Wednesday, December 17, 2008

Gitmo Lawyers Are the Latest in Radical Chic

How about some pro bono work for the government?

Within the ranks of our leading law schools, law firms and legal centers, it would be hard to find a cause more popular than the detainees of Guantanamo Bay. Every lawyer wants his own detainee or detainee group. The result is that dozens of the world's most dangerous men now have their own legal Dream Teams.

In this context, wouldn't it be refreshing to hear the dean of some Ivy League law school, or a partner in a white-shoe law firm, stand up and say these words: "As part of our pro bono commitments, we hereby offer our services to the overworked men and women trying to keep our nation safe from terrorist attack."

You can imagine the reaction. Back in 2007, we had a taste when a Defense Department official suggested that corporate America might look askance at the high-priced law firms devoting their time and talents to those held at Gitmo. In accord with long-established Beltway rituals of public penance, this official soon published "An Apology to Detainees' Attorneys" in the Washington Post -- and soon after resigned.

[what do you call 200 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean?

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a good start.]

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