, and a substantial fraction of trial errors โ including ones everyone agrees were errors โ survive appellate review. Knowing why is essential to understanding why the criminal justice system produces the outcomes it does.
Appeals review process, not facts
The single most important constraint on appellate review is that appeals courts almost never re-examine the facts. They review the trial record for legal errors โ improper jury instructions, evidentiary rulings, prosecutorial misconduct, ineffective assistance of counsel. They generally accept the trial-level factual findings as given, even when the appellate judges privately doubt them. If a witness was mistaken, a forensic technique was junk science, or new evidence has emerged, those issues mostly fall outside what direct appeals can address. Post-conviction proceedings under habeas corpus or state innocence statutes are the venues for factual claims, and they have their own significant limitations.
Harmless error doctrine swallows real errors
Even when appeals courts identify a legal error in the trial, they often decline to reverse the conviction under the “harmless error” doctrine. The standard asks whether the error likely affected the verdict. In practice, courts are highly reluctant to find harm โ they tend to assume juries would have reached the same verdict despite the error, even when the error involves significant evidentiary problems or constitutional violations. Studies of harmless error analysis show appellate courts uphold convictions despite acknowledged errors at high rates. The doctrine exists for sensible reasons, but its application has tilted toward affirmance over decades of precedent.
Procedural default cuts off claims entirely
Many of the strongest appellate claims are barred before they’re heard. Procedural default rules prohibit raising issues on appeal that weren’t preserved at trial โ and trial counsel often fails to object in real time, especially in court-appointed representation. Federal habeas review of state convictions is further restricted by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), which requires deference to state court rulings even when federal judges believe they’re wrong. Successive petitions, statutes of limitations, and exhaustion requirements collectively narrow the path so much that many meritorious claims are dismissed without consideration on the merits.
Ineffective assistance is hard to prove
Inadequate trial counsel is a leading cause of wrongful conviction, but the legal standard for proving ineffective assistance (Strickland v. Washington) requires showing both deficient performance and that the deficiency probably changed the outcome. The bar is high enough that lawyers who slept through portions of capital trials, missed critical evidence, or failed to investigate alibi witnesses have been deemed constitutionally adequate. The doctrine effectively normalizes mediocre defense work as acceptable.
The bottom line
The appellate system corrects some errors, but it isn’t designed to be a comprehensive backstop against trial-level mistakes. Defendants and their families who expect appeals to fix obvious problems are often shocked to discover what the system can and can’t do. The honest framing is narrower than the popular one.
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