Let's Get Free

A Hip-Hop Theory of Justice

Hardcover, 214 pages

English language

Published 2009 by New Press.

ISBN:
978-1-59558-329-1
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
286490647

View on OpenLibrary

No rating (0 reviews)

Paul Butler was an ambitious federal prosecutor, a Harvard Law grad who traded in his corporate law salary to fight the good fight. It was those years on the front lines that convinced him that the American criminal justice system is fundamentally broken -- it's not making the streets safer, nor helping the people he'd hoped, as a prosecutor, to protect.

In Let's Get Free, Butler, now an award-winning law professor, looks at several places where ordinary citizens interact with the justice system -- as jurors, crime witnesses, and in encounters with the police -- and explores what "doing the right thing" means in a corrupt system.

Butler's provocative proposals include jury nullification -- voting "not guilty" in certain non-violent cases as a form of protest, just saying "no" when the police request your permission to search, and refusing to work inside the criminal justice system. And his groundbreaking "hip-hop …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Criminal justice, Administration of -- United States
  • African Americans -- Legal status, laws, etc
  • African American public prosecutors -- Washington (D.C.) -- Biography