President's Message
What About Justice?
Defining Justice and Its Measure
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by Gary L. Bakke ![Gary Bakke]()
TWO HUNDRED YEARS AGO, lawyers were designing and building a new 
nation that promised to be the most just in the history of the world. 
Their medical brethren were using leeches. How does the comparison look 
today? The medical profession, having embraced research and the 
scientific method, has been responsible for monumental advances in human 
health. The legal profession has grafted detail upon excruciating detail 
onto our fundamental processes to the point that process and procedure 
has taken on a life of its own, all without any formal study or 
empirical evidence that we are advancing the cause of justice.
We lawyers are masters of process and procedure - intricate, complex, 
arcane procedure. We operate with the implicit assumption that a rigid, 
lockstep subservience to ponderous precedent, process, and procedure 
assures justice. But we know better. In our daily lives we see unjust 
results but, hardened by years of battle, we chalk them up as minor 
aberrations and ignore the possibility that injustice may be at the core 
of our system.
That brings me to a remarkable program scheduled for our Annual 
Convention. Barry Scheck and Peter Neufeld, two of the three authors of 
Actual Innocence, will present a Presidential Showcase Program at our 
May convention in Lake Geneva. Ostensibly, they will be talking about 
DNA evidence, but don't be misled. In the broad sense, this program is 
not about DNA, nor is it about criminal law. It is about our court 
system, our legal system, our justice system. The DNA contribution to 
this discussion will not be in the context of how to convict the guilty 
and exonerate the innocent with powerful new biotechnology. Rather, and 
more importantly, DNA is presented as a measuring stick by which to 
gauge the effectiveness of our system. This is the first time in history 
that we have had an absolute benchmark by which to test the results of 
our system. The news is not good.
DNA is the ultimate benchmark for those few cases where bodily cells 
or fluids are evidence of the disputed facts and where specimens have 
been appropriately collected and preserved. As a wild guess, I would 
think such cases represent far less than one hundredth of one percent of 
the disputes handled by the legal system. There is no benchmark for 
accuracy or justice in that other 99.99 percent of our cases. Therefore, 
it is critical that we learn about our procedures from these unusual 
cases where a benchmark test is available.
What have Scheck and Neufeld found? They have analyzed 62 cases where 
the defendant was convicted of a capital crime and later exonerated by 
DNA evidence. In 84 percent of those cases where the defendant was 
wrongly convicted, there had been a positive, definite, and convincing 
eyewitness identification of the defendant that later was proven to be 
erroneous. In 29 percent there were two or more mistaken eyewitness 
identifications. In 24 percent of those cases where the defendant was 
convicted and later exonerated, the defendant actually had confessed, 
sometimes to avoid the death penalty. In 24 percent of the cases, the 
accused was fingered by a jailhouse snitch who won special privileges or 
a lighter sentence because of his "cooperation." In 90 percent of the 
cases there was scientific evidence (fingerprints, blood tests, fiber 
analysis, and so on) that allegedly, but erroneously, supported the 
conviction; while in 34 percent of the cases, alleged experts had 
testified to junk science that had no true scientific basis and the 
results of which could not be independently tested or replicated. In 50 
percent of the cases, there had been overt perjury or other serious 
misconduct by the police. In 42 percent there was serious misconduct by 
an overzealous prosecutor that ranged from withholding exculpatory 
evidence to coaching witnesses to lie, to improper arguments. In 27 
percent incompetent defense counsel was documented. The totals are much 
greater than 100 percent because most of the cases analyzed had multiple 
failures of the system.
The race of the defendant and the victim also had a large role in 
explaining the wrongful convictions. There is an embarrassingly high 
correlation of egregious errors and misconduct whenever there are black 
defendants and white victims. Seventy-one percent involved nonwhite 
defendants. Race matters.
We can draw several conclusions from the evidence presented by Scheck 
and Neufeld. And these conclusions should not be limited to serious 
criminal cases. They apply to our entire adversary system. It appears 
that once the participants in a trial convince themselves of the correct 
result, they tend to magnify all facets of the case that are consistent 
with their conclusions and ignore those that are inconsistent, and, by 
definition, those conclusions are drawn without the benefit of a fair 
trial because the trial is yet to be held. It also appears that the 
mental image of people and events collected by an eyewitness morphs over 
time to be consistent with other known or supposed facts, and that only 
after a successful morphing does the concrete of the memory finally set. 
It is not uncommon for a witness to be much more definite about his or 
her observations months or even years after an event than they were 
immediately following the event. Finally, and we have always known this, 
witnesses lie. Frequently the lie is to further their own best 
interests, but sometimes there is no apparent motive other than the fun 
of a lie or to stay in practice for when a good lie will be 
important.
Problems are not exclusive to the criminal justice system. Roberta 
Katz, writing about our civil justice system observes: "It is clear - it 
has always been clear - that the legal system does not function with 
mathematical precision. Because of differences in legal skills, because 
of the room for maneuver afforded by rules, and because of the inexact 
nature of precedent, opportunities for unfairness and injustice coexist 
with their opposites. But increasingly, Americans feel that civil 
litigation is not being conducted fairly ... and that this unfairness 
goes far beyond the 'traditional' and occasional injustices. Over the 
past few years, many Americans - especially those who have extensive 
contact with the system - have begun to feel that unfairness is now 
systemic.1 Remember, for most people perception is 
reality.
