Duke
Posted by Radley Balko on April 12, 2007
I'm happy for the Duke lacrosse players. And I'm glad that the 90 percent of America that otherwise doesn't pay attention to the flaws, biases, and corruptions in the criminal justice system got to see a real, live, outrageous injustice play out on national television before their very eyes. And I'd love to think the upside to all of this would be increased scrutiny on overly zealous prosecutors and the incredible damage they can do to someone if they wield their power inappropriately (I have my doubts). I'd also like nothing more than to see Mr. Nifong stripped of his office, his ability to practice law and--if it's proven he broke the law--his freedom.
That said,
this statement from Glenn Reynolds doesn't quite cut it:
In the conventional imagination, it used to be -- see
To Kill a Mockingbird or reports of the Scottsboro rape trial -- that it was the noble fairness-obsessed lefties who supported due process against the ignorant right-wing hicks who tried to lynch people out of a mixture of racism, political opportunism borne of racism, journalistic sensationalism, and sheer meanness. Now the hats have switched. That's worth noting.
I'm not left-wing or right-wing (though I've been accused of both).But the reason why the narrative for most of the last century has been that of noble, left-wing ACLU and NAACP lawyers coming to the aid of black people wrongly accused by racist white people is because for most of the last century,
that's the way it has actually happened. Over and over and over. And I'm not just talking about the Jim Crow era. See
Tulia. Or
Hearne. Or the dozens of people freed by the liberal lawyers at the Innocence Project.
And let's not go overboard in heaping praise on the Duke players' more conservative defenders. Reynolds is an honest-to-goodness civil libertarian. So I don't include him in this. But to hear law-and-order right-wingers like Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly, Michael Savage, or the Powerline crew scream about prosecutoral excess, the rights of the accused, and political opportunism on the part of a prosecutor these past few months really strained all credulity. Yes. I'd love to think their interest in this case was motivated solely by their sense of justice. But come on. Does anyone not think the race and class of the accused, the race and class of the accuser, and the politics of feminism and anti-feminism had something to do with their sudden embrace of and familiarity with
NACDL talking points?
Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe these conservatives have gotten religion. Maybe in the future, O'Reilly, Hannity, & Co. will actually make a cause celebre about cases where the accused aren't rich white kids with high-paid attorneys accused of raping a poor black woman. I'm skeptical.
Yes, Nifong was rotten to the core. Yes, the liberals who convicted the lacrosse team in the press rushed to judgment, and were dead wrong. But listening to the right wing over the last several months, you'd think this kind of thing only happens to white people, and only liberal, bleeding-heart prosecutors like Nifong are capable of unjust, overtly political, race-fueled witch hunts. The unique thing about this case is that everything happened in reverse. So it tested the principles and allegiances of everybody. The real credit I think goes to the handful of liberals who stood by the lacrosse team, bucking the civil rights groups and feminist groups on the other side.
These kinds of injustices happen to all people, of course. It's just that most of them don't make the newspapers. They do also tend to happen disproportionately to black people, and to poor people who can't afford big-shot attorneys. And they happen far more frequently than most conservatives I know would ever care to acknowledge.
The right-wingers who left their law-and-order perch to hustle to these players' defense were no less politically motivated than the left-wingers who left their rights-of-the-accused perch to condemn them.
The right-wingers just happened to be right this time.