This, from Norm Pattis' legal blog, www.pattisblog.com
 There will come a time in which our incredulity about the words of  children looks as troubling as the manner in which we treated accused  witches in Salem, Massachussetts. In 1692, 19 men and women and two dogs  were convicted and executed for consorting with the devil. These deaths  were the product of the words of children who claimed to have been  seduced by a Satan-worshipping household servant named Tituba.
 Arthur Miller wrote a play about the trials in 1953, The Crucible. He  viewed the Salem trials as a parable through which the activities of the  House Un-American Committee's prosecution of Americans for disloyalty  could be viewed. What gives so much power to mere accusation?, he  wondered. Why are some times ripe for an hysteria that is so easily seen  to be false in a calmer time?
 I wish Miller were writing now. I'd like to see what he would make of  the moral panic present in our courts whenever the state chooses to  adopt the words of a child as a truth worth fighting for. We do not  permit children to make contracts and regard them as incapable in most  of life's serious affairs. But yet, if the state chooses to take the  uncorroborated claim of a child as truth, to treat it as a disclosure  based upon which it can and should deprive a man or woman of liberty,  then a defendant is left often as helpless to combat the claims as were  the true victims at Salem.
 I re-read The Crucible a few weeks ago to prepare for a civil trial in  which a client sued the mother of a child who made extravagant claims.  The mother defended by saying that it was her job to believe and support  her child. I asked the jury to conclude that it was also the mother's  job to behave responsbily, and to provide guidance to her child.  Treating children as oracles is always dangerous. We won, proving  defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress, known in  some states as outrage. It was an encouraging verdict.
 I read the following words from The Crucible to the jury during my  opening statement and closing argument. "Is the accuser always holy now?  Were they born this morning as clean as God's fingers? I'll tell you  what's walking Salem -- vengeance is walking Salem. We are what we  always were in Salem, but now the little crazy children are jangling the  keys of the kingdom, and common vengeance writes the law."
 Children do not deserve privileged status in our courts. Perhaps it is  time to reinvigorate the Mosaic "two witness" rule, once required in  homicide cases, and apply it to child sex cases. In those cases in which  liberty hangs solely on the word of a child, and in which there is no  other witness or any physical proof of harm, it should simply be too  risky to prosecute merely on the word of a child. Massachussetts learned  that the hard way in Salem; why do we need to learn the lesson all over  again?
Words Are Weapons -- Salem Revisited
Posted by
David
at
1/31/2011 07:54:00 PM
 
 
Labels: Injustice, Witch Hunt
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment