
On November 27, 1978, councilman Dan White bypassed the San Francisco City Hall security systems by crawling through a basement window with a loaded.38. By the time he left City Hall that day, Mayor George Moscone and openly homosexual councilman Harvey Milk had been shot dead—point blank. Convicted of manslaughter, not first degree murder, Dan White and the infamous ”Twinkie defense” entered the legal vocabulary. The Harvey Milk case also, more ominously, was the beginning of a trend in criminal trials that has led to such disturbing verdicts as those in the recent Lorena Bobbitt, Rodney King, and Menendez brothers trials. With Justice for Some: Victims' Rights in Criminal Trials, a ground-breaking book by renowned legal scholar George P. Fletcher, is the first effort to examine the new political trial. In the high-profile, politicized trials of the 1990s, punishment becomes a means of self-vindication for disenfranchised groups who identify with the victims. Criminal trials have become the focal points for activist groups who have suffered in the palace of justice, and who now take their grievances to the street. Gay men stream out of the Castro and riot after the unexpected manslaughter verdict in the slaying of Harvey Milk. Blacks and Hispanics rebel in Los Angeles after the first Rodney King verdict, leaving South-Central L.A. in ruins. Hasidic Jews march and scream their bitter disappointment after the surprise acquittals in trials for the murders of Meir Kahane and Yankel Rosenbaum. Feminists fill the streets to ”take back the night” and toughen our laws against rape.With his insightful, angry critique, George Fletcher confronts the flaws in America's system of criminal prosecution. He explains exactly how such miscarriages of justice have become endemic. The primary function of today's criminal trials, Fletcher argues, is no longer to determine guilt of condemn evil. It is rather to understand the mind of the criminal, to camouflage the crime as less heinous
Does the modern American criminal trial prioritize the social grievances of victimized groups over the objective determination of guilt? George P. Fletcher, a distinguished professor of law, utilizes his extensive academic background to analyze the shift in judicial proceedings during the late 20th century. He argues that high-profile trials have evolved into political arenas where the focus has moved away from individual culpability toward the validation of collective identity and social trauma. By examining the intersection of law and public activism, Fletcher critiques the systemic erosion of traditional prosecutorial functions.
What You Will Find
Legal scholars and critics frequently cite this work as a provocative examination of the politicization of the American judiciary. Readers often note the author's sharp, critical tone and his ability to connect specific trial outcomes to broader societal trends in the 1990s.
Page Count:
304
Publication Date:
1995-01-20
Publisher:
Addison Wesley
ISBN-10:
0201622548
ISBN-13:
9780201622546
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