Esquire: The Bill of Rights Is Hanging by a Thread

Esquire: The Bill of Rights Is Hanging by a Thread by Charles P. Pierce:
The law is supposed to be our protector, not our enemy.

Since I suspect a lot of us will be talking about the inequities of the American criminal justice system (again) on Thursday—those of us who do not teach a section of Law 301: Elements of Vigilantism at respected law schools, anyway—it’s a good time to drop by the good folks at The Marshall Project to see what they’ve been up to these days.

First, though, let’s revisit Gideon v. Wainwright, the 1963 landmark case in which the Supreme Court ruled that the 14th Amendment requires the states to provide counsel to indigent defendants regardless of the offense for which those defendants have been charged. Along with Miranda, which was decided three years later, Gideon was part of a pronounced legal shift in which the Sixth Amendment rights of poor defendants were strengthened against deliberate sabotage at the state level.

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