mirror of
https://github.com/nhammer514/textfiles-politics.git
synced 2024-10-01 01:15:38 -04:00
169 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
169 lines
9.3 KiB
Plaintext
|
<conspiracyFile>THE FORGOTTEN IMPORTANCE OF CIVIL LIBERTIES
|
||
|
By JACOB G. HORNBERGER
|
||
|
One of the real tragedies in the struggle for freedom in the
|
||
|
United States in the latter part of the 20th century has been
|
||
|
the forgotten importance of civil liberties. While economic
|
||
|
liberty provides the focal point of most of the efforts of
|
||
|
freedom devotees, and rightfully so, it is vitally important
|
||
|
that we never forget that all aspects of freedom are
|
||
|
intertwined--if we lose one, we stand in danger of losing all
|
||
|
of them.
|
||
|
Advocates of economic liberty and limited government recognize
|
||
|
that the purpose of government is to protect peaceful and law-
|
||
|
abiding people from violence and fraud. If a person inflicts
|
||
|
direct harm such as murder, rape, or theft on another person,
|
||
|
he should be punished by the State for violating the rights of
|
||
|
others.
|
||
|
But many freedom devotees believe that the analysis stops
|
||
|
there--that criminals should be punished and that's all there
|
||
|
is to it. Many of them, especially those on "the
|
||
|
Right," view the procedural safeguards in the Constitution as
|
||
|
mere "technicalities" or "obstructions" whose design and
|
||
|
effect are to help criminals go free. They see these
|
||
|
safeguards as 18th century "horse and buggy" anachronisms
|
||
|
which are inappropriate to the more complex life of the 20th
|
||
|
century.
|
||
|
They are sadly mistaken. And they do not do justice to the
|
||
|
intelligence and insight of their American ancestors who
|
||
|
fought so hard to ensure that these restrictions on government
|
||
|
power were expressly enunciated in the Constitution.
|
||
|
Tragically, the forgotten, or perhaps abandoned, importance of
|
||
|
civil liberties characterizes many freedom organizations in
|
||
|
the United States which are devoted to achieving economic
|
||
|
freedom. Recognizing the vital importance of economic liberty,
|
||
|
and giving lip service to the Constitution and the Bill of
|
||
|
Rights, they scoff at the importance of civil liberties as a
|
||
|
part of freedom in general.
|
||
|
For example, a tremendous intellectual assault on civil
|
||
|
liberties took place last year in a series of articles
|
||
|
entitled "Crime and Punishment" by Robert James Bidinotto.
|
||
|
The assault was made more meaningful because the articles
|
||
|
appeared in The Freeman, a journal published by The Foundation
|
||
|
for Economic Education of Irvington, New York, an organization
|
||
|
long known for its principled commitment to economic freedom.
|
||
|
Concerned with ever-increasing crime rates in America, Mr.
|
||
|
Bidinotto argued that the solution, at least in part, turned
|
||
|
on the curtailment of the safeguards enunciated in the Fourth,
|
||
|
Fifth, Sixth, and Eighth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution.
|
||
|
Mr. Bidinotto suggested that if Americans just loosened some
|
||
|
of the strictures in the Bill of Rights which enabled so many
|
||
|
criminals to go free, the crime problem could be significantly
|
||
|
alleviated. Unspared from Mr. Bidinotto's attack were civil
|
||
|
liberties lawyers as well as such rights as trial by jury,
|
||
|
right to bail, right to counsel, protection from unreasonable
|
||
|
searches and seizures, and protection from self-incrimination.
|
||
|
Contrary to popular opinion and what Americans are so often
|
||
|
taught by their government officials, the procedural
|
||
|
safeguards in the Constitution are not mere technicalities to
|
||
|
protect the guilty. They are instead well-established
|
||
|
safeguards to protect the innocent--those who have been
|
||
|
falsely accused of a crime by their own government officials.
|
||
|
If Americans in the latter part of this century forget this
|
||
|
vital principle, they do so at their peril.
|
||
|
I used to be a civil and criminal trial attorney. I was often
|
||
|
asked, "Don't you lose sleep when you get guilty people off
|
||
|
the hook?" My answer was, "Never." In fact, of all the
|
||
|
criminal cases I handled--drug, murder, theft, assault,
|
||
|
embezzlement, fraud--I lost sleep for several weeks in only
|
||
|
one case. That was the case in which I believed, and still
|
||
|
believe, that I had lost an innocent man to ten years in the
|
||
|
federal penitentiary.
|
||
|
What many criminal defense lawyers recognize is what our
|
||
|
American ancestors recognized, but unfortunately what so few
|
||
|
Americans today do: that the government sometimes falsely
|
||
|
accuses a person of a crime. When that happens, such
|
||
|
fundamental rights as the presumption of innocence, legal
|
||
|
counsel, trial by jury, and cross examination lose all
|
||
|
semblance of "technicalities" and become the obstacles, the
|
||
|
obstructions, the entanglements which interfere with the
|
||
|
government's ability to convict a person who has done nothing
|
||
|
wrong. The reason I never lost sleep at getting a "guilty"
|
||
|
person off the hook (which actually happened only rarely) is
|
||
|
that I knew that if it was this difficult to convict a
|
||
|
"guilty" person, that meant that it was that much more
|
||
|
difficult to convict an innocent person.
