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Sometimes as criminal defense attorneys we get asked how we can live with what we […] The post The Institution appeared first on Harter & Schottland.
Sometimes as criminal defense attorneys we get asked how we can live with what we do. There is, in that statement and thought, an unfounded assumption that every person accused is either guilty or bad or both. The problem with that line of thinking is that it is contradictory to the basic tenets of the American criminal justice system. In our system of justice, every person accused of a crime is innocent until proven guilty. And every person is entitled to his or her day in court, represented by counsel (if they are charged with a misdemeanor or felony).
The simple truth is that criminal defense attorneys are only one cog of the criminal justice system, along with the court, the judge, the prosecutor, the arresting or ticketing officer, the legislature, service providers, witnesses and the accused. Each cog serves to provide checks and balances on the others. In fact, one of the most important jobs we have as defense attorneys is to make certain that every other player is playing their part honestly and ethically. The reverse is also true. Lawyers are held to high standards of ethics and also competence. We have a duty to ferret out and report perversions to the system. An extreme example is the legacy of Jon Burge of the Chicago Police Department, where systematic use of torture and physical abuse during interrogatories, including beatings, suffocation, burnings and electrocutions, was shown to have occurred. These actions led to the inability to rely on confessions obtained by certain officers, for obvious reasons. And sadly, this example in not isolated or unique. There is countless evidence of the general unreliability of eye witness testimony, and the possibility of tainted evidence, dishonest witnesses, and unconstitutional laws. The Chicago Tribune recently pointed out that 4 now-exonerated men spent a combined total of 60 years incarcerated for crimes committed in Lake County even after forensic evidence suggested their innocence. (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/ct-met-hobbs-lawsuit-settlement-20130407,0,2400853.story).
It’s easy to say that someone accused of a crime, especially a heinous crime, does not deserve to be fairly represented or defended. However, that leads to a slippery slope, one where it is impossible to draw the line of who deserves to be represented and who doesn’t. The 4 men mentioned in the Chicago Tribune article were charged with especially gruesome crimes, and they are a prime example of why everyone charged with a crime is entitled to representation.
When you are a victim of a crime or when the accused is someone you don’t know or like, you might say that it doesn’t matter, the person is “bad.” However, when the person accused of a crime is you or someone you know, someone you love and respect, you will see that it matters quite a bit and that most people charged with crimes are not bad people or habitual offenders. They are often regular, every-day folk. The courts regularly issue decisions on the appropriateness of actions of each cog in the wheel, and those decisions apply to everyone: the good, the bad, and the ugly. We cannot be selective or the institution falls apart. The rights we protect are for you and your family. We represent the Institution of the criminal justice system. We respect all parts of it and make certain that the respect for your constitutional rights remains intact.
The post The Institution appeared first on Harter & Schottland.
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