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Entries associated with the tag "Gary Dotson":

June 7th - 4:46 p.m.

Eric Zorn, writing smartly in Thursday's Tribune about Kevin Davis's new book, Defending the Damned: Inside Chicago's Cook County Public Defender's Office: "Idealists may be shocked at how much like a game criminal justice is to those entrusted to protect its principles at the horrific margins, and how much they really enjoy playing it."

Zorn was trying to explain how lawyers who defend the worst of the worst function, but it takes two sides to play a game, and the other team's the prosecution. The prosecution is supposed to be doing God's work on earth--separating evil from good and sending it packing. But a job that big might overwhelm someone who doesn't also approach it as a game: "I'll assume everyone's guilty and you assume everyone's innocent. Anything goes, and the jury picks the winner." I thought a little less of Jim Thompson in 1991, when he was leaving the office of governor, and the Sun-Times asked him about Gary Dotson, the convicted rapist cleared first by the supposed victim's recantation and then by DNA evidence. Said ex-prosecutor Thompson, who'd conducted a hearing on TV and reduced Dotson's sentence to time served (six years), "I still feel he did it."

Sometimes the game needs to be over.




The News Bites blogroll
Harold, Daily by Harold Henderson

The View From Here by Andrew Patner




Branzburg v. Hayes, the split U.S. Supreme Court decision (1972) generally construed by journalists and judges alike as affirming some sort of reporter's privilege in federal courts.

U.S. Appellate Judge Richard Posner's influential opinion in McKevitt v. Pallasch (2003) telling those journalists and judges they were wrong -- there is no such privilege.

John Milton's Areopagitica (1643), one of the earliest and most eloquent arguments for a free press. Said Milton: "As good almost kill a man as kill a good book; who kills a man kills a reasonable creature, God's image; but he who destroys a good book, kills reason itself, kills the image of God, as it were in the eye."

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