Word: goldberg
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Even so, said Goldberg, the defendant without money remains under severe disadvantages...
...raise bail, while the accused who can afford bail is free to return to his family and his job. Equally important, he is free during the critical period between arrest and trial to help his attorney with the investigation and preparation of his defense." After the trial, said Justice Goldberg, the fine-or-imprisonment choice often specified by law for minor offenses "may also be unfair to the defendant without means. The 'choice' of paying $100 fine or spending 30 days in jail is really no choice at all to the person who cannot raise $100. The resulting...
What About the. Victim? Goldberg did more than criticize; he proposed some reforms. After "careful screening," he said, most defendants should be released without bail pending trial. And "we should certainly consider adopting procedures whereby persons erroneously charged with crime could be reimbursed for their expenditures in defending against the charge...
...well aware, Goldberg added, that whenever anyone urges more help for the accused, "the question arises: But what about the victim? We should confront the problem of the victim directly; his burden is not alleviated by denying necessary services to the accused. Many countries throughout the world, recognizing that crime is a community problem, have designed systems for government compensation of victims of crime. Serious consideration of this approach is long overdue here. The victim of a robbery or an assault has been denied the protection of the laws in a very real sense, and society should assume some responsibility...
...opening example of a state where justice is often colored by the condition of a defendant's pocketbook, Justice Goldberg might well have mentioned Georgia, where one out of every 434 citizens is behind bars-as against a national ratio of one out of every 1,000. Of the more than 5,000 Georgians imprisoned in state institutions each year for misdemeanors, 40% are locked up simply because they are unable to pay small fines. Examples: - A 17-year-old girl got one year for having two jars of moonshine in her house; the alternative fine...