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- <text id=93TT0411>
- <title>
- Dec. 02, 1993: The "Cultural" Defense
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 02, 1993 Special Issue:The New Face Of America
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPECIAL ISSUE:THE NEW FACE OF AMERICA
- The "Cultural" Defense, Page 61
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Adam Biegel/Atlanta and John F. Dickerson/New York
- </p>
- <p> In Connecticut last April, with five friends from a Buddhist
- youth group assisting him, Binh Gia Pham doused himself with
- gasoline, flicked a lighter and exploded into flames. The 43-year-old
- immigrant was protesting attempts by the Vietnamese government
- to suppress Buddhism.
- </p>
- <p> Pham's friends had recorded his death with video cameras, then
- promptly notified Connecticut police. "It was clear," says Sergeant
- Scott O'Mara, "that they did not think they had done anything
- wrong." The state saw things differently. All five were charged
- with second-degree manslaughter, for aiding a suicide, an offense
- that carries a maximum of 10 years in prison. Fortunately for
- the five, the judge ruled that Pham would have sacrificed himself
- "with or without" his friends and granted them probation.
- </p>
- <p> New immigrants are often ignorant of U.S. laws, even as they
- hold tightly to values brought from their homelands. But business
- as usual in the old country can be a felony in the U.S.; conventional
- child-rearing practices there, for example, might be considered
- child abuse here. One result of the rising immigrant tide is
- the increasing use of "the cultural defense"--legal shorthand
- for courtroom attempts to explain the actions of foreign-born
- defendants by invoking the mores and taboos of their native
- countries. Defense attorneys use the tactic in two major ways:
- to persuade prosecutors to reduce charges and to encourage judges
- to exercise leniency at sentencing.
- </p>
- <p> Courts and prosecutors approach the matter with some puzzlement.
- In 1990 J. Tom Morgan, now the district attorney of DeKalb County,
- Georgia, decided not to press charges of child molestation against
- a South American woman suspected of stroking her male toddler's
- genitals, having concluded that "this is the way her culture
- taught her to put healthy young boys to sleep." Four years earlier,
- however, he had brought a Somali woman to trial for allegedly
- performing a clitoridectomy, traditional in some parts of Africa,
- on her two-year-old niece. In 1989 Dong Lu Chen, a Chinese immigrant
- in New York City, hammered his wife to death because he suspected
- her of cheating on him. Feminists were outraged when Chen was
- sentenced to just five years' probation. But the judge had relied
- on an anthropologist's testimony about the seriousness of infidelity
- in Chinese culture and on the defense's contention that shame
- pushed Chen to an extreme act.
- </p>
- <p> Should American jurists bend the rules to accommodate foreign
- cultures? Can judges and juries draw reliable conclusions about
- what the rules in those cultures might really be? Most jurists
- recognize that ignorance of the law has never been--and should
- not be--a basis for full acquittal. Yet in determining charges
- before trial and in sentencing afterward, U.S. law has always
- taken into account a wide array of factors that might shed light
- on the responsibility of the accused. That might be a useful--and defensible--basis for a cultural defense, but only
- after some well-defined guidelines are developed to help steer
- the courts through this vexing legal issue.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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