"The present adversarial system has been corrupted and is being 
devastated by process run amok. In theory, the rules of procedure, 
evidence, and ethics play only a supporting role, helping to set up and 
flesh out a fair contest between the adversaries, so that the merits of 
the case will become clear to the judge and jury. But to the extent that 
these rules and procedures are now used to harass, intimidate, and carry 
out a war of attrition against the adverse party, the rules become the 
substance of the case. This mocks the intent of the adversary system, 
which requires that the fight be secondary to the merits."2
Recently, I was treated to a mini-debate of a topic that had not 
previously crossed my mind. Do we have a justice system or a legal 
system? To the participants in the debate, two lawyers at the ABA 
convention, the difference was stark. One argued that the goal of the 
system is always justice and that our procedures must be subservient to 
that end. The other argued that we have a system of laws and that the 
predictability of consistent interpretation and application of law and 
procedure is essential to the functioning of society. Therefore, he 
argued that in any given instance, if the two are in conflict, law and 
established procedure must take precedence over justice. That theory 
must have been uppermost in the mind of U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice 
William Rehnquist when he wrote that a claim of actual innocence is not 
a constitutional claim and therefore, claims of actual innocence cannot 
be addressed by the federal writ of habeas corpus.3 Do 
we agree that correctly following the prescribed procedure is more 
important than determining guilt or innocence? Does the public?
I trust that we have broad, nearly unanimous agreement that the 
long-range goal of a system of laws is to promote justice, but 
apparently we have a significant disagreement about the short-range, the 
individual cases that are resolved in court. When they conflict, what's 
more important, law or justice? Who decides? How do we decide?
I am truly astounded to find myself in my 36th year as a lawyer 
confronting for the first time an issue so basic to what I do.
The legal process serves an essential function in civil society. It 
resolves disputes in a way that is generally accepted by society and 
that is generally enforceable by the government. But is it justice? I 
submit that we do not know. We have recently become aware of horrific 
instances where justice has failed. (Consider, for instance, that 12 
convicted capital criminals have been exonerated in Illinois in the last 
12 years alone.) But can we draw broad conclusions from this anecdotal 
evidence? There are divergent views about what constitutes a just 
result, and we know almost nothing about whether the legal process 
assures justice or whether it is a sword and shield used to avoid 
justice. It is extraordinary how little we really know about the quality 
of justice produced by our legal machinery. Do we care? Maybe, like 
democracy, our system is the worst in the world, except for all others. 
Is that good enough?
I suggest that it is time to identify and examine the fundamental 
assumptions underlying our laws and procedures. The adversarial system 
should be the government-sponsored way to resolve disputes. Clients are 
really in control of their cases. A result can be just, regardless of 
the time and expense invested to obtain it. Lay juries produce better 
results than would an expert tribunal. Eyewitness testimony generally is 
reliable. Extensive discovery enhances the quality of the legal result. 
Jury instructions are helpful. The list could go on.
Our entire system is constructed on these and similar assumptions. 
Where's the evidence that they are correct? Have we been using the legal 
version of leeches for 200 years? Remember, leeches made intuitive sense 
back then. Our assumptions make intuitive sense now. That's not good 
enough.
In medicine, aviation, automobiles, student testing, or almost any 
other endeavor, errors like we are seeing in the law would be cause for 
alarm, intense scientific inquiry, and possibly a Congressional 
investigation. Strangely, the law seems to be immune, or at least it has 
been. A few isolated attempts to study and improve our processes have 
been documented by a recent New Yorker article. Largely we have been 
uncooperative with these studies and unbelieving of the results.4
We are soon coming to an era when the public will decide that law and 
justice are too important to leave to the lawyers. We already see signs 
of concern in unlikely places. Scientific American has published 
statistics on criminal law, including that 68 percent of all death 
penalty sentences are subsequently found to have serious error, at least 
23 people have been mistakenly executed since 1900, and that the 
homicide rate is higher in states that have the death penalty than in 
those that do not.5 Are we ready to defend our system 
of justice when the public decides that it is unworthy? Should we 
be?
Individually, we are not in a position to undertake the necessary 
research, but our institutions are. Law schools, bar associations, court 
systems, legislatures, and foundations should be addressing these most 
fundamental of all questions. We have a National Institute of Justice 
that is a part of the U.S. Department of Justice. This sub-agency has 
the potential to undertake such research projects but to date has not 
done so. Maybe we should expect it to play a role parallel to that of 
the National Institute of Health - research and action to improve the 
national quality of justice. The question must be, "What is justice and 
how do we best assure it for all citizens?"
I challenge anyone to read Scheck's Actual Innocence,6 Roberta Katz's Justice Matters7 (a 
critique of the civil justice system), Atul Gwande's article, 
"Investigations Under Suspicion," in the New Yorker, and to watch the 
film "Hurricane" (based on the true-life story of exprofessional boxer 
Ruben "Hurricane" Carter), and then not agree that we need to take a 
hard look at the system.
Endnotes
1 Roberta Katz, Justice 
Matters, Discovery Institute, 1997, p. 29.
2 Katz, p. 73.
3 Herrera v. 
Collins, 506 U.S. 390 (1993).
4 Atul Gawande, 
"Investigations Under Suspicion," New Yorker, Jan. 8, 2001, p. 
50.
5 "Death Defying," 
Scientific American, Feb. 2001, p. 28.
6 Barry Scheck, Peter 
Neufeld, Jim Dwyer, Actual Innocence, Doubleday, 2000.
7 Roberta Katz with Philip 
Gold, Justice Matters: Rescuing the Legal System for the 
Twenty-First Century, Discovery Institute, 1997.
Wisconsin Lawyer