|
||
|
I once represented a security guard for a national railroad
|
||
|
line. He was one of the most competent law enforcement
|
||
|
officers I had ever encountered. His credentials included a
|
||
|
commission from the State of Texas as a Special Ranger.
|
||
|
The railroad had been suffering a series of burglaries of its
|
||
|
railroad cars. One day my client caught a juvenile breaking
|
||
|
into a railroad car which contained the household goods of
|
||
|
some American family. The boy resisted arrest and, after a
|
||
|
struggle, was taken into custody by my client.
|
||
|
For various reasons, some of which we were convinced were
|
||
|
extra-legal, the prosecutor decided to charge my client with
|
||
|
assault rather than the juvenile for burglary and attempted
|
||
|
theft. It is this type of situation which creates the
|
||
|
sleepless nights for the defense attorney--the specter of an
|
||
|
innocent client, and a law enforcement officer at that, being
|
||
|
sent to prison for a crime he did not commit.
|
||
|
Fortunately, my client was acquitted. It is impossible to
|
||
|
understate my gratitude (and that of my client) in having the
|
||
|
benefits of the presumption of innocence, trial by jury (we
|
||
|
didn't trust the judge either), and the right to cross-examine
|
||
|
the juvenile.
|
||
|
In another case, I was summoned to a local hotel by a client
|
||
|
who was being accused of murder. His girlfriend had died after
|
||
|
falling from their tenth floor hotel room. When I arrived at
|
||
|
the hotel, the police were already questioning my client;
|
||
|
yet, having just lost his girlfriend, he was obviously in no
|
||
|
state of mind to be answering questions. I immediately advised
|
||
|
him to stop responding and asked the police to stop
|
||
|
interrogating him.
|
||
|
The reaction of the police? Intent on not allowing the
|
||
|
"technicality" of the Fifth Amendment to impede the "proper
|
||
|
administration of justice," they arrested me for "disorderly
|
||
|
conduct," removed me for booking, and continued the
|
||
|
interrogation of my client. I at least had the solace of
|
||
|
believing that no court would admit my client's answers, no
|
||
|
matter how "voluntary," in any criminal proceeding.
|
||
|
The inquest ultimately established, and the district attorney
|
||
|
conceded, that the girl's death was a suicide, not a murder.
|
||
|
The grand jury did not see fit to even issue an indictment,
|
||
|
which of course, is simply a legal accusation. The truth was
|
||
|
that the man was innocent. (The truth was that so was I. I
|
||
|
hired one of the foremost criminal defense lawyers in the
|
||
|
United States who represented me for free--he had recently
|
||
|
suffered the same type of experience in a Miami court;
|
||
|
ultimately, after I refused a plea bargain, the prosecutor
|
||
|
dismissed the charges against me and apologized.)
|
||
|
To this day, when I hear an American judge instructing a jury
|
||
|
to presume the defendant innocent and not to convict him
|
||
|
unless convinced of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, I take
|
||
|
great pride in being an American; in living under a criminal
|
||
|
justice system that towers above those in other countries
|
||
|
whose criminal justice system unfortunately is the ideal of
|
||
|
many American "anti-crime fighters"--a system of presumption
|
||
|
of guilt, pretrial incarceration without bail, non-jury
|
||
|
trials, involuntary confessions, and unrestricted searches and
|
||
|
seizures, all with the single-minded purpose of punishing the
|
||
|
guilty no matter what the cost to the innocent.
|
||
|
The Founding Fathers, and the American people of the 1700s,
|
||
|
were not naive. They knew that the procedural safeguards in
|
||
|
the Bill of Rights would result in the release of many guilty
|
||
|
people. But they were willing to accept that price in order to
|
||
|
ensure that innocent people were never, or rarely, convicted.
|
||
|
They fully recognized that which freedom devotees on the Right
|
||
|
recognized--that those who violate the rights of others need
|
||
|
to be punished. But what they also recognized is what those on
|
||
|
the Right so often do not: that sometimes people are wrongly
|
||
|
accused of violating the rights of others.
|
||
|
Mr. Bidinotto is right to be concerned about crime and other
|
||
|
crises which periodically beset us. However, historically it
|
||
|
is crises that have furnished the excuse for some of
|
||
|
government's most monumental assaults on human freedom. It is
|
||
|
during these times that we must be most on our guard to
|
||
|
protect our civil liberties, not surrender them. Otherwise,
|
||
|
freedom devotees, and especially those on the Right, will find
|
||
|
that economic liberty, which they have fought so hard to
|
||
|
achieve, has been sacrificed back to government under the
|
||
|
guise of the criminal law.
|
||
|
Mr. Hornberger is the founder and president of The Future of
|
||
|
Freedom Foundation, P.O. Box 9752, Denver, CO 80209.
|
||
|
<div>
|
||
|
From the July 1990 issue of FREEDOM DAILY,
|
||
|
Copyright (c) 1990, The Future of Freedom Foundation,
|
||
|
PO Box 9752, Denver, Colorado 80209, <data type="phoneNumber">303-777-3588</data>.
|
||
|
Permission granted to reprint; please give appropriate credit
|
||
|
and send one copy of reprinted material to the Foundation.</conspiracyFile>
|