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Friday, November 30. 2007
WPFW (with Von Martin early in the tape). Amy Goodman. During the first week at law school in Washington, D.C., an area native described Washington as a small town. The notion that I might have moved to a small town from a huge city (Manhattan after Boston) threw me for a loop. I realized that Washington had a much smaller population than New York City and Boston, but had not stopped to check whether its population is dwarfed by New York's and Boston's, which it is. Plenty of other places have much smaller populations, but as major cities go, this is a small town in many ways. One feature of Washington that made me immediately feel at home was Pacifica Radio station WPFW 89.3 FM. I thrived on the pure jazz and other great music, and took to some of the political programming, although some of it seemed whacked out of the stratosphere. I later learned about ugly infighting that would follow at Pacifica, and I do not know how much Pacifica and its listenters have recovered from that. At the same time, I continue listening; I am not aware of any other radio station that refuses dollars from government and large corporate entities. WPFW has its own homey feel. Five years after relocating to Washington, I was driving nowhere in particular one early Saturday evening, and heard highly-talented Carribeana host Von Martin soliciting a ride for a woman named Gabi to a Curry-out at the station. Von and Gabi accepted my offer to drive her to the station, where I had a blast. Von showed me his cramped studio, where I suppose most of the announcers spoke to listeners. He gave me a cool tape of Caribbean music. I found some tasty vegetarian eats among the meat-laden Caribbean food. The party apparently went very late; I departed much earlier than that. Yesterday, as I often try to do when at the courthouse in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, I had lunch at the vegan Everlasting Life restaurant in Capitol Heights, Maryland. The restaurant apparently is geared more towards health than bottom-line profit, proclaiming, for instance: "Once you get beyond all the studies, the statistics, the hype and the hoopla, it comes down to providing people with the knowledge on how to eat to live, the ability to access the things they need to make it a reality, and the support and dedication to encourage them to do so." The restaurant is surrounded by a sea of fast food joints, and seems always busy. On yesterday's visit to Everlasting Life, I met a uniformed animal control officer, and remarked that as much as I believe strongly in animal welfare, perhaps he and I one day would be on opposite sides of the court if I were to defend in criminal court someone accused by him of animal cruelty, which I would gladly do, just as I gladly defend all criminal defendants. He mentioned being vegetarian for fifty years (he is sixty-two, and looks to be in great health) and mostly or all vegan now. He mentioned Dick Gregory, who is apparently a vegetarian, and has shown himself to be very likeable when I bumped into him at the nearby Whole Foods market and a few years earlier at another store. He said that Mr. Gregory will be at WPFW's December 15 thirtieth anniversary celebration. It looks like quite a celebration -- not an inexpensive one to attend, but charging a little less than what plenty of other non-profit fundraisers charge. I decided to tell you about it. Also in attendance at WPFW's December 15 celebration will be Peace and Justice Award recipients Amy Goodman of Democracy Now, Ron Clark, John Conyers, Sonny Rollins (who presented a smashing Carnegie Hall performance in 1978 that I attended), and Dr. Doroth Height. I likely will miss the event due to a prior obligation. If you go, please update me. If you are a WPFW listener, please remember to donate to the station, which cannot live on love alone. Jon Katz.
Friday, November 30. 2007

Washingtonian Magazine has renewed my Top Lawyers ranking in its December 2007 issue at page 145. When Washingtonian last published such a ranking, in 2004, I was included for the first time in that listing. Washingtonian calls the list "800 Top Lawyers" with the following description: "Here are Washington's best -- the top 1 percent -- in 26 legal specialities." Washingtonian further describes the list: "This is the fifth time that The Washingtonian has compiled a list of top lawyers. It is created primarily by peer recommendations. We asked, by telephone and e-mail, some 1,000 attorneys who (excluding themselves and members of their firms) the top practitioners in their fields are and whom they would hire to represent them in a range of areas." Why should I even be speaking of this ranking? The magazine admits it is subjective. On the other hand, I like that a magazine as mainstream and widely-read as the Washingtonian gives exposure to such lawyers as myself who focus on doing good with the law, rather than on pleasing the mainstream. Do I like the publicity that this ranking brings our firm? Certainly, just as I also like putting my AV-rating and media appearances on the back of my business card. The Washington, D.C., area, is an incredibly competitive market for providing legal services. Such free publicity helps us avoid spending much on marketing, and to focus our time on serving our clients and our revenue on quality support staff. Of course, I get a kick from media exposure, always tempering it with the knowledge that silence is sometimes the best substantive response to the media. Jon Katz.
