Lex Fridman Podcast - #170 – Ronald Sullivan: The Ideal of Justice in the Face of Controversy and Evil

Episode Date: March 22, 2021

Ronald Sullivan is a law professor at Harvard and previously a lawyer for Harvey Weinstein and Aaron Hernandez. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Brooklinen: https://brooklin...en.com and use code LEX to get $25 off + free shipping - Wine Access: https://wineaccess.com/lex to get 20% off first order - Munk Pack: https://munkpack.com and use code LEX to get 20% off - Blinkist: https://blinkist.com/lex and use code LEX to get 25% off premium EPISODE LINKS: Ronald's Twitter: https://twitter.com/profronsullivan Ronald's Website: https://hls.harvard.edu/faculty/directory/10870/Sullivan Ronald's Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ronald_S._Sullivan_Jr. Ronald's NY Times Article: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/24/opinion/harvard-ronald-sullivan.html PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (09:48) - Harvey Weinstein (15:53) - Harvard succumbs to pressure (27:08) - Safe spaces (33:26) - Cancel culture (36:23) - Evil (40:33) - Hitler (45:09) - Criminal justice system (49:10) - Innocence (51:39) - Racism in the judicial system (1:03:41) - George Floyd (1:06:06) - The trial of Derek Chauvin (1:19:55) - O. J. Simpson (1:24:29) - Aaron Hernandez (1:36:10) - Book recommendations (1:43:45) - Advice for young people (1:45:53) - Death (1:47:59) - Meaning of life

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 The following is a conversation with Ronald Sullivan, a professor at Harvard Law School, known for taking on difficult and controversial cases. He was on the head legal defense team for the Patriots football player Aaron Hernandez in his double murder case. He represented one of the Gina 6 defendants and never lost the case during his years in Washington, D.C.''s Public Defender Services Office. In 2019, Ronald joined the legal defense team of Harvey Weinstein, a film producer facing multiple charges of rape and other sexual assault. This decision met with criticism from Harvard University
Starting point is 00:00:39 students, including an online petition by students seeking his removal as faculty dean of Winter Pals. Then a letter supporting him signed by 52 Harvard Law School professors appeared in the Boston Globe on March 8, 2019. Following this, the Harvard administration succumbed to the pressure of a few Harvard students and announced that they will not be renewing Ronont Sullivan's Dean position. This created a major backlash in the public discourse over the necessary role of universities in upholding the principles of law and freedom at the very foundation of the United States.
Starting point is 00:01:19 This conversation is brought to you by Brooklyn and Sheets, wine-access online wine-store, Monk Paclo Carp Snacks, and Blinkist app that summarizes books, click their links to support this podcast. As a side note, let me say that the free exchange of difficult ideas is the only mechanism through which we can make progress. Truth is not a safe space. Truth is humbling, and being humbled can hurt. But this is the role of education, not just in the university, but in business and in life. Freedom and compassion can coexist, but it requires work and patience. It requires listening to the voices and to the experiences unlike our own. Listening, not silencing.
Starting point is 00:02:06 I'll do a few minutes of ads now and no ads in the middle. I tried to have fun with these, even though my voice is genetically incapable of sounding like I'm having fun. I do give you time stamps, so go ahead and skip if you do not happen to have the patience of a saint. But I do try to make it so there are at least like somewhat interesting to listen to. But either way, please do click the links in the description for the sponsors. It really is the best way to support this podcast. This episode is sponsored by
Starting point is 00:02:35 Brooklyn & Sheets. I am not an expert on comfort. I've often throughout my life slept on a carpet without anything but a jacket and jeans, but these sheets have been amazing. In general, for many years, I've mostly lived a minimalist life in the things that eat in the content I consume, in the possessions that I actually have, material possessions, in the things that have hung up on my wall, which is usually nothing, except maybe a picture of fine men and Einstein. And when you have a minimalist life like that,
Starting point is 00:03:09 you could really appreciate quality. I think there's two kinds of products. Of course, it's a Venn diagram, but the first category is the ones you get to show to the world, and the other is the ones you get to make yourself feel happy like internally in transit versus extrinsic, I guess. Again, it's probably significant overlap, but I do
Starting point is 00:03:32 appreciate quality. I do appreciate products that make me feel good. These sheets are that. So it's nice. I will never be dependent on these things. If I do feel myself becoming dependent, I will let go of them. Anyway, go to brooklynin.com and use code Lex to get 25 bucks off when you spend $100 or more. Plus get free shipping as brooklynin.com and enter code Lex. This podcast is also sponsored by Wine Access Online Store with expertly selected wine. They make it easy for anyone, i.e. me, from novice to expert to pick and order the most delicious wines from around the world. Their team tastes over 20,000 bottles a year and handpicks only the best for
Starting point is 00:04:20 their customers. There's something profoundly joyful about me imagining the tasting of 20,000 bottles. I personally had a lot of joyful experiences drinking wine because uh, at least for me, wine has been a thing that brings close friends and family together over a great meal. So I kind of think there's several categories of alcohol. Wine is like about sharing love with friends and then there's like the other side of the spectrum, which is tequila, where every single experience I've had or tequila was involved. I've regretted. So, if you choose wine, you're choosing love.
