Monthly Archives: January 2016

In Place Of Torts, Social Justice

In one of the most remarkably absurd non-sequiturs that ever emitted from the mouth of a law school dean, AALS president Kellye Testy explained that the law school crisis was over because law schools could enable students to pursue social justice. But the ridiculousness of Testy’s response doesn’t stand alone, and is part of the new package that law school is selling to young people who aren’t put off by non-sequiturs. Or lack of fully formed thought. Or, well, thought at all.

Apparently, social justice is the new snake oil, and law schools are the new snake oil marketeers.

Many, if not most, law schools proclaim that they will advance “social justice.” My own law school recently pledged to use part of the generous 100 million dollar gift from the Pritzkers to do just that. Generally the pursuit of such justice is done through clinics, which represent clients, but have larger objectives in their choice of representation, such as ending the death penalty, protecting rent control, or increasing environmental regulation.

Beyond this abstract tension, the pursuit of a particular vision of justice can make it harder for research faculty to pursue opposing viewpoints. Some years back, Northwestern Law School’s criminal law clinic crusaded successfully for a moratorium on the death penalty in Illinois. This effort became part of the school’s identity. In that atmosphere few professors would have had the temerity to start writing in favor the death penalty.

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Twitter de Milo

Editor of Breitbart Tech, and rather flamboyant and outrageous social media conservative, Milo Yiannopoulos, was stripped of his blue verification check on the Twitters.  His twitter handle, @Nero, is now just like anyone else’s. Anyone who has over 140,000 followers, that is.

So what?  If you never knew of or cared about Milo’s existence before, his deverification is unlikely to keep you awake at night. If you wish to learn more about him, you can do it on your own. I can’t help you.

But this has given rise to an epic twitter shitstorm, implicating the new cry of censorship. To be clear, this is not a First Amendment issue, as Twitter is not the government and can act as capriciously as it wants, the law of contract notwithstanding. But Milo had no contractual claim to a blue check in his Twitter bio.

According to the Twitters, the purpose of blue check is an indication, in the Twitterverse, that the user is a “somebody” to Twitter. Continue reading

113 Stories and the Law of Feelz

An amicus brief submitted to the Supreme Court, in Whole Women’s Health Care v. Cole, on behalf of the Center for Reproductive Rights does what, well, no one has done before.

The avalanche of amicus briefs is impressive—but one brief towers above the rest. Aided by the Center for Reproductive Rights, the powerhouse firm Paul, Weiss put together an astonishing document, signed by 113 female attorneys, detailing the importance of abortion rights in their own lives. “To the world, I am an attorney who had an abortion, and, to myself, I am an attorney because I had an abortion,” the brief begins. What follows is a series of gripping narratives about how abortion access helped women escape from poverty and abuse and rise to the heights of the legal profession.

Amicus briefs proffer arguments, whether legal or policy, in an effort to persuade the Court.  Are “gripping narratives” going to impact Supreme Court Justices?  And what, exactly, does this mean?

To the world, I am an attorney who had an abortion, and, to myself, I am an attorney because I had an abortion.

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The Stress Hug

When you’re selling the snake oil of mindfulness at $500 a pop, it behooves you to feed into the notion that sad lawyers are suffering, miserable, losing sleep and hair over the stress of practicing law. No doubt, some are. At the same time, pitching the notion that this is pervasive, that all lawyers live lives of desperation, that no lawyers can handle the stress, serves only to make the weenies feel validated in their misery.

Good news. Well, not so much for the weenies who should never have become lawyers in the first place because they can’t handle the stress, and who now seize upon the misguided lie that there is nothing wrong with putting their own interest before their clients, because you deserve it, or that incompetence and failure is totally understandable and forgivable because nobody’s perfect. There is no good news for you, and there never will be.

But for the rest of us, the experience of a Norway winter offers comfort without sacrificing our raison d’etre. The people of Tromsø see winter as a hug. Continue reading

“Making A Murderer”: Any Love Is Good Love?

The cool new law show last year was Serial.  As season two opened, focusing on the case of Army deserter, Bowe Bergdahl, the anticipation was that Serial would again capture the American psyche.  Ironically, after the breakout success of season one, I got calls from some very big “interested parties” hoping I could feed them the next Serial, the case where they could spin the innocent, wrongly convicted defendant into their own smash hit. I declined.

Of course, Serial fizzled, another one-hit wonder. I cried no tears over it, even though Ken Womble and I took opposite views of its utility in making Americans more knowledgeable.  Ken argued that by providing a vast quantity of information about the criminal justice system, people couldn’t help but benefit from listening to Serial.

