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- <text id=94TT0714>
- <title>
- Jun. 06, 1994: Law:Oprah! Oprah in the Court!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jun. 06, 1994 The Man Who Beat Hitler
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 30
- Oprah! Oprah in the Court!
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Are talk shows changing the sensibilities of American jurors?
- </p>
- <p>By Sophfronia Scott Gregory--Reported by Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles, Wendy Cole/Chicago,
- S.C. Gwynne/Houston and Ratu Kamlani/New York
- </p>
- <p> In the quiet of suburban Los Angeles, Moosa Hanoukai picked
- up a pipe wrench and bludgeoned his wife Manijeh to death. When
- the businessman did not contest the facts, prosecutors assumed
- they had an easy second-degree murder conviction. But Hanoukai's
- attorney James Blatt mounted this defense: his client was a
- victim of husband battering and 25 years of abuse. Furthermore,
- because of the stringencies of an Iranian-Jewish culture, Hanoukai
- felt trapped: he killed Manijeh because he was not allowed to
- divorce her. The jury empathized and found Hanoukai guilty only
- of voluntary manslaughter. Instead of 15 years to life, he may
- serve as brief a prison term as 4 1/2 years.
- </p>
- <p> The Hanoukai verdict provoked little of of the turmoil attending
- the acquittals of Lorena and John Bobbitt and the hung juries
- of the Menendez brothers. But critics charge that all these
- legal proceedings illustrate the same trend: juries are increasingly
- willing to make allowances for mitigating circumstances once
- considered largely irrelevant--abused spouses who kill, violated
- children who murder incestuous parents, victims of posttraumatic
- stress syndrome driven to violence by disturbing flashbacks.
- </p>
- <p> Such tales are the daily stuff of talk shows, of course, leading
- some prosecutors to blame Oprah and company for making jurors
- more sympathetic to novel defense strategies that try to excuse
- the accused's behavior. "I call it the Oprahization of the jury
- pool," says Dan Lungren, attorney general of California. "It's
- the idea that people have become so set on viewing things from
- the Oprah view, the Geraldo view or the Phil Donahue view that
- they bring that into the jury box with them. And I think at
- base much of that tends to say, `We don't hold people responsible
- for their actions because they've been the victim of some influence
- at some time in their life.'"
- </p>
- <p> Thanks to the talk shows, Americans are increasingly familiar
- with the language of therapy and recovery--with new syndromes,
- with the fragility of the psyche and with the painful ways the
- abused can become abusive. Nan Whitfield, a Los Angeles public
- defender, believes media coverage of abuse has raised juror
- interest in the motives and mind-set of the accused. "I think
- juries have always been interested in why something happened,"
- she says. "Once the defendant crosses the threshold and does
- present that evidence ((of his victimization)), I do think the
- jurors' ears perk up and they become more interested." She speaks
- from some experience. She won the felony acquittal of Aurelia
- Macias, accused of cutting off her sleeping husband's testicles
- with a pair of scissors, by arguing that the California woman
- had been verbally and emotionally abused throughout her marriage
- and feared for her life. Macias now faces just one count of
- simple battery.
- </p>
- <p> While authoritative studies have yet to be compiled, jury consultants
- are beginning to correlate TV habits with a juror's likely behavior
- during a trial and deliberations. Talk-show watchers, says Jo-Ellan
- Dimitrius, a jury consultant in Pasadena, California, are considered
- more likely to distrust the official version and to believe
- there are two sides to a story. At the same time, jurors who
- regularly watch such reality-based police shows as America's
- Most Wanted may harbor strong law-and-order beliefs. "We want
- to find out what drives a potential juror to watch the shows,"
- says John Gilleland, a jury consultant with FTI Corp. in Chicago.
- "It's a signal to look at a person more closely."
- </p>
- <p> Given the popularity of the victimization defense, attorneys
- have fewer qualms about taking a chance on exotic arguments
- that may, at the very least, bring their clients lighter sentences.
- The American Bar Association Journal this month cited a case
- in which a defense lawyer insisted that indulging in pornography
- was a form of intoxication--and thus reason to mitigate the
- sentence an Indiana man received for rape and murder. His client
- suffered from sexual sadism because of pornography, rendering
- him unable to gauge the wrongfulness of his conduct. Another
- lawyer in Milwaukee coined "cultural psychosis" to explain why
- an inner-city teenager killed another for her leather coat.
