June 13, 2008

Legal Department

In My Bookbag: Your Witness

I love reading about crimes and criminal law. The issues are fascinating and the stories are sometimes pretty cool.

(One of my favorites is about a pre-trial proceeding where the judge decides that the defendant has been assigned to the wrong court because of his age. The defense lawyer interrupts to ask if this means the court has no jurisdiction. When the judge agrees that's true, the lawyer immediatly grabs his client and marches him out of the courtroom and down the hall toward the exit from the courthouse. They almost made it to the street before some cop figured out a legal reason to stop them. I don't know if that's really a smart thing to do, but if I'd been the client it would have impressed the hell out of me.)

Anyway, this blogging thing just paid off again. A publicist just sent me a review copy of Your Witness: Lessons on Cross-Examination and Life From Great Chicago Trial Lawyers, edited by Steven F. Molo and James R. Figliulo.

It's a collection of 50 short chapters, each written by a local lawyer. I don't know the Chicago legal community at all, so I'll have to trust the editors' assertion that these people really are great lawyers (although, for example, Terry MacCarthy has been the Federal Defender for Chicago for 40 years so he probably knows a trick or two) but some of them sure are well-known names.

Dan Webb was U.S. Attorney during the Greylord investigation into corrupt judges in Cook County and a prosecutor in the Iran-Contra mess, R. Eugene Pincham was a prominant judge who ran for Mayor of Chicago, and as I write this, Sam Adam is awaiting a verdict for his client R. Kelly.

Some famous names also provided publicity blurbs for the book, including Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens, Cook County States Attorney Dick Devine, Kenneth Starr, Andrew Napolitano, Bill Kurtis, and a whole bunch of lawyers whose names would probably be important to other lawyers. (David Boies? Brendan Sullivan? Evan Chesler?)

The book is dedicated "To all those who enjoy a good courtroom story..." which certainly includes me. I just hope the stories don't rely on more legal knowledge than I have.

So far, I've been working my way through the surprisingly complicated frontmatter, which includes a forward by author Scott Turow (whose Presumed Innocent got me interested in reading courtroom stories), a notice that all the authors' profits will be donated to the Chicago Bar Foundation, acknowledgements, the table of contents, a section describing how the contributing authors were chosen, an introduction by Steven Molo, and a curious "Cautionary Note":

The stories and references in this book are based on real-world trial experience, but as with most good stories, they all may not be entirely precise. Sometimes names and dates have been changed, sometimes the details are generalized, and occasionally some stories have gotten better with age.

Heh. In other words, these stories are just a little too entertaining to be ruined by fact checking.

I can live with that. What I'm hoping for is the literary equivalent of spending a few hours listening to a bunch of experienced lawyers tell entertaining stories over dinner and drinks. It's a good sign then, that the first story starts in Binion's Restaurant, which on most nights could include a sampling of just about anyone from the federal trial bar.

That's where the author first ran into a famous lawyer named Frank Oliver, whose courtroom dress included an amber amulet, a walking stick, and a cape... I think I'm really going to enjoy this.

Update: I did enjoy it.

2 Comments

My copy arrived yesterday, and I've made it about as far as you in the book. I got bogged down in the name-dropping immediately, partly because it's so Chicago-centric. While I know some of the people mentioned, most of the names don't mean much to me and they are just a distraction.

But I am looking forward to the stories, and I like the approach. I'll be back to review once I'm finished, but they have a set the bar high and I hope they meet it.

I decided to post about the book before finishing it because this way I get to write about it more. That helps me increase my posting frequency. I'm also hoping that multiple posts will encourage more people to send me free stuff.

I'm thinking of doing some video blogging, for which I would of course need a video camera. Hint, hint.

Leave a comment

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Mark Draughn published on June 13, 2008 1:25 AM.

RPS Championships? was the previous entry in this blog.

Getting Away With It is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Unless you request otherwise, we will assume all messages are for publication and attribution.

Red links are Not Safe For Work NSFW.

