Why the Innocent Plead Guilty and the Guilty Go Free : And Other Paradoxes of Our Broken Legal System
Why the Innocent Plead Guilty and the Guilty Go Free : And Other Paradoxes of Our Broken Legal System
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Author(s): Rakoff, Jed S.
ISBN No.: 9781250829566
Pages: 208
Year: 202202
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 23.46
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"Rakoff, a prominent federal judge, patiently but relentlessly details the shortcomings of the criminal justice system . [in this] elegant broadside . The precision with which Rakoff presents his arguments belies his outrage at a system that has gone wrong at multiple turns." --Michael O''Donnell, New York Times " Compelling . Rakoff''s revelation of the misplaced faith in witness testimony and forensic evidence outside of DNA. is eye-opening." -- Michael Bobelian , The Washington Post "Federal judge Rakoff debuts with an excoriating and exceptionally knowledgeable analysis of flaws in the U.S.


justice system . Rakoff builds his case with precise evidence and clear intent. The result is a persuasive and practicable call for reform." -- Publishers Weekly "As [Rakoff] makes clear, our justice system affects all of us. We pay dearly--financially and otherwise--when people are imprisoned falsely or for longer than they should be. In addition to laying out the flaws, Rakoff offers practical solutions." -- Kirkus Review "At times scathing, provides readers one-stop-shopping for what he has learned about the justice system during his long stretch on the bench." -- Randy Maniloff , ABA Journal "One of our foremost legal intellectuals, Senior U.


S. District Court Judge Jed S. Rakoff is an inveterate optimist with a broken heart. In this vital yet amiable jeremiad, he challenges his fellow jurists on their dereliction of duty. They stand charged with having helped strip Americans of their constitutional right to trial and due process, of being handmaidens to our mass incarceration crisis, of having assented to excess punishment for the innocent and poor while having acceded to the mollycoddling of the rich and powerful. With penetrating insights that flow like silk, he offers a full indictment of our broken justice system--with clear reform proposals to help us out of this dire predicament." --Jesse Eisinger, author of The Chickenshit Club: Why the Justice Department Fail to Prosecute Executives "How does our justice system really work? Judge Rakoff knows and has raised the curtain on it all. In this brilliant, lucid and gripping account, discover how the beliefs we have about fairness and equity are challenged through reason and years of judicial experience.


Rakoff reveals what actually goes on in a courthouse and it is downright frightening." --Michael S. Gazzaniga, Director of the SAGE Center for the Study of Mind, University of California-Santa Barbara, and author of The Consciousness Instinct "Judge Rakoff''s insightful anatomy of the Nation''s state of justice provides the knowledge and understanding of its fundamental flaws and pathways to reform. Analyzed with the unique experience of a prosecutor, defense attorney, teacher and judge, Judge Rakoff powerfully outlines what''s needed to form a "more perfect union [and] establish justice" in our courtrooms and prosecutorial offices--citizens unafraid to vote for change and fairness as with the First Step Act. Why the Innocent Plead Guilty is a must read for all stakeholders in the American justice system." --Louis J. Freeh, former Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and United States District Judge for the Southern District of New York "Judge Jed Rakoff, one of America''s most prolific, informed, and outspoken judges, inside and outside the courtroom, articulately considers many inputs to the judicial process that distort and debase the system in insidious ways. Fortunately, for each unjust and damaging practice he also suggests corrective steps that can lead to a system of true justice.


Appealing to science, to citizens, and to legislators and judges he turns what could be a judicial horror story into an optimistic invocation." --Rush D. Holt, former Member of Congress and CEO Emeritus of the American Association for the Advancement of Science "America has many smart judges, and a few of them are pioneering in their decisions. Of that small number, however, only a handful are so intellectually creative, scientifically literate, and politically subtle as to become nationally renowned. Jed Rakoff, of the influential US District Court of Southern Manhattan, is one of that rare breed. In our national time of troubles, Rakoff''s fascinating Why The Innocent Plead Guilty and the Guilty Go Free could not be more timely or important." --Robert D. Putnam, Professor of Public Policy at Harvard University and author of Bowling Alone and The Upswing "There is something rotten in Justice Land.


So says Jed Rakoff, former prosecutor, defense attorney, turned Federal Judge. We convict innocent people based on dubious science. We imprison poor Black and brown men for small crimes while rarely prosecuting rich white executives for bigger ones. We incarcerate people in massive numbers. We routinely violate constitutional notions of fair play. In shining a light on the problems with our justice system, Rakoff spurs us to take actions to fix things. Now more than ever, his incredible, wonderfully expressed insights need our full and sustained attention to give us a justice system that we can all be proud of." --Elizabeth Loftus, Distinguished Professor, Psychological Science and Law, University of California, Irvine "A searing indictment of our criminal justice system by a federal judge who has seen how the system really works.


Judge Rakoff has written a magnificent book that in a very accessible manner describes how innocent people are convicted and denied relief, while guilty people go free. This is the best book I have read on what must be fixed to have a just administration of criminal laws in the United States." --Erwin Chemerinsky, Dean and Jesse H. Choper Distinguished Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley School of Law " This book is both required reading and a compelling call to action. In this bracing work, Judge Rakoff combines rigorous analysis of his 24 years on the bench, his prior experiences as a prosecutor and as a defense attorney, and his journey as the brother of a brutally murdered man. It exposes how reliance on plea bargains, demonstrably faulty forensic and eyewitness evidence, negligible oversight, and deference to the executive branch all lead even innocent people to plead guilty, produce the massive sentences making the US the most incarcerating society in history, and fail to hold the heads of large companies responsible for corporate frauds. It suggests specific reforms--such as requiring prosecutors to spend some months each year as defense attorneys--while rightly urging voters to demand better for what is done in all our names." --Martha Minow, 200th Anniversary University Professor at Harvard University and author of When Should Law Forgive? "Judge Rakoff has produced the finest and most incisive critique of the shortcomings of our criminal and civil justice systems.


Drawing on a wealth of first-hand experience, he shatters many of our foundational myths: that our justice system is based on jury trials; that people do get their day in court; that eye witness identification and forensic evidence are reliable; and that only the guilty plead guilty or are found guilty. This important and timely book should be required reading for anyone who cares about our system of justice." --Gary P. Naftalis, former Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York and co-author of The Grand Jury: An Institution on Trial "A number of judges write with style and verve, as does Judge Rakoff. But he writes with something additional: passion. After 25 years on the bench, he has sadly concluded "our system of justice is broken and needs to be fixed.


" Among his targets are the striking fact that 2.2 million Americans are incarcerated -- 25% of the world''s prisoners -- and that mandatory minimum sentences impose long and arbitrary sentences, often on minor offenders. Yet, crime levels are falling. Moving from the poor to the rich, he is also disturbed that corporate crime results only in toothless deferred prosecution agreements and that the executives who planned the crime rarely receive punishment. No other judge tells it like it is in harder hitting words. Still, Judge Rakoff remains among the most respected trial judges in the nation. This book is written not for academics or the legal elite, but the broader public. He needs to be heard.


" --John C. Coffee, Jr., the Adolf A. Berle Professor of Law at Columbia University Law School and Director of its Centre on Corporate Governance "The inhumane paradoxes and mass injustices of our courts come alive in Judge Jed Rakoff''s new book. Ranging from false guilty pleas, mass incarceration, and brain science, to sharp limits on the Great Writ of habeas corpus, and the nonprosecution of white collar offenders after the Great Recession, Judge Rakoff delivers, with characteristic passion, wit, and empirics, a must-read collection of explosive chapters that puncture one justice system myth after another." --Brandon L. Garrett, Professor of Law at Duke University and Faculty Director of the Wilson Center for Science and Justice "In Why the Innocent Plead Guilty , Judge Rakoff draws on his decades of courtroom experience and wide-ranging expertise to identify and astutely analyze patterns of injustice. This honest and trenchant critique of the justice system from one of the nation''s most distinguished judges is a must-read for anyone se.



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