Saturday, October 18, 2014

Peel the Label

It's a frequent refrain during intakes at the public defender's office.  Despite clear and overwhelming evidence that facts, if proven at trial, would result in a conviction, despite the security or dashcam video that would likely persuade a jury that a client's conduct satisfies the elements of a crime, despite the actual truth of the matter, some clients can't get over labeling themselves something that they abhor: a criminal.  They may not dispute the facts at all, but they sure dispute the label.

I strive to offer no moral judgement in my capacity, only legal advice.  I, literally, presume everyone innocent. But the moment the conversation turns to a person's conception of themselves, ("I'm not a criminal...I'm not like the rest of these people in your lobby...") I have to rethink the advisement.

In its simplest terms, the problem is a quasi-Cartesean confusion of behavior with identity.  "I [behaved badly], therefore, I am [a bad person]," goes common logic. Or, when judging others, "You [behaved badly], therefore, you are [a bad person]." I believe that's a common mistake.  Our actions define us in the minds of others, of course. But, there is still a flaw in the decision to define a person solely by their negative behaviors. It's an all too easy moral shortcut.

People do terrible, despicable things.  People may behave with appalling disregard for the consequences of their actions. People may require punishment in a just society for their victimization of others. But, I have always viewed behavior and identity unrelated terms in the lexicon of moral responsibility, as connected as apples and oranges. Each of us is more than the sum of the worst things we've done. Those simplistic definitions we have of one another diminish the other, as well as ourselves.  Each of us deserves the dignity of a thoughtful, multivariate analysis of our actions, and the events that led to them.  "Label not, lest ye be labeled," I suppose.

But there is something more at stake here:  If we define people, label them this way or that, then the capacity to change fades away.  "This is who you are, and we're all stuck with you, because people never change," goes conventional wisdom.  But what if conventional wisdom uses the wrong lexicon?  People change their behaviors all the time.  Behavior modification is no mere cottage industry; it's a staple of our economy.  Call it what you will...advertising, the power of suggestion, propaganda, persuasion, we are its audience.  And as the world we live in changes at an accelerated rate, we must adapt to it.  Change our behaviors to succeed or survive.

I suspect those who find defining themselves unpleasant, if truth be told, are also those who all too often use the aforementioned all too easy moral shortcut.  Go easy on them, though. They haven't, yet, comprehended their own capacity for change.





Monday, September 22, 2014

Courtroom Classroom Theater Church

Sunday, April 20, 2014

The Infant of Prague Versus The Easter Bunny

Saturday, March 29, 2014

What is "Tele-Justice"?

Lost in nearly every public conversation about the criminal justice system is the actual business of ensuring the Constitutional rights of individuals.  You can't fix a problem you don't understand, and unless you've actually tried to breathe live into the rights of others, at a podium, in a holding cell, before a judge or jury, you don't understand.

When you enter today's courtroom, you'll find surprises.  Judges often conduct matters over a television, with cameras and microphones and recordations that preserve it all. Sometimes, the criminally accused is "present" remotely, over a screen in the courtroom, watching proceedings on a screen of his own while he sits in a cell in a jail.

Such proceedings pose far more concerns for the basic, constitutional rights of the criminally accused than anyone is willing to admit.  It's a far cry from "the olden days" when, at least, everyone was in the same room, and a court reporter paid rapt attention to your every word.

The ability to read your client's behavior, as a doctor would a patient, is out the window.  So is the notion that anything you say to a client isn't being recorded.  Forget about whispering an important point in his ear during proceedings. Forget about the way it was always done, before.

Tele-Justice is the name of this realm of inquiry.  It's aim is to expose the variety of constitutional concerns present when all of the parties aren't physically present.  Now that our local governments plan on regionalizing our jail populations, more and more courtrooms will use this technology, especially for those unable to post a bond and secure release.

Tele-Justice also serve another purpose: to educate lawyers how to use courtroom technologies in ways that serve their clients' needs and rights.  Tens of thousands of hours of video exists - every minute a public record - in which I stand in court, advising and defending people against criminal charges.  Perhaps many lawyering lessons exist in that record, amid my successes, mistakes and failures would serve the next generation of lawyers sworn to serve the Constitution as I have.

Tele-Justice also points out the many benefits of using such technologies, to courts, police, jailers, victims, and, yes, defendants.  Such technologies must be used wisely, without corrupt influence or malice aforethought toward the rights of the criminally accused.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

The Portal, The Jut & The Flame