Thursday, November 29. 2007
Bill of Rights. (From the public domain.) In such Virginia counties as Arlington and Fairfax, ringing cellphones are confiscated in the courtroom and returned only the next business day. In the federal courthouse in Alexandria, cellphones, blackberries, PDAs and the like are banned. In Robert Restaino's courtroom one day, however, he ordered dozens of people in his courtroom locked up as collective punishment for the ringing of an unknown person's cellphone. Two weeks ago, New York's Commission on Judicial Conduct put its foot down, and voted to strip Mr. Restaino of his black robe. Let us count the ways in which Mr. Restaino urinated on the Constitution: He ordered a five-minute recess for courthouse personnel to search for the phone, during which time all courtroom visitors were unlawfully detained by having been barred from leaving. He interrogated courtroom visitors about the cellphone without telling them their right to remain silent, and which put him in the role of prosecutor, judge and jury (granted, a jury trial right may not have been available). He overruled the pleas of phone-ringer suspects to avoid lockup to enable a medical visit for possible surgery, and to be home for school for a young child. He locked up dozens of people over the cellphone incident without having probable cause to do so (and for what crime? Contempt of court?), and without sufficient grounds to set bail (apparently setting the same bail for everyone, rather than bail individually tailored to assure each person's return to court for a hearing on the matter) rather than permitting the suspects (over a dozen of whom could not afford the bail amount) to be permitted to promise to return to court. Ultimately -- but too late -- he reversed his position after learning that the news media was hot on this story. The New York Commission on Judicial Conduct determined that "Throughout all the proceedings that morning, [Judge Restaino] did not raise his voice; he appeared calm and in control." Too bad he did not have the restraint, then, not to commit the blunder that he committed by detaining, interrogating, and locking up dozens of people obliged to be in his courtroom that day. In sum, judges are humans, and, therefore, can make mistakes, and even blunders. Collectively, they should not be cloaked in anything more glowing than that. Jon Katz. ADDENDUM: Articles on this scandal are here, here, here, and here.
Wednesday, November 28. 2007
Bill of Rights. (From the public domain.) A few years ago, an ACLU staffer told me that her son -- already a Republican -- surmised aloud that she probably would be pleased if he grew his hair long and wore an earring. She confirmed he was correct; he responded that this was the reason he did not do it. I took to activism when my family members were not activists (and at least one counseled several times to "play the game," although I have never thought there was just one game, and have thought the notion strange of being expected to follow the rules of a game I had nothing to do with creating), aside from an uncle who talks passionately about justice and a brother whom I joined for two protests against Gulf War I ten years after I became active with Amnesty International. For me, making such decisions was about figuring out what was right, rather than reacting against or in favor of any family members. When they deviate from their parents' political paths,. children seem to do so sometimes as a way to feel independent, sometimes for reasons divorced from the parents, and sometimes after having had a chance to observe, experience and dislike the parents' political path. Interestingly, the three children of famous peace activists Elizabeth McAlister and the late Phil Berrigan (a good friend and teacher) all admired their parents' activism very much, and joined in it to a substantial extent. The three children grew up not only to activist parents, but within the Jonah House non-violence resistance community in Baltimore, which I have enjoyed visiting several times. Here is a video of Liz and Phil's eldest daugher, Frida, discussing the activism of her parents, and her own activism. Aside from their overall optimism -- tempered by their deep sorrow over the violence saturating the world -- one thing in particular that inspires me about Frida, her parents, and the Jonah House community members is their absence of fear about death, and about achieving financial security, let alone their disinterest in accumulating massive wealth. The Jonah House members are singleminded in the pursuit of peace. Jon Katz.