My view was that information, without understanding and context, was overrated. People would believe they understood the system, but they would be wrong. Worse, they would believe so strongly that they couldn’t be told otherwise.  They would be both ignorant and certain, a toxic combination.

Ken did have one compelling point, however. Serial was the first viral opportunity in a long time that made people think, long and hard, about the system and its flaws. Continue reading

The Death Gap

It’s one of those head-shaking moments as the question inevitably gets posed: whether Sandra Bland was legally entitled to continue smoking her cigarette, despite Trooper Brian Encinia’s “request” that she put it out.  It’s the sort of monumentally stupid parsing of details in which naïve people indulge. Do you really think it’s worthwhile to argue your rights from the grave?

The problem is on the other side of the equation, in the training, formal and around coffee and donuts, and law, that police officers must seize control of all situations lest they end up harmed.  This gap in compliance, not doing what the officer commands, even when his words are framed politely, can end up badly for the person on the business end of his gun. Yes, we have rights. Yes, those rights can be ignored, wrongly, by a police officer. And yes, the law is deeply, irreconcilably, conflicted when it comes to who wins in a violent clash.

At a new blog by the Virtus Group, Chicago Police Officer Lou Hayes takes a hard look at this gap. He opens with an anecdote, of a confrontation with a bad dude that is going, well, well. Continue reading

Naked And Afraid: The Grand Jury To Meet Anthony Hill’s Killer

DeKalb County District Attorney Robert D. James Jr. announced that he will seek an indictment for felony murder against Police Officer Robert Olsen for the killing of Air Force veteran Anthony Hill.  Promising?

Officer Olsen’s conduct has been scrutinized since last March, when he was called to an apartment complex in Chamblee, northeast of Atlanta, and Mr. Hill approached and behaved erratically. Witnesses said that Mr. Hill, whose family said he had post-traumatic stress disorder after an Air Force deployment to Afghanistan, had raised his hands or placed them at his sides and that he did not obey Officer Olsen’s instructions to halt.

Hill allegedly lunged at Olsen. Olsen killed him.  There are sympathetic factors at play, that Hill was a veteran, suffered from PTSD, and was clearly unarmed. But no cop, current or former, will concede that it’s wrong to shoot and kill an erratic, non-compliant man who could potentially harm an officer. The First Rule of Policing.

They might agree that a cop could hopefully avoid the killing, but not that it would be wrong to do so.  Olsen chose his path, to kill Hill so he risked no harm.  He was not a therapist with a gun. Just a cop.  Once a threat was presented to his safety, even if disputed by witnesses because they just don’t understand the dangers police officers face, the entitlement to kill kicked in. Boom. One life ended. One life saved. That’s the cop version, and he’s sticking with it. Continue reading

Fault Lines: The Force Awakens

Once again, Fault Lines is ready to grow its writers.  While we’re looking for writers who bring experience, knowledge and excellent writing, we are also hoping to broaden our perspective of criminal law commentary to include other views than the criminal defense.  We would really appreciate more voices reflecting the cop’s view, the prosecutor’s view, the academic’s view and the judicial view.

Would you really like to write, but fear that you don’t have the bona fides to come aboard Fault Lines?  Toughen up, take a chance and give it a try.  We’ve got some great contributors, brilliant writers, who had no prior experience blogging, but with some mentoring have grown into must-read voices.

If you doubt me, ask any of the Fault Lines writers whether they feel they’ve grown as writers and lawyers.  More importantly, ask them whether they feel that their efforts have been worthwhile, and that they’ve been able to make a difference. If you’ve got the Force in you, I’ll wake it up. You can count on that. Continue reading

Great News! The Law School Crisis Is Over!

Via Paul Caron at TaxProfBlog, the National Law Journal’s interview of the new American Association of Law Schools president, Kellye Testy, brings us the words so many law students and lawyers longed to hear:

NLJ: It seems that the phrase “law school crisis” has died down a bit, yet enrollments and bar passage rates are still declining. Do you think legal education is still in crisis mode?

KT: I don’t see legal education as being in crisis at all. What I do see is that there are a lot of crisis in our world that legal education can help address. That’s part of why I’m trying to help our academy look outward and talk about the great things our schools and our profession do around what I think of as real crisis: things like incredible inequality and poverty, and violence around our world.

There you go. There’s no crisis. None at all. Continue reading