Soul of the Court
Tonya Bolden
University Press of Mississippi
Sachbuch / Biographien, Autobiographien
Beschreibung
Legal legend Judge Louis F. Oberdorfer once stated that there were “only two people in the world who really understood the Constitution” and its impact on American lives. One was Hugo Black, deceased Supreme Court justice. The other was William Benson Bryant Sr. (1911–2005), who in the early 1950s became the first Black assistant US attorney to try cases in Washington, DC’s federal court, and became that same court’s first Black chief judge in 1977. Written by award-winning author Tonya Bolden,
Soul of the Court:
The Trailblazing Life of Judge William Benson Bryant Sr. presents the story of Bryant’s remarkable, pioneering life in the law—one that began in a segregated DC and included many years as an extraordinary criminal defense attorney, most notably as the dogged defender of Andrew Mallory, a young poor Black man sentenced to the electric chair for the 1954 rape of a white woman. Bryant fought for Mallory’s life all the way to the US Supreme Court, chiefly on the grounds that Mallory’s confession—the most damning evidence against him—was the fruit of an illegal detention. The High Court overturned Mallory’s conviction.
Mallory v. United States was among the cases that culminated in the landmark 1966 Miranda rule.
Appointed to federal judicial service by Lyndon B. Johnson in 1965, Bryant’s forty-year tenure included cases ranging from overturning a corrupted election of the United Mine Workers and unconstitutional conditions at the DC jail. The biography draws upon an array of documents, newspaper articles, and interviews with the judge’s friends, colleagues, and family members, as well as oral histories, including Judge Bryant’s. Bolden beautifully narrates the story of a life of compassion, unparalleled integrity, and unwavering belief in the dignity of every human being.
Kundenbewertungen
Abe Fortas, Campbell v. McGruder, Howard University School of Law, Inmates of DC Jail v. Jackson, African American History, Black History, Howard University, Spottswood Robinson (or Spottswood William Robinson III?), Aubrey Eugene Robinson Jr., DC Jail, Eleanor Holmes Norton, Lyndon B. Johnson, Civil Rights Movement, Wetumpka, Alabama, Joseph C. Waddy, Mallory v. United States, W. Mark Felt, Oliver Gasch, Hodgson v. United Mine Workers of America, Alexander Holtzoff, John F. Kennedy, Thurgood Marshall, Dellums v. Powell, Ralph Bunche, William C. Gardner, Dunbar High, David L. Bazelon, Theodore R. Newman Jr., US District Court for the District of Columbia, George E. C. Hayes, Vernon Jordan, Segregation, Brown V. Board of Education, Charles Hamilton Houston, Earl Warren, Walter Washington