People's Lawyer Goes To Jail: Barry
Wilson Sentenced To 90 Days In The South Bay House of
Correction In Boston
01 June 2012
By
Karin Friedemann
Boston–"The fiery
attorney who represented former Boston city councilor
Chuck Turner in his bribery trial is now headed to
jail himself," the Boston Globe reports.
Superior Court Judge Patrick Brady sentenced famed
"people's lawyer" Barry Wilson to 90 days in the South
Bay House of Correction in Boston for contempt of
court for being "loud, abusive, insulting and
disruptive."
On May 15, 2012, Wilson was escorted off to jail in
front of a courthouse crowded with his supporters.
Attorney Wilson was attempting to ensure that his
client, a 22-year-old African-American man on trial
for his life, had a jury of his peers in a first
degree murder trial. Wilson protested when the
prosecutor struck off all young people and people of
African-American descent from serving on the jury.
Wilson then "went ballistic" after the judge then
empaneled a white man who had worked many years for
Homeland Security. David Boeri of WBUR reports that
Wilson's "pyrotechnics" went on for six minutes.
"You're going to sit him. Lock me up now. Just lock me
up, lock me up and declare a mistrial," Wilson ranted.
"That's ridiculous. Fifteen years a federal agent and
he's going to be unbiased — are you kidding me?"
As Wilson strongly objected, the judge found him in
contempt. The Judge then stayed the sentence until
completion of the trial and ordered Attorney Wilson to
proceed. As a result, Wilson said he was under the
sword during the whole trial and therefore distracted
from defending his client fully.
Two days after the jury found the defendant guilty of
first degree murder, Judge Brady sentenced Attorney
Wilson to ninety days in jail.
Barry Wilson has a 36 year long history of defending
political activists, labor organizers, immigrants and
minorities. He was lead counsel in the Plymouth 25,
Marcus Jean and Amer Jubran cases, the first lawyer
for the Boston School Bus Drivers, Steelworkers Local
8751 in the 1970s, and counsel for framed
African-American City Councilor Chuck Turner. Wilson
served six months in federal prison in 1985 for
refusing to violate attorney-client privilege.
According to Wilson's lawyer, Judge Brady had dropped
"a nuclear bomb" without warning, "chilling the
advocacy" of defense attorneys.
Associate Appeals Court Justice David Mills, in
reviewing Wilson's alleged misconduct, considered it a
clear breach of decorum. "He screamed at the judge and
made a scene," Mills said.
"All I'm trying to do is stand up for my clients'
rights," Wilson said. "You got to be in those pits to
understand what you have to do.
You're standing between your client and a jail cell.
And you have an ethical, professional obligation to be
a zealous advocate."
On Thursday May 3, 2012, the Massachusetts Supreme
Judicial Court denied Attorney Wilson's motion for
further appellate review, thus upholding the Court of
Appeal's March 20, 2012 decision denying Attorney
Wilson's appeal. The Appeals Court called Wilson's
conduct "without parallel" in a 21-page rebuke.
During the contempt hearing, Wilson was defiant.
"Mr. Wilson, your behavior before me two weeks ago was
atrocious," said Suffolk Superior Court Judge Patrick
Brady, calling Wilson's conduct "the worst I've seen
in 20 years on the bench."
"I don't think my conduct was egregious or out of line
in terms of what occurred in court," the criminal
defense attorney replied to the judge in his
well-known booming voice. "In 2011 an African-American
man cannot get a fair trial."
"Wilson has a right to his own opinions but he has no
right to interrupt the proceedings and turn the
courtroom into a platform from which to hurl
disrespectful words at the judge and the criminal
justice system because he did not agree with the
judge's ruling," the Appeals Court concluded.
"This flagrantly reactionary repression — which comes
from the same poisoned well that jailed people's
lawyer Lynne Stewart (who represented the blind Shaykh
Omar Rahman) — is designed to send a threatening
message to the progressive movement and to all defense
lawyers who stand with it," comments Kirshbaum in
Workers World.
Larry Pinkney writes on BlackCommentator.com, "On
February 10th, 2005, attorney Lynne Portia Stewart,
after having been targeted for many years by the US
Government for her vigorous defense of the rights of
Black and other people of color, found herself
convicted of a despicably and conspicuously bogus
‘conspiracy to aid and abet terrorism' charge."
This was "an obvious attempt by the U.S. government to
silence dissent, curtail vigorous defense lawyers, and
install fear in those who would fight against the U.S.
government's racism," state her supporters.
Prior to sentencing, Stewart wrote a letter to the
judge pleading for mercy: "What might have been
legitimately tolerated in 2000-2001, was after 9/11,
interpreted differently and considered criminal… The
government disparages the idea of zealous advocacy
because it has never practiced criminal defense law as
I did, with heartfelt concern for my clients. I tested
the limits of what the courts and law would allow for
my clients because I believed I was, as criminal
defense lawyers often say, "liberty's last champion."
Unfortunately the rules of ethics have moved away from
excusing zealous or intemperate behavior and language.
90 days in the county jail for Wilson still seems
quite extraordinary, when the customary penalty for an
attorney's contempt of court is normally a fine, but
jail time for zealous attorneys seems to be occurring
more frequently, especially in political cases.
Michigan criminal defense attorney Scott Milliard
found himself in jail for four days after being held
in contempt by District Court Judge Kenneth Post
because he told a client at arraignment not to answer
the judge's questions about personal drug use because
the client might incriminate himself.
Kentucky attorney Amelia Adams got 6 months in jail
after she refused to disclose to District Judge Karem
the name of her 17 year old client who had sought
permission from the court to have an abortion without
her parent's consent.
Wilson told his supporters, "I'll go do my 90 days,
I'll smile through the whole 90 days. I'll go out the
way I came in… No I don't regret anything. I did what
I was supposed to do."
Wilson plans to retire after he does his time. "I'm
gone," Wilson says. "I don't want any more part of
this. Why would I want to do this job any more and be
surrounded by judges who are idiots? I legitimized a
bankrupt system, and I was very good at it. I achieved
everything I ever wanted."
Karin Friedemann is a Boston-based freelance
writer. karinfriedemann.blogspot.com