THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG IN NORTH CAROLINA:
WHAT YOU CAN DO NOW (WITHOUT SPENDING MONEY)
TO KEEP THE PRESSURE ON BAD LAWYERS AND BAD JUDGES
By David Grossack
Decent people everywhere took genuine satisfaction at the irony of the televised bar
proceedings involving disgraced Democratic prosecutor Michael Nifong recently.. Here was the
prosecutor being prosecuted. Here was the inversion of justice, the purported defender of truth,
justice and the American way being exposed as a purveyor of lies, injustice and subversion of
constitutional right, and better yet, he is being made to pay for it.
Regrettably, Mr. Nifong is not a rare creature. From coast to coast, America is plagued with
the twin epidemics of legal and government abuse. Defining legal and government abuse is a
task I will assume right now.
Legal abuse occurs when lawyers, their clients, and/or court officials and judges use and
manipulate the court system to deliberately and maliciously perpetuate an injustice.
Government abuse occurs when politicians, police or bureaucrats use and manipulate their
authority for the purpose of achieving an illegitimate goal.
Legal and government abuse often occurs for obvious reasons. Governments often do
mischief through legal process, and government is the largest employer of lawyers.
The examples of these varieties of bad behavior are so frequent and so many it would fill
several encyclopedias.
America experienced it in Brooklyn, New York recently when several judges and lawyers
were caught on tape fixing divorce cases. The story made the New York media, but not the
national media.
The story should have made people realize that if this kind of conduct occurs in Brooklyn, it
can occur in Portland, Maine, Seattle, Washington or anywhere else, including here.
Similarly, if a prosecutor is suppressing evidence favorable to the defense in North Carolina,
then a prosecutor here might be capable of the same kind of thing. Because sequestering
evidence is done in secret, no doubt a lot of instances of it go on all the time and nobody learns
about
How many people are in jail because their families could not afford million dollar legal
defense teams with state of the art private detectives the way the Duke kids’ families did?
Isolated incident?
How many people know that in the aftermath of the massacre of the Branch Davidian church
community in Waco, Texas by the ATF, a United States Assistant Attorney was indicted for
obstruction of justice, lying to a grand jury and lying to federal investigators in the course of a
review of the incident. Few know, because the media pretty much ignored the story.
The litany goes on and on. Last year one Arthur Scott, Jr., a Housing Court judge in
Manhattan, was detected accepting $14,000.00 in bribes to fix landlord tenant cases. The kind
of impact this kind of incident makes on the public is devastating. Respect for the law and
respect for the legal system is diminished and society as a whole pays the price
In Chicago, a case fixing epidemic led to the ends of the careers of several judges in the
nineteen nineties.
Every time a judge accepts bribe or a prosecutor violates the canons of ethics, it means that
somebody else is being deprived of fair treatment in a case.
But the really serious epidemic is probably not one of bribery. It is one of entrenched power
protecting other entrenched interests, creating a wall between the ordinary people on one side
and local power elites on the other who rule the roost in police departments, bar associations and
the Courthouse. In these situations where favorites are played all the time, outsiders lose
because they are outsiders and insiders win because they are insiders, because they are local
elites or connected with local elites, or at least the power structure of police, prosecutors,
insurance companies’ local counsel, other corporate interests and government interests. It is
almost always rigged against the little people.
Years ago the author was in the business of conducting training programs for unrepresented
people with legal problems. We did a national outreach, publishing training manuals and a
newsletter, and conducted seminars in which we taught legal skills to pro-se litigants.
Word traveled to just about every corner of the country of what we were doing and we were
besieged by letters from people in small rural towns who told of sheriffs, lawyers and town
officials harassing, extorting, framing, and even sexually assaulting them.
We got letters from people whose lawyers had taken their money and done little or nothing,
who had missed deadlines, had not communicated with them, had serious conflicts of interest or
who had engaged in terrible overreaching by means of fee gouging. There were too many of
these stories not to take the problem seriously.
We contacted Congressman James Sensenbrenner and asked his House Judiciary Committee
to consider holding hearings on legal abuse in the United States. No letters or phone calls were
ever returned. We picketed Sensenbrenner’s office out of frustration. It was especially
distressing that Congressman Sensenbrenner was a fellow Republican.
Rather than being part of the problem, every Republican legislator should be anxious to be
part of the solution. This is in fact an opportunity not only to stand up for the constitutional
rights of constituents, but also to demonstrate to the voting public that we care about this
extremely urgent and serious crisis.
There is a very clear way the Republican party can now take the initiative to deal with legal
abuse on a national basis. This would be at the state legislative level, where 50 House Judiciary
Committees have the ability to hold hearings and exercise subpoena powers. The legislature can
hold hearings on the reasons why there is public dissatisfaction with lawyers and the legal
system, and to determine what, if anything, can be done to improve the situation.
People who care about this extremely critical issue can write to their state legislators and
suggest “Perhaps it would be a good idea to hold hearings to determine if the public is well
served by the state of conditions in the courts and the quality of justice offered by the legal
profession.” No such hearings have ever been held in the history of America. I for one would
like to testify, and I am sure many others among my readers also would.