Law in Contemporary Society

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CriminalDefense 7 - 21 Apr 2010 - Main.DanKarmel
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 Eben has spoken very highly of criminal defense several times in class. I am one of those people who still doesn’t know what kind of law he wants to practice, but criminal law is definitely one of the possibilities. I find it interesting, at least academically/abstractly, and I think I would enjoy being the guy in someone’s corner.

The problem is, as much as I would love to be the person defending the wrongfully accused, I think I would be uncomfortable defending someone I believed had committed the crime. This would be more or less true depending on the circumstances, but for some crimes in particular (gratuitously violent crimes, sexual crimes against women and children, white collar crime/public integrity/fraud), I think I would have a real problem.

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 @Jessica - I'd like to echo your assertion that representing people whose actions we may condemn is not a moral dilemma. As I stated above, everyone deserves vigorous representation. I think that the real concern regarding moral dilemmas in criminal law is when lawyers are pressured to engage in unethical tactics in criminal cases. All too often, this happens in large organizations (be it on the prosecution side or the defense side). And all too often, we read about this in the newspaper. People who go it solo or work with a trusted partner or two don't face as much pressure to break the rules. There is a clear line between representing one's client vigorously (ensuring that her constitutional rights are protected and that she gets the representation she is entitled to) and representing one's client unethically (breaking rules to get the best possible outcome). If one stays on the correct side of the line, he is defending the people - regardless of which side he is on.

-- DavidGoldin - 20 Apr 2010

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Allison, I think you bring up a really key point, that the reason these issues are so particularly salient in criminal law is because of the profound effect that your actions have on someone's life. If you're bringing a civil suit against Morgan Stanley on behalf of Goldman Sachs, the implications are so much more abstract. Whether someone is "right" or "wrong," you're just moving chips around. By the way, this is also the reason that people who work in criminal law tell me they find the work so personally rewarding.

Jessica, I agree with your comment in regards to mitigating factors such as economic circumstances, which is why I mentioned certain crimes that make me particularly uncomfortable. I would have much less of a problem representing a bank robber than a child molester. And to respond to both yours and David's comments, I understand the theoretical arguments and would never for a second argue that someone shouldn't have the right to counsel when they're accused of a crime. I'm just wondering if I want to be the guy who does it.

-- DanKarmel - 21 Apr 2010

 
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Revision 7r7 - 21 Apr 2010 - 03:35:39 - DanKarmel
Revision 6r6 - 21 Apr 2010 - 02:59:33 - JessicaCohen
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