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- <text id=94TT1235>
- <title>
- Sep. 12, 1994: Justice:The Banishing Judge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 12, 1994 Revenge of the Killer Microbes
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- JUSTICE, Page 74
- The Banishing Judge
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> The author of a plan to punish two young Native Americans has
- credibility problems of his own
- </p>
- <p>By David Van Biema--Reported by David S. Jackson/Klawock
- </p>
- <p> The mythologies of many Native American tribes feature a character
- known to anthropologists as the trickster. He is both good and
- bad; a creator but also a mischief maker. Above all, he is duplicitous:
- joyously, energetically deceptive. Among the Tlingit people
- of western Alaska, the trickster figure is known as the Raven.
- At the moment, however, someone bearing a striking resemblance
- to him is roaming the Ketchikan area under another name.
- </p>
- <p> Last Thursday marked the first day of what is without question
- the most widely publicized legal proceeding in Tlingit history.
- In the 750-person lumber and fishing town of Klawock, Alaska,
- 12 self-proclaimed tribal judges pondered the fate of two young
- criminals. The "tribal court" had the trappings of authenticity:
- the hall had been ritually purified with a "devil's club" branch,
- and some of the judges wore red and black ceremonial blankets
- and gestured with eagle and raven feathers. But there were abundant
- reasons for skepticism, both of the tribunal and the sentence
- it was likely to mete out. Not least of which was its presiding
- magistrate: one of the more creative cross-cultural jurists
- in recent legal history, Rudy James.
- </p>
- <p> The saga began in August 1993, when Adrian Guthrie and Simon
- Roberts, both 17, and raised in Klawock, ordered a pizza in
- Everett, Washington. When Domino's Pizza deliveryman Timothy
- Whittlesey showed up, Guthrie distracted him and Roberts hit
- him repeatedly with a baseball bat, leaving him, his assailant
- now admits, "kinda in convulsions." A bystander saw the teens
- removing Whittlesey's beeper, $40 and the pizza. The two Tlingits
- pleaded guilty to first-degree robbery. Superior Court Judge
- James Allendoerfer was expected to assign prison terms of up
- to 5 1/2 years.
- </p>
- <p> Enter Rudy James. The 58-year-old Klawock native had long ago
- moved to Washington and married the ex-wife of one of Allendoerfer's
- colleagues on the bench. At the behest of Roberts' grandfather,
- he presented himself as a Tlingit tribal judge and suggested
- an exotic deal. If Allendoerfer bound the boys over to their
- tribe, they would undergo a traditional Tlingit punishment:
- banishment on remote, uninhabited islands, while contemplating
- their sins and hewing logs with which to build Whittlesey a
- house.
- </p>
- <p> The offer had its attractions. It was eminently multicultural;
- it addressed a well-founded Native American grievance regarding
- the law's treatment of Indian minors; and it dovetailed nicely
- with the public misgivings about the criminal justice system's
- inability to rehabilitate. By contrast, James offered up the
- Alaskan islands as a type of Rousseau's Eden where, he enthused,
- the boys' "attitudes can be affected by nature and nature's
- god. By beholding ((nature)) you become changed."
- </p>
- <p> Allendoerfer bought it. Postponing official sentencing for 18
- months, he accepted a $25,000 property bond from the boys' families
- and put them in James' custody. Then he went on vacation.
- </p>
- <p> That was prudent, given the information that had already begun
- leaking out. Although James has no criminal convictions, he
- has a history of bad debts, and civil court judgments against
- him have reportedly reached $60,000. Klawock's only federally
- recognized Tlingit organization, the Klawock Cooperative Association,
- sent a letter disassociating itself from the case. Sociologists
- were up in arms. Says Sasha Hughes, author of two books on Native
- Alaskan heritage and a longtime James observer: "Banishment
- is not part of Tlingit culture. Rudy is a con man. He just makes
- it up as he goes along." Adds Aaron Isaacs of the Cooperative
- Association: "People want to know. Who's he representing?"
- </p>
- <p> A good question. In Klawock last Thursday, the panel of judges
- was peculiarly constituted. Five of the 12 were named James;
- a sixth was Roberts' grandfather; a seventh was invited on at
- the last minute by Guthrie's mother. Relatives also made up
- a large fraction of the hearing's meager Tlingit audience. After
- the purification ceremonies and a speech by 92-year-old George
- Jim exhorting the Tlingits to "march together; that way we will
- not fall apart!" the defendants entered, dressed in reversed
- tunics, to indicate their shame, and traditional red head coverings.
- </p>
- <p> While Whittlesey, whom James had promised restitution for the
- partial deafness he has suffered, looked on from the audience,
- both boys apologized for their crime. But then, responding to
- leading questions by their elders, they ticked off a list of
- extenuating circumstances: they had been drunk; Roberts always
- carried a bat with him for fear of gangs; he had "heard a report
- that one of the Domino's Pizza deliverymen had a gun" and might
- be dangerous. The day's session ended with a statement by one
- of the elders that "it's a known fact that under the influence
- of alcohol you can break all the Ten Commandments of God." The
- two defendants, who sometimes had trouble keeping a straight
- face during the proceedings, replaced their ceremonial headdress
- with baseball caps, jumped into a jeep and drove home for the
- evening, grinning.
- </p>
- <p> On the following day, to nobody's surprise, they were banished
- for from 12 to 18 months apiece. It will be interesting to see
- how onerous that penalty actually turns out to be.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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