- The defense attorney sought to convince jurors that the girl's
- traumatic childhood in a violent inner-city neighborhood created
- a mental disorder similar to the posttraumatic stress syndrome
- that afflicts some Vietnam veterans.
- </p>
- <p> The courts refused to admit those two arguments, but attorney
- Bill Lane had better luck with a legal strategy called urban
- survival syndrome. His client, Daimion Osby, 18, of Fort Worth,
- Texas, was accosted last year by two men who in the past had
- threatened him over a gambling debt. Osby pulled out a .38-cal.
- pistol and shot the unarmed men to death. The case ended last
- month in a mistrial. Though 11 of the 12 jurors voted for conviction,
- the foreman opted for acquittal. He agreed with the argument
- that Osby shot Willie Brooks, 28, and Marcus Brooks, 19, in
- part because the environment in which all three men lived--one of Fort Worth's most dangerous neighborhoods--heightened
- Osby's fear.
- </p>
- <p> "Mr. Osby was threatened by young black men who fit the profile
- of the most dangerous men in America," says Jared Taylor, author
- of Paved with Good Intentions: The Failure of Race Relations
- in Contemporary America and an expert witness for the defense.
- "His decision to use his weapon when attacked is more understandable,
- since his assailants fit this profile." Urban survival, said
- Lane, "is an extension of the law of self-defense to try to
- make the jury understand the point of view of our client."
- </p>
- <p> But African-American critics say the urban-survival defense
- harks back to a time when blacks were seen as an indistinguishable
- whole: volatile, angry and presumed guilty. "((The Osby mistrial))
- says `these folks' can't help shooting each other," says the
- Rev. Ralph Waldo Emerson, a Fort Worth minister. "And it says
- to already nervous law-enforcement officials that they'd better
- be ready to draw when they stop someone in our community."
- </p>
- <p> The criminal-justice system is "on the verge of a crisis of
- credibility," says Los Angeles District Attorney Gil Garcetti.
- He admits that in the Menendez brothers' cases, he and his team
- underestimated "the emotional pull" the abuse defense had on
- the jurors. Garcetti hopes to head off such tendencies among
- jurors by changing the system itself. At his initiative, a team
- of judges along with the heads of the state and county bar associations
- has formed a task force to study the possibility of altering
- rules about juries. Among ideas to be explored: broadening the
- pool of jurors to include a greater range of society, as well
- as judges stressing the importance of values and personal responsibility
- when they instruct jurors on how to deliberate.
- </p>
- <p> Whitfield scoffs at such so-called reforms. "It is the very
- narrow-mindedness of some prosecutors that is always the best
- edge for a defense," she says. "They think they can just come
- into court, put on their evidence, and that will be the end
- of the story. They stop there. Well, thank God, juries don't."
- Legal scholars say juries have always been unpredictable, refusing
- to bend to controls the authorities hope to impress on them.
- "The tradition is that juries are the ultimate arbiter of law,
- not judges and not the state," says Anthony D'Amato, a law professor
- at Northwestern University. "And if they think the law is ridiculous,
- juries may ignore it. Instinctively, juries are getting it that
- they don't have to listen to the judge's instructions."
- </p>
- <p> Are juries therefore influenced by the talk shows, or do talk
- shows merely cater to popular inquisitiveness? Talk-show host
- Montel Williams argues that "we reflect society--we don't
- create society." Rose Mary Henri, executive producer of the
- Sally Jessy Raphael show, says: "I think we've helped the public
- awareness of domestic abuse and many of the abuse problems that
- exist, but I have no idea what kind of impact that has on someone
- who is serving on a jury."
- </p>
- <p> And what does Oprah Winfrey have to say about Oprahization?
- The queen of talk is willing to concede some culpability. She
- says she and her colleagues have made society more sensitive
- to the idea that crimes are not committed in a vacuum. "What
- happened to you in the past is a part of who you are today,"
- she says. However, she adds, "If, in the process, we have made
- people think that people are not responsible for their lives,
- then that is a fault." Ever the pioneer, she delivered that
- opinion last February on a segment entitled Can You Get Away
- with Murder?
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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