Tuesday, November 27. 2007
Bill of Rights. (From the public domain.) When one of my clients is charged with such offenses as sexual assault, child pornography distribution and soliciting a minor online for sexual activity, inevitably we end up discussing exposure to registering as a sex offender in the event of a conviction. People required to register as sex offenders do not only face being listed on sex offender registry websites, but -- depending on the state -- also face being banished from living in wide swaths of land that are within specified distances from schools, parks, and various other places where minors tend to be found. In one state -- Florida, I believe -- some registered sex offenders find that living under bridges sometimes is their only remaining alternative to satisfy the living distance requirements. Georgia statutory law designates so many locations -- including school bus stops -- from which registered sex offenders may not live within one thousand feed, that registered sex offenders cannot find houses and apartments in which to live. Fortunately, the Georgia Supreme Court on November 21, 2007, struck down such overly broad residence restrictions, leaving the state's legislators to go back to the drawing board. My quick review of the Georgia Supreme Court's opinion does not suggest that the court will prevent all distance limits on where registered sex offenders live, but that the court found the current statutory residency requirements so overbroad as to strike them down wholesale rather than narrowing the statute. However, the Georgia Supreme Court refused to invalidate the statutory provision that create distance limits concerning where registered sex offenders may work. Jon Katz. ADDENDUM: Thanks to Corey Yung for blogging on this case.
Monday, November 26. 2007

Photo from website of U.S. District Court (W.D. Mi.). A recent New York Times article reports that prosecutors in such states as New Jersey are paring down their reliance on civilian witnesses, to reduce obligations to protect witnesses in a climate where the police often are unable to protect witnesses' safety. Nevertheless, if the prosecutor knows that any witnesses have exculpatory information, the prosecutor must disclose the witnesses' identifying information under Brady v. Md., 373 U.S. 83 (1963). Jon Katz. ADDENDUM: Thanks to Scott Greenfield for having posted on this article.
Sunday, November 25. 2007

Too many people are unjustly caged in United States prisons. (Image from Bureau of Prisons' website). On a visit today to the National Geographic's wildlife exhibit in Washington, D.C., I happened upon an information card about tonight's airing of Prison Nation on the National Geographic Channel at 8:00 p.m. Eastern time. A National Geographic blogger listed some of the most outrageous facts about the American prison system, as follows: "The U.S. has five percent of the world’s population, it has 25% of the world’s inmates. California operates the third largest penal system in the world, right after China and the United States. 80,000 inmates are kept in isolation nationwide. A rising suicide rate is linked to the increasing use of solitary confinement. Nearly 70 percent of inmate suicides are in isolation. 25% of all state prison beds are occupied by the mentally ill. Tops in Los Angeles county jail, followed by New York’s Rikers Island." "700,000 inmates are released from prison each year - more than two-thirds of them end up back behind bars within three years. Assaults on inmates have risen 65% in the past decade." I do not think we will achieve a fair and just criminal justice system -- including policing, prosecuting, judging, imprisoning, and releasing and supervising on probation and parole -- until people insist on and achieves a radical and positive overhaul of policing and police hiring, training, supervision, and discipline; and of the rest of the criminal justice system, including heavily decriminalizing drugs (and legalizing marijuana), eliminating mandatory minimum sentences, and eliminating criminal penalties for activities as minor as prostitution. That is my modest proposal. Jon Katz.
