Incumbent Robert Morgenthau and challenger Leslie Crocker Snyder are contending for one of the nation’s most visible law enforcement posts. So should their supporters really be scuffling in the streets? (Leslie Eaton, New York Times, Sept. 8).
Posts Tagged ‘crime and punishment’
Book review in today’s WSJ
I’m in today’s Wall Street Journal (sub – $) with a generally favorable review of Sadakat Kadri’s new book “The Trial: A History from Socrates to O.J. Simpson“. A few excerpts from the review:
By 1880 the criminal trial as an institution had become standardized around the West to the point that readers on many continents found little that was unfamiliar in Dostoevsky’s account of the murder proceedings against Dmitri Karamazov. The lawyers popping up with objections, the witness box and table of evidentiary exhibits, the sensation-seekers filling the gallery — all were as common to the courthouses of San Francisco or Paris as to those of late-czarist Russia. Go back a few centuries to premodern Europe, though, and the forms of justice can seem to our eyes indescribably strange: trial by ordeal, by combat or by compurgation (the collecting of oaths from supporters) and so forth.
And yet the march of progress is not always quite so apparent. We may smile at the premodern practice of putting a pig or haystack on trial for having caused harm to a human being, yet our contemporary law abounds in forfeiture and pure-food cases with headings like United States v. 900 Cases of Peaches (1975) and United States v. One 1967 Pontiac Bonneville Convertible (1973)….
The continuities between past and present are many. Battles over jury selection, so typical today in big trials, propel the plot of Burnt Njal, a medieval Icelandic saga involving arson-murder and bloody retribution. The tendentious interpretation of ambiguous marks on witnesses’ bodies — a hideous aspect of the witch hysteria of the 16th and 17th centuries — reappears in the child-abuse prosecutions of our own era. Denunciation boxes, into which citizens dropped accusing notes in Inquisition times, popped up in police stations across Russia in the 1930s. Hype-fraught celebrity trials? They date back pretty much forever and serve useful purposes, such as calling attention to social problems that would never stir public debate if left abstract….Regarding the emotionally manipulative style of some courtroom champions, Mr. Kadri finds plenty of precedent. He quotes the 1897 Tennessee Supreme Court, which said that “tears have always been considered legitimate arguments before a jury. Indeed, if counsel has them at his command, it may be seriously questioned whether it is not his professional duty to shed them whenever proper occasion arises.”
As for glittering but empty turns of courtroom rhetoric, Johnnie Cochran was just building on a tradition that goes back to Shakespeare’s time. “Elizabethan schoolboys,” Mr. Kadri writes, “were commonly taught adoxography, the art of eruditely praising worthless things….The first English treatise on the subject appeared in 1593 and contained essays celebrating deformity, ugliness, poverty, blindness, drunkenness, sterility, and stupidity. Its preface claimed that it would be particularly useful to lawyers.”
Read the whole thing here if you are a subscriber, or go out and buy a copy of the Journal. Incidentally, the Journal’s editors had to drop a couple of paragraphs of my original review draft for space reasons. Here they are:
* On the centuries-old practice of digging up the rotting remains of deceased persons to make them stand trial on criminal charges, a judge named Pierre Ayrault observed in 1591 that after all it is natural to regard the reputations of the dead as of continuing interest — wouldn’t we want to free a wrongly accused decedent from suspicion? That still didn’t explain why it would be needful to exhume a corpse, so Ayrault suggested a painting of the accused be hung in court instead.
* On the differences, some apparent and some real, between American and British justice: “Plea bargaining has never been given legal recognition in England. Barristers nevertheless haggle over pleas and judges give ‘indications’ of their likely sentences almost every day in almost every court of the land.” On the other hand, some differences are very real indeed, as with British judges’ power to summarize for jurors the weight of evidence in a case: “The summing-up invariably pays lip service to the principle of jury independence — typically, by ending a devastating criticism with the observation, ‘It is, of course, entirely a matter for you.'”
Crowe phone throw dough, cont’d
Actor Russell Crowe “has officially reached a settlement with the Manhattan hotel clerk he hit with a phone, a spokeswoman for the star confirmed…” According to sources who talked to the New York Daily News, “the offer was in the low six figures — a far cry from the $11 million a British tabloid claimed the ‘Cinderella Man’ star was ready to pay.” (Barbara Ross and Bill Hutchinson, “Crowe & clerk call it a deal”, New York Daily News, Aug. 26). My offer still stands, though.
