Alton Maddox Jr.: The criminal justice system in Black and white
Sunday, March 20, 2005 at 09:30AM
TheSpook
It has been very frustrating for me to
watch any legal proceeding from the sidelines over the past fifteen
years. This is especially true of the Kobe Bryant and Michael Jackson
cases. For televising criminal prosecutions, California v. O.J. Simpson
is the seminal case. Unlike Kobe and Michael, O.J. had the intelligence
to retain a real lawyer and to change the venue from a military
tribunal to relatively free soil territory. Within the past quarter of
a century, no person has contributed more to the coffers of the legal
profession and the media than O.J. He gave lawyers the “Lawyers Relief
Act.” Court-TV got its legs from O.J. Scores of lawyers have been hired
as analysts for media outlets. The criminal justice system has engulfed
more than 7 million defendants, most of whom are Black. Blacks are in
greater need of legal education and assistance than any other ethnic
group. Kobe and Michael are in the best position to challenge the
criminal justice system, but they refuse to raise the critical
questions. Of all the defenses that were available to Kobe and Michael,
they have limited their arguments by saying, in effect, “I did
something but I didn’t do that.” This is akin to looking at the ground
and scratching your head while talking to a white person. Kobe and
Michael refuse to turn on the heat. Neither Kobe nor Michael is seeking
to expose the racism in the criminal justice system. [more]
Pictured above: Who Watches this 'ish? No that's not Michael Jackson - it is actor Edward Moss
dressed up like Michael Jackson. With cameras banned from the Santa
Maria, Calif., courtroom where Jackson is being tried on molestation
charges, the E! Entertainment Television re-enacts the case for you
with actors. Periodically, "legal experts" chime in and provide
"analysis" on the case - this is for real yall. So who is the freak yall? Mike or the people watching this stuff? [more]
Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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