I watched an episode of a legal series on TV called “the
good wife”. On this particular episode, an accused person is charged with the offence
of murder and was looking at a life imprisonment sentence. He had the option of
taking a plea deal of 8 years but refused because he affirmed he was innocent and
was willing to take his chances with the jury. While the matter was ongoing in
court, counsel on the prosecution and defense side were conferring with the
judge on whether a witness should be allowed to testify in the matter. In the
usual rapport of lawyers and judges, they argued and eventually turned this into
a joke and were seen laughing heartily while the accused person looked on,
confused as to what could be really funny while his life hangs in the balance. He
looked at the jury and members of the gallery with tears in his eyes, no one
looked at him more than a criminal charged for killing a person. I guess it was
at this point he decided there was no way the case was going to go his way. He looked
around and saw the gun of the officer in court exposed. He managed to get it
and ended up shooting a number of people in the court room, his lawyer and
tried killing himself but he was out of bullet. Suffice to say this is a sad
outcome but not totally shocking given the psychological state of mind of an
accused person especially an innocent one.
My job as a first-year state counsel at the department of
public prosecution exposes me to a lot of criminal prosecution. I get to see
accused robbers, murderers, child-molesters and the likes of them in the
prosecution of offenders in pursuit of the administration of criminal justice. I
observe that the usual countenance of the officers of the state, the police,
the warders that keep these accused persons in custody is usually one of guilt
and indifference; and this is before they have been convicted by the court.
I have observed lawyers in court converse with their
colleagues, Judges, Investigating Police Officers (IPO), families of the
accused person in a way that is very indifferent to the cause of the accused
while the latter looks on sadly often times physically and emotionally drained
from his place at the dock. For some reasons, his lawyer after arguing sternly
about the unfairness of not responding to an application by the opposing party
leading to a further delay in his incarceration and count-down to his acquittal
still manages to share a hearty laugh with his colleague just shortly after
been upset. I would often look at the dock to see how they feel. Does this
person feel like his lawyer or the judge doesn’t care enough for his situation
to find humour in his very saddening situation?
I know that as lawyers we are taught in school and in the
course of early practice to learn to distance our personal feelings from our
jobs. I think however that we need to do more. We need to care more. A person
living in a deplorable state in incarceration while his life hangs in the
balance doesn’t understand that you do this every day and it is usual to see
criminals now and then hence your immunity. If we are to even consider a state
where opposing party doesn’t care whether an accused person is innocent or
guilty I think it is the duty of his own lawyer to do more. It is absolutely
unfair and cruel to laugh at silly things in court while your client is unsure
of his future survival.
The job of a lawyer is not only to ensure exoneration of his
client, he also owes him a duty of care; a humane feeling towards his plight
when the latter is going through the process. This I believe will to a large
extent reduce depression and suicidal thoughts from the state of mind of an
accused person.