Thursday, April 19, 2007

Different Sorts of Justice

A civil lawyer would not -- should not -- be satisfied if his client received procedural justice but did not receive (what the lawyer considered) substantive justice. A criminal lawyer would not -- should not -- be satisfied if his client received (what anyone considered) substantive justice but did not receive procedural justice. A civil lawyer fights on behalf of a human being for what the lawyer believes is restorative justice. A criminal lawyer fights on behalf of a human being against what others hold is retributive justice. Both lawyers fight against unpeople (corporations, governments, organized religions). Both are motivated by compassion. I believe that the universe is ethically self-correcting. I subscribe to Clarence Darrow's view that we don't know diddly-squat about justice, and that we should cling to justice, understanding, and mercy. Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe some of you are competent to decide who goes to prison, who gets a needle in his arm, and who walks free. But I doubt it. Legislatures, judges, and prosecutors are no more competent to decide whether a person deserves to die or be imprisoned than you or I. Few and far between are the criminal cases in which the world would be a better place if the government had its way with the defendant.

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

"I believe the universe is self-correcting."

How so?

Rickster

Mark Bennett said...

Rickster -

Deliberate human effort is not necessary (or even helpful) to ensure that we all get whatever it is we deserve.