Point of View
BREAKPOINT: Bring in the clowns: Trivializing the law
By CHARLES COLSON
BreakPoint
Published February 24, 2005
While most Americans will do almost anything to avoid jury
duty, 250 prospective jurors in California are hoping that they
will be selected. Im talking about the prospective jurors
in the Michael Jackson case. For the lucky twelve, serving
in this years trial of the century is like
hitting the lottery.
Interest in the upcoming trial is so great that Santa Barbara
County officials are charging media outlets up to $800,000 for
access to the courthouse. This could be an honest attempt to
recoup costs, but in the current media frenzy, its easy to
suspect that everybody associated with the trial is looking to
cash in.
After all, weve already witnessed a judicial first: a
court-approved commercial for the defendant urging people to keep
an open mind. Then there was Michael Jacksons
father who blamed racism for his sons troublesa
claim made especially ridiculous by the fact that his son is the
only known recipient of what appears to be racial-transplant
surgery.
The prosecution isnt covering itself with honor either.
The judge cited their leaks in his decision to allow Jackson to
make the commercial. Fortunately, there wont be televised
coverage of the type that turned the O.J. Simpson trial into a
combination soap opera and courtroom drama. Unfortunately, E!
Entertainment Television will do a nightly re-enactment of
the days proceedings with actors portraying the principals
and reading from the transcripts. E! Entertainment insists on
calling the show a public service. Right.
Just as theres no shortage of media excess, theres
no shortage of media critics decrying that excess. Many of them,
however, work for cable news networks that spend an hour a week
criticizing media excess and the other 167 hours adding to it.
If the only problem with the media circus was that it was
unseemly or tacky, I wouldnt care. Id just tune it
out. But turning a court case into a soap opera and prospective
jury duty into the equivalent of an American Idol audition isnt
only unseemly; its corrosive of the legal system.
We are so accustomed to the protections afforded by our legal
system that few of us appreciate what Justice Sandra Day OConnor
called The Majesty of the Law. In fact, in an ironic
age like ours, that expression seems almost maudlin or quaint.
But ask people who have lived without the laws
protection, for whom arbitrary government action is a real threat.
Theyll tell you that calling the rule of law majestic
is anything but excessive. The idea that every member of a
society, even the ruler, is subject to a clear and understood
body of law is arguably Western civilizations greatest
accomplishment.
Treating the law as the stuff of entertainment undermines our
respect for the institutions that make and enforce the law. The
media becomes more important than justice. To contend otherwise
is to describe a parallel universe Im not familiar with.
And since law, like the rest of self-government, requires our
informed participation, anything that turns jury duty into
somebodys big break is bad news. Its just
not the kind of news the clowns in the Santa Barbara circus
understand.
Copyright © 2004 Prison Fellowship. Used with permission.