Defending People

the tao of criminal-defense trial lawyering

Go Go Godzilla

I had a con­ver­sa­tion recently with a woman who had accused her hus­band of hit­ting her. I was explain­ing her posi­tion in the crim­i­nal case: “You won’t have a lawyer, since you’re not a party. You’re a wit­ness.” “I’m not a wit­ness,” she replied indig­nantly, “I’m a vic­tim.”

This is, I’m afraid, the spirit of these Amer­i­can times: if vic­tim­hood isn’t acknowl­edged, the vic­tim is offended. There is value in being a vic­tim. It’s a point of pride.

Inter­twined with this vic­tims’ pride, there is a move­ment of vic­timoc­racy afoot in Amer­ica. To the vic­ti­moc­rats, not han­dling vic­tims with kid gloves is an impeach­able offense. To the vic­ti­moc­rats, it is appro­pri­ate to to honor the dead with destruc­tion or by nam­ing laws that will put peo­ple in prison after them.

Hous­ton has a victimocrat-in-chief, Andy Kahan (who has found a way to make vic­timoc­racy pay) thinks vic­tims’ rights should be con­sti­tu­tion­ally enshrined, and that vic­tims should be treated with respect and dig­nity … unless they are the vic­tims of false alle­ga­tions. The vic­ti­moc­rats even have their own week at which they cel­e­brate fic­tional inflated num­bers of crimes.

The vic­ti­moc­rats’ only tool is fear. “I am a vic­tim,” they say, “and if you don’t pass this leg­is­la­tion you will be one too.”

How are the vic­ti­moc­rats doing? Con­sider Pres­i­dent Obama’s appear­ance on the 1000th edi­tion of America’s Most Wanted, about which Norm Pat­tis writes:

The pres­i­dent sat for an inter­view with one of the angri­est and most self-righteous men in the United States, John Walsh. He’s the father of Adam Walsh, a lit­tle boy abducted and mur­dered sev­eral decades ago. Since then, we’ve all felt the pain of the Walsh fam­ily.
.…
Pres­i­dent Obama’s deci­sion to appear on America’s Most Wanted was not the rea­soned and mea­sured response of a com­man­der in chief com­mit­ted to rule of rea­son. Obama sat with Walsh and was lec­tured by the talk-show host about the need to take DNA sam­ples of every per­son accused of a felony. The pres­i­dent lis­tened to a man who has lent his son’s name to con­tro­ver­sial fed­eral leg­is­la­tion that has been declared uncon­sti­tu­tional in some fed­eral courts and is des­tined for a Supreme Court chal­lenge. What was Obama try­ing to accom­plish with this appearance?

We had eight years of fear­mon­ger­ing in D.C.; as Norm says, “It’s look­ing more and more like the same old stuff. Yet another Amer­i­can pres­i­dent cos­set­ing the fear­mon­gers? Ho hum.

This is the Amer­i­can vic­timoc­racy, flex­ing its polit­i­cal mus­cle. It’s rep­tile writ large.

Are those of us who believe that love will tri­umph over fear delud­ing ourselves?

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About The Author

Mark Bennett got his letter of marque from the Supreme Court of Texas in May 1995. He is famous for having no sense of humor when it comes to totalitarianism.

Comments

4 Responses to “Go Go Godzilla”

  1. Nathaniel Tarlow says:

    The cult of vic­tim­hood is another unfor­tu­nate out­growth of polit­i­cal correctness.

  2. Don Waggoner says:

    As an attor­ney this inter­ests me. In Florida, we have con­sti­tu­tion­al­ized “victim’s” rights. They have a right to avoid seques­tra­tion, they have a right to be heard at sen­tenc­ing, and they have other rights. Butm their name appears nowhere in the charg­ing doc­u­ment as a party to the case, other than as a wit­ness. The “State” is listed as a vic­tim. Because the “State” is the plaintiff/victim, state­ments the per­son whose purse was stolen can­not be entered against them as a party oppo­nent, osten­si­bly because they are not a “party” to the pro­ceed­ing. This among other evi­den­tiary mat­ters. I think they should be included as party oppo­nents– State of Florida, obo Jane Vic­tim, Plain­tiff v. Jack Badguy, Accused/Defendant. And yes, I have been the vic­tim of a very bad crime since becom­ing a defense attor­ney. I have no prob­lem with treat­ing vic­tims respect­fully, but we should get rid of the legal fic­tion that they are not “party opponents.”

  3. Clay S. Conrad says:

    I have started rou­tinely fil­ing motions in crim­i­nal cases that the com­plain­ing wit­ness not be referred to as a “vic­tim” until and unless there is a con­vic­tion. I had only one judge (Don Strick­lin) deny it, but the State real­ized she was wrong and never referred to the CW as a victim.

    The State loves to refer to the “vic­tim,” “vic­tim this,” “vic­tim that.” Every time, they are stat­ing that the defen­dant is a victimizer.

    Lan­guage mat­ters. Call­ing some­one a vic­tim assumes the defen­dant is guilty; for there to be a vic­tim, there must be a victimizer.

    In cases where iden­tity is the issue, of course, I leave this out.

  4. that vic­tims should be treated with respect and dig­nity … unless they are the vic­tims of false allegations”

    OR if the vic­tim advo­cates leniency for the defendant.

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