Mark

About Me

PGP key

Visit me on MySpace

Gary

Article Syndication

Find us on Facebook

Bloggy Goodness

Hit&Run
Cataloguing every inch of our daily slide down the slippery slope towards a more totalitarian state.
Reason
Free markets and free minds.
Virgina Postrel
Author, columnist, brings depth to the simplest subjects.
InstaPundit
Law professor, author, columnist, music engineer, the founding father of the blogosphere.
Marginal Revolution
Smart economists.
StrategyPage
News and commentary on all things military.
Google Blogoscoped
Smart writing about search technology.
Majikthise
Your basic working philosopher.
The Agitator
Radley Balko, libertarian at large.
Nobody's Business
Pro-Liberty. Anti-Nannies.
A Stitch in Haste
Lawyer & investment banker and part-time pop scholar.

War on Drugs

StoptheDrugWar.org
Taking the drug war debate to the blogosphere
Vice Squad
Vice, in all its forms. [review]
DrugWar Rant
More reasons every week for hating the War on Drugs.
DUI Blog
The road to hell is paved with good intentions and patrolled by Mothers Against Drunk Driving.
Last One Speaks
Injustice in the war on drugs.
The D'Alliance
The Drug Policy Alliance blog.
Vigil for Lost Promise
A counterweight to the DEA's exploitive site.

Chicagoland

BlogNetNews.com/Illinois
The Illinois blogosphere's front page.
Leslie's Omnibus
I have no idea what this blog is about.
Marathon Pundit
John Ruberry runs, drives, and blogs.
The So-Called "Austin Mayor" Blog
Just a tad to the left of my usual tastes, but always very interesting.

Blawgs

Indefensible
David Feige, creator of Raising the Bar and former public defender.
a Public Defender
Rants, explanations, and complaints from a public defender.
Simple Justice
Rants, explanations, and complaints from a private lawyer.
Defending People
The art and science of criminal defense trial lawyering
26th St. Bar Association
Chicago criminal defense.
ECILCrime
East Central Illinois criminal defense.
Austin Criminal Defense Lawyer
A decent blawg despite the SEO-friendly name.
Underdog Blog
Criminal defense, politics, and God only knows what else.
CrimLaw
A big, goofy, ballcap-wearing prosecutor who even likes dogs. [review]
Blonde Justice
Funny stories about criminal defense.
Crime & Federalism
Legal analysis and bitching about federalism issues. [review]
Seeking Justice
Tom McKenna, Virginia prosecutor on a mission from God.
Woman of the Law
Defendin', datin', drinkin'.
Prosecutor Post-Script
Sarena Straus, author and former Bronx D.A.
The Volokh Conspiracy
Smart legal experts.
Iowa Champion
Iowa criminal defense
The Legal Satyricon
Entertainment and First Amendment Law

Media

Eric Zorn
Real blogging at the Chicago Tribune, with real blogging software.
Miss Manners
A marvelous writer and deeper than you think.

Photography

iN-PUBLiC.com
Very cool modern street photography.
Digital Photography Review
Detailed reviews of digital cameras and vicious forum debates too.
Ken Rockwell
Strong opinions about photography.
Dan Heller
Photographs and the business of photography.
Bert P. Krages II
Photography and the law.

Resources

Institute for Justice
A merry band of libertarian litigators.
Bird Flu Breaking News
A bird flu news and blog aggregator.
EFF: Bloggers
The Electronic Frontier Foundation's page for bloggers.
Citizen ICAM
Map of recent criminal activity in Chicago. [review]
CIA World Factbook
A brief summary about every nation.
Wikipedia
The mostly-useful encyclopedia of everything.
Current Impact Risks
It has to happen some day.

Credits

Copyright  ©  2002-2007 Mark Draughn. All rights reserved.

Site developed by
Draughn Software Corporation

Powered by Movable Type 4.21-en
Version 4.21-en

Downtown Host

Social networking tags courtesy of the Sociotags for Movable Type plugin by Ole Wolf.

Chicago lakefront image by Ken Gibson.

Admin

Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional

Valid CSS

ICRA

Statistics

Adorama
Adorama