Racial discrimination in jury selection
A Dallas Morning News investigation documents the degree to which it’s been second nature to lawyers on both sides in Texas criminal trials to exclude on the basis of race. Among highlights: the unique “Texas shuffle” technique used to give lawyers an advance peek at the race of prospective panelists; and the taxpayer-funded database that allows prosecutors to identify persons who have previously served on juries in cases which ended in acquittals, so as to keep those persons off future panels. (“Striking differences”, 2005 series (reg))(via Mike Cernovich).
Ted’s habeas debate
Ted’s debate with lawprof David Bruck (Washington & Lee) on federal habeas corpus reform at Legal Affairs has now wrapped up (for more on the bill itself, see Jul. 17). Not only is it highly illuminating and a great read (Ted: “We’re not talking about a sacrosanct legacy for which General Grant fought; we’re debating a malleable judicial rule that’s younger than two of the stars of ‘Desperate Housewives.'”) but (for readers who think they’re only interested in the civil and not the criminal side of the courtroom) Ted discusses in passing the general paucity of means by which miscarriages of justice in state court litigation can be reviewed by federal courts (see his Aug. 2 post).
Jailed…for not breaking the law
Conflicting legal obligations in Illinois:
An Alton woman embroiled in a divorce case spent more than four hours in jail for contempt of court after she refused a Madison County’s judge’s order to return a handgun to her ex-husband, a convicted felon.
Elizabeth “Beth” Ritchie, 30, said that complying with Associate Judge Ellar Duff’s order, delivered at a hearing on Thursday, would have required Ritchie to commit a crime herself.
It is a felony in Illinois for a felon to possess a firearm, and for anyone to transfer a gun to a felon.
Duff said in an interview Friday that she did not learn until after the hearing that Ritchie’s ex-husband was a felon, and that she then ordered Beth Ritchie released from the Madison County Jail.
Ritchie said she tried to explain the situation to Duff in court but was ignored.
“I was being ordered by the law to break the law,” Ritchie said. “And when I wouldn’t, I got thrown in jail.”
(Paul Hampel, “Justice misfires over gun”, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Jul. 22)(& welcome Crime & Federalism, Wave Maker readers).
More: reader Mickey Ferguson asks whether Ritchie could have avoided the predicament by volunteering to the gun over to the court itself, as in a case of escrow, with the court then free to turn it over or not to the felon. Good question, but I for one don’t know the answer.
Federal habeas reform debate on Legal Affairs
I’m debating Washington and Lee professor David Bruck about federal habeas reform (Jul. 17) on Legal Affairs this week.
Corporate governance at Point of Law
White-collar prosecutions, securities and accounting law and corporate governance in general have come in for much attention of late at our sister site. Lyle Roberts (no relation to John that we know of), who puts out the excellent securities law blog 10b-5 Daily, dropped by as a guest the other week to contribute posts on, inter alia, the record of the PSLRA and the Supreme Court’s history of dodging questions in this area. Ted Frank discusses the Bernie Ebbers sentence as well as a new NERA study on securities lawsuits, while Martin Grace, Jonathan Wilson and I all post on different aspects of the Sarbanes-Oxley law. I’ve also got brief items on Chris Cox as Bill Lerach’s nightmare nominee and on the much-discussed Larry Thompson memo laying out ground rules for corporate prosecutions at DOJ.
No convictions in Enron Broadband trial
Tom Kirkendall has the definitive post on the failure of the U.S. Attorney’s office to criminalize complex corporate finance transactions for being conducted by employees of an entity that was a subsidiary of another entity associated with fraudulent accounting. The jury deadlocked on several counts, and there’s a threatened retrial. The original trial took three months and featured some scandalous prosecutorial practices.
“For Potential Juror, ‘Honest’ Response to Judge Backfires”
The story seems straightforward enough:
It may have been an inelegant description, but Stephen Caruso said he thought he was just being honest on Thursday afternoon when a judge asked if he could be fair and impartial toward a defendant on trial for kidnapping. No, Mr. Caruso said during the voir dire portion of jury selection. “I have been held up three times at gunpoint,” he said according to transcripts, adding, “I am already looking at him; I think he is a scumbag.”
Caruso now faces criminal contempt charges from the angry Judge William A. Wetzel of Manhattan Criminal Court, and the Times coverage is disapproving. (Andrew Jacobs, NY Times, Jul. 2 (via Betsy Newmark)). However, AP reports that the judge protests that Caruso “was screaming at the top of his lungs,” and Newsday notes that Caruso also gave a smart-aleck response when asked his profession, so there may be more to the story than the recounting by Caruso’s defense attorney.