Starting point is 00:04:59 If you're choosing tequila, you're choosing danger, but sometimes a little dangerous fun. So, but most of the time you want to stick with wine, you want choosing danger, but sometimes a little dangerous, so. But most of the time you want to stick with wine, you want to stick with wine access. Let me recommend, this is where I try to silence smart and sophisticated, the 2018 radio silence kebberna 7 young napa valley. It's definitely a good one, and it's affordable given the high, high quality. So get 20% off your first order when you go to wineaccess.com slash Lex. The discount will be applied at checkout.
Starting point is 00:05:31 That's wineaccess.com slash Lex. To see my winepicks and to get discount. And I hope you and I, dear listener, will share wine together one day. This episode is also brought to you by Monkpack, Kiro Grenola bars, that contains just one gram of sugar, two grams of net carbs, and there are only 140 calories. It's actually interesting to think about what kind of fuel is needed when you're on the low carb diet, when you all of a sudden step up the performance needs. So like if I usually run, you know, five or six miles here and there, do pushups and pull-ups and so on,
Starting point is 00:06:12 if I go all of a sudden I have to run like an ultra marathon, which I hope I don't have to, but I very well might need to once I meet David. There's quite a few people that say you could do the ultra on continuing low carb like ultra low carb, but there's also a lot of people that say, well no in these cases even if you low carb you need to load up on carbs, all that stuff, there's so many debates, they're so confusing, I don't know what to make of it. I think I'd go back to the same thing, I will go back to which is you have to experiment on yourself and you have to listen to your body. Like don't listen to a random guy in the internet. Listen to your body over that. Okay, get 20% off your first purchase of any Monkpack product by visiting Monkpack.com
Starting point is 00:07:01 and enter code Lexit checkout. If you don't like it for any reason, I would personally first question your tastes, but monkpack will not. They'll exchange the product or refund your money guaranteed. That's monkpack.com and enter code Lex. This episode is also supported by Blinkus. My favorite app for learning new things, Blinkus takes the key ideas from thousands
Starting point is 00:07:26 of nonfiction books and condenses them down into just 15 minutes they can read or listen to. They've also started doing this weirdly amazing thing called Shortcasts, which summarizes podcasts. They have a selection of podcasts and they summarize them. The ones they choose are like the really well-organized podcast, but it's kind of fun to think about them trying to summarize like this podcast that I'm doing or even like the crazy or long form podcast like a Joe Rogan experience kind of podcast. Good luck trying to summarize that. Chips, DMT and aliens. There you go.
Starting point is 00:08:00 That's the summary. I should work for Blinkist. I really actually enjoy this idea of hardcore summarization, like some people listen to podcasts like 2X or even more faster. Like there's a lot of value to that or even just like with Blinkist summarizing books that are like huge into just like a few pages. I really think that's exceptionally valuable, but it also has to be coupled with actually reading long form content or listening to long form content as well. And I actually think there's space to listening to stuff at like one X and pausing and giving your mind a chance to think. I really think there's power and silence.