Sunday, November 25. 2007
Image from Bureau of Engraving and Printing's website. For a year before law school, from 1985 to 1986, I worked as a financial auditor with the Irving Trust Company in the belly of the Wall Street capitalist beast that loved the money flowing during Reagan's reign. I know by now that enlightened capitalists exist, but on Wall Street I often felt like I was searching for a needle in the haystack, including with the unapologetic and very open racially insensitive comments of too many of my colleagues in the financial auditing department, even when not at happy hour, of which there were many. For personal growth, of great benefit to me at this job was rubbing elbows with a much larger cross section of people than I had ever dealt with before on a daily basis, My job at Irving Trust seemed neither to contribute much to nor detract from society. I essentially was obtaining and reviewing raw data to assure that the bank was following proper accounting, financial, and regulatory controls, in order to protect the bank's profits, to keep shareholders and customers happy, and to keep bank regulators interested in spending most of their time elsewhere. I liked having a chance for the first time in my life to live a full year on the income I earned myself, and ordinarily to be living on bankers' hours with plenty of free time on the weekends and evenings to enjoy Manhattan, except when holed up at hotels on a few assignments in upstate New York. I did not find anything to whistleblow about at Irving Trust -- I made clear in brief words to my colleagues my attachment to the American Civil Liberties Union's agenda -- although I cannot imagine any fears that would prevent me from doing so anywhere. Of course, some people pay a high price for whistleblowing. One of them is Cynthia Fitzgerald, who relocated to a new city and joined a very large health care company, all bright eyed and bushy tailed. Read this article and see this video to see how lonely and costly it can become for such pure-intentioned people as Ms. Fitzgerald to blow whistles from within the capitalist beast's belly, rather than keeping focused on the almighty dollar. Jon Katz.
Friday, November 23. 2007
Bill of Rights. (From the public domain.) On November 19, 2007, the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit limited the government's authority to ban alcohol in strip clubs. The case is , Eric Joelner Fish, Inc. v. Village of Washington Park, __ F.3d _ (7th Cir. Nov. 19, 2007). Thanks to my friend Marc Randazza for linking to fellow First Amendment Lawyers Association member Cari Wiggins' discussion of this Eric Joelner Fish case. Jon Katz.
Thursday, November 22. 2007

Regardless of their party affiliation, presidents each year "pardon" a turkey, only to leave 48 millions more for Thanksgiving slaughter. I became a strict vegetarian in 1988 -- and am now 99% vegan, after a three-year process eating up and down the food chain -- after finding no logical basis to being an activist for human rights for many years, while still eating other mammals, birds and fish, and after learning that my health would suffer not at all by making the switch, and would in fact improve and has improved. I usually have not gotten on a vegetarianism soapbox unless asked or taunted. This year I add Thanksgiving to my vegetarian soapbox motivations. Dozens of people wish me happy Thanksgiving. The happiness of the holiday is substantially diminished for me with the holiday's heavily traditional focus on eating slaughtered turkeys. Every Thanksgiving meal I have joined has always had a turkey as a major centerpiece. Many of the same justifications for subjugating animals for food and other human uses have been used in the past to justify subjugating minorities, women ,and other subjugated people. Am I merely wearing rose-colored glasses to expect that we would have a much less violent, more peaceful, harmonious, just and caring society if meat consumption plummeted? I do not think so. Fortunately, vegetarian and animal rights activists offer some great alternatives to having a turkey corpse at the Thanksgiving dinner table. For years, the Vegetarian Society of the District of Columbia has hosted a sellout gourmet vegan Thanksgiving celebration. On November 17, Poplar Spring Animal Sanctuary in Poolesville, Maryland, hosted a vegan potluck Thanksgiving With the Turkeys. PETA's website details the horrors that meat turkeys face from birth to slaughter, and provides some delicious vegan recipes together with suggestions for a Thanksgiving table that replaces a real turkey with soy-based Tofurky and Unturkey Here is a suggestion to help reduce harm to animals produced and caught for the food industry (and to improve the environment, improve health, and reduce hunger in the process), rather than a suggestion for becoming completely vegetarian: Try going meatless and fishless for a day. If you do not now eat meat and fish every day, try adding an additional day that you eat vegetarian. If you end up feeling better spiritually and physically as a result, consider continuing to reduce or eliminate your meat and fish consumption. If even one million people followed this approach, millions of land and water-based animals could be spared annually. That would give me more to be thankful for at Thanksgiving. Jon Katz.
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