Starting point is 00:08:43 You can call it boredom or whatever, but it's that meditative silence that you want to escape. There's an anxious desire to escape that silence, but if you resist that anxious desire, I think brilliant ideas come. So that's the value of long-form content. But then the short-form content is really valuable
Starting point is 00:09:00 because you get condensed information. So you're maximizing on information, with long-form content, you're maximizing on the silence and the chance to think. Anyway, go to Blinkist.com slash Lex to start your free seven-day trial and get 25% off a Blinkist Premium membership. That's Blinkist.com slash Lex. This is the Lex Friedman podcast and here is my conversation with Ronald Salman. You were one of the lawyers who represented the Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein in advance of a sexual assault trial.
Starting point is 00:09:57 For this, Harvard forced you to step down as faculty deans you and your wife of Winter Pous. Can you tell the story of this saga from first deciding to represent Harvey Weinstein to the interesting complicated events that followed? Yeah, sure. So I got a call one morning from a colleague at the Harvard Law School who asked if I would consent to taking a call from Harvey.
Starting point is 00:10:27 He wanted to meet me and chat with me about representing him. I said, yes. And one thing led to another. I drove out to Connecticut where he was staying and met with him and some of his advisors. And then a day or two later, I decided to take the case. This would have been back in January of 2019, I believe. So the sort of cases, I have a very small practice,
Starting point is 00:10:58 most of my time is teaching and writing, but I did take cases that most deem to be impossible. I take the challenging sorts of cases. And this was fit the bill. It was quite challenging in a sense that everyone had pre-judged the case. When I say everyone, I just mean the general sentiment in the public had the case pre-judged, even though the specific allegations did not regard any of the people in the New Yorker. That's the New Yorker article that sort of exposed everything that was going on allegedly with Harvey. So, I decided to take the case and I did. Is there a philosophy behind you taking on these very difficult cases?
Starting point is 00:11:57 Is it a set of principles? Is it just your love of the law? Or is there like set of principles why you take on the cases? Yeah, I do. I'd like to take on hard cases and I'd like to take on the cases that are with unpopular defendants, unpopular clients. And with respect to the latter, that's where Harvey Weinstein fell. It's because we need lawyers and good lawyers to take the unpopular cases because those sorts of cases determine what sort of criminal justice system we have. If we don't protect the rights and the liberties of those whom the society deems to be the least in the last, the unpopular client, and that's the camel of those who the society deems to be the least in the last,
Starting point is 00:12:45 the unpopular client, and that's the camel's nose under the tent. If we let the camel's nose under the tent, the entire tent is going to collapse. That is to say, if we short-circuit the rights of a client like Harvey Weinstein, then the next thing you know someone will be at your door, knocking it down and violating your rights. There's a certain creep there with respect to the way in which the state will respect the civil rights and civil liberties of people. These are the sorts of cases that test it. For example, there was a young man many, many years ago named Ernesto Miranda. By all accounts, he was not a likable guy. He was three time on knife thief and not a likable guy, but Roy or stepped up and took his case. And because of that, we now have the Miranda warnings, you have the right to remain silent, those
Starting point is 00:13:45 warnings that officers are forced to give to people. So it is through these cases that we express oftentimes the best values in our criminal justice system. So I proudly take on these sorts of cases in order to vindicate not only the individual rights of the person who am I representing, but the rights of citizens writ large, who most of whom do not experience the criminal justice system. And it's partly because of lawyers who take on these sorts of cases and establish rules that protect us average everyday ordinary concrete citizens. As from a psychological perspective, just you as a human, is there fear, is there stress from all the pressure? Because if you're facing, I mean the whole point, a difficult case,
Starting point is 00:14:39 especially in the latter, that you mentioned of the going against popular opinion, you have the eyes of millions potentially looking at you with anger. As you try to defend, you know, this, these set of laws that this country is built on. No, it doesn't stress me out particularly. It's, you know, it sort of comes with the, the territory. I try not to get too excited in either direction. So a big part of my practice is wrongful convictions. And I've gotten over 6,000 people out of prison who've
Starting point is 00:15:16 been wrongfully incarcerated and a subset of those people have been convicted. And you know, if people have been in jail 20, 30 years, who have gotten out, and those are the sorts of cases where people praise you and that sort of thing. And so, look, I do the work that I do. I'm proud of the work that I do. And in that sense, I'm sort of a part-time dower. The expression reversal was the movement of the dower. So I don't get too high, I don't get too low. I just try to do my work and represent people to the best of my ability. So one of the hardest cases of recent history
Starting point is 00:15:55 would be the Harvey Weinstein in terms of popular opinion or unpopular opinion. So if you continue on that line, where does that story take you of taking on this case? Yeah, so I took on the case, and there was some, some few students at the college.
Starting point is 00:16:15 So, let me back up. I had an administrative post at Harvard College, which is separate entity from the Harvard Law School. Harvard College is the undergraduate portion of Harvard University, and the law school was obviously the law school. And I initially was appointed as master of one of the houses. We did a name change five or six years into it, and we're called faculty deans.
Starting point is 00:16:39 But the houses at Harvard are based on the college system of Oxford and Cambridge. So when students go to Harvard after their first year, they're assigned to a particular house or a college and that's where they live and eat and so forth. These are undergraduates. These are undergraduate students. So I was responsible for one of the houses as its faculty dean. So it's an administrative appointment at the college. And some students who didn't, clearly didn't like Harvey Weinstein began to protest about the representation. And from there, it just mushroomed into one of the most cra craving cowardly acts by any university in modern history.
Starting point is 00:17:28 It's just a complete and utter repudiation of academic freedom. And it is a decision that Harvard certainly will live to regret. It's frankly, it's an embarrassment. We expect students to do what students do. And I've encouraged students to have their voices heard and to protest. I mean, that's what students do. What is vexing are the adults, the dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Claudine Gay, absolutely craven and cowardly, the dean of the college, same thing, Rakesh Karana, Craven and cowardly. They capitulated to the loudest voice in the room and ran around afraid of 19-year-olds. Oh, 19-year-old drop set.
Starting point is 00:18:22 I need to do something. And it appeared to me that they so, so desired the approval of students that they were afraid to make the tough decision and the right decision. It really could have been an important teaching moment at our heart. Very important teaching moment. So they forced you to step down from the faculty
Starting point is 00:18:45 dean position at the house. It, um, I would push back on the description a little bit. So, so, so, so I, so I, I don't write that the, um, you know, the references to the op-ed, I did the New York Times. Yeah. Harvard made a mistake by making me step down or, or something like that. So I don't write those things. I did not step down and refuse to step down. Harvard declined to renew my contract. And I made it clear that I was not going to resign as a matter of principle and forced them to do the cowardly act that they, in fact, did.
Starting point is 00:19:25 And you know, the worst thing about this, they did the college Dean Gay and Dean Karana commission this survey. They've never done this before, survey from the students, you know, how do you feel at Winthrop House? And the funny thing about this survey is they never released the results.
Starting point is 00:19:45 Why did they never release the results? They never released the results because I would bet my salary that the results came back positive for me. And it didn't fit their narrative because most of the students were fine. Most of the students were fine. It was the loudest voice in the room.
Starting point is 00:20:04 So they never released it. And you know, loudest voice in the room. So they never released it. And I challenged him to this day, release it, release it. But no, but they wanted to create this narrative. And when the data didn't support the narrative, then they just got got silent. Oh, we're not going to release it. The students demanded it. I demanded it, and they wouldn't release it because I am, I just, I just know in my heart of hearts that it was, it came back in my favor that most students at Winterhouse said they were fine. There was a group of students that weaponized a term unsafe. They said, we felt unsafe and they bantied this term about.
Starting point is 00:20:54 But again, I'm confident that the majority of students at Winter Pous said they felt completely fine and felt safe and so forth. And the super majority, I am confident, either said I feel great at Winthrop or I don't care one way or the other. And then there was some minority who had a different view. But lessons learned,
Starting point is 00:21:22 it was a wonderful opportunity at Winthrop amid some amazing students over the my 10 years as master and then faculty dean. And I'm still in touch with a number of students, some of whom are now my students at the law school. So in the end, I thought it ended up being a great experience. The national media was just wonderful. And it's just wonderful.
Starting point is 00:21:49 People wrote such wonderful articles and accounts and whacked their finger appropriately at Harvard. Compare me to John Adams, which I don't think is an app comparison, but it's always great to read something like that. But anyway, that was the Harvard versus Harvey situation. So that seems like a seminal mistake by Harvard and Harvard is one of the great universities in the world. And so it's successes and its mistakes are really important for the world as a beacon of like
Starting point is 00:22:26 what how we make progress. So what lessons for the bigger academia that get that's under fire a lot these days? What bigger lessons do you take away? How do we make Harvard, Great, how do we make other universities Yale, MIT, great in the face of such mistakes? Well, I think that we have moved into a model where we have the consumerization of education. That is to say we have We have feckless administrators who make policy based on what the students say. Now this comment is not intended to suggest that students have no voice in governance, but it is to suggest that the faculty are there for a reason.
Starting point is 00:23:23 They are among the greatest minds on the planet Earth in their particular field. That's schools like Harvard and Yale, Stanford, the schools that you mentioned MIT, quite literally the greatest minds on Earth. They're there for a reason. Things like curriculum and so forth are rightly in the province of faculty. And while you take input
Starting point is 00:23:48 and critique and so forth, ultimately, the grownups in the room have to be sufficiently responsible to take charge and to direct the course of a student's education. And, you know, my situation is one example where it really could have been an excellent teaching moment about the value of the Sixth Amendment, about what it means to treat people who are in the cross-airs of the criminal justice system, but rather than having that conversation, it's just this consumerization model. Well, there's a lot of noise out here, so we're going to react in this sort of way. Higher education, as well, unfortunately, has been commodified in other sorts of ways that has reduced or impede at hamper these schools' commitments to free and robust and open dialogue. So to the degree that academic freedom doesn't sit
Starting point is 00:24:56 squarely at the center of the academic mission, any school is going to be in trouble. And I really hope that we weather this current political moment where 19-year-olds without degrees are running universities and get back to a system where faculty, where adults make decisions in the best interests of the university and the best interests of the students, even to the degree, some of those decisions may be unpopular. And that is going to require a certain courage. And hopefully in time, and I'm confident that in time, administrators are going to begin to push back on these current trends.
Starting point is 00:26:00 Harvard's been around for a long time, for a reason. And one of the reasons is that it understands itself not to be static. So I have every view that Harvard is going to adapt and get itself back on course and be around another 400 years. At least that's my goal. So, I mean, what this kind of boils down to is just having difficult conversation, difficult debates. When you mentioned sort of 19-year-olds,
Starting point is 00:26:36 and it's funny, I've seen this even at MIT, it's not that they shouldn't have a voice. They do seem to, I guess you have to experience it and just observe it, they have a strangely disproportionate power. Right. It's very interesting to basically, I mean, you say, yes, there's great faculty and so on, but you know, it's not even just that the faculty is smart or wise or whatever, it's that they're just silenced.
Starting point is 00:27:08 So the terminology that you mentioned is weaponized as sort of safe spaces or that certain conversations make people feel unsafe. What do you think about this kind of idea. Is there some things that are unsafe to talk about in the university setting? Is there lines to be drawn somewhere? And just like you said on the flip side with a slippery slope, is it too easy for the lines to be drawn everywhere? Yeah, that's a great question. So this idea of unsafe space, at least the vocabulary derives from some research, academic research, about feeling psychologically unsafe. And so the notion here is that there is, there are forms of psychological disquiet that impedes people from experiencing the educational environment to the greatest degree possible.
Starting point is 00:28:14 And that's the argument. And assuming for a moment that people do have these feelings of of of disquiet at elite universities like MIT and like Harvard. That's probably the safest space people are going to be in for their their lives because when they get out into the the quote unquote real world, they won't have the the sorts of nets that these schools provide, safety nets that these schools provide. So to the extent that research is descriptive of a place like MIT, Yale, any of these great institutions and come out the same person that you were when you went in. That seems to be a horrible waste of four years and money and resources. Rather, we ought to challenge students that they grow, challenge some of their most deeply held assumptions. They may continue
Starting point is 00:29:29 to hold them, but the point of an education is to rigorously interrogate these fundamental assumptions that have guided you thus far, and to do it fairly and civilly. So to extent that there are lines that should be drawn, there's a long tradition in the University of Civil Discourse. So you should draw lines somewhere between civil discourse and uncivil discourse. The purpose of a university is to talk difficult conversations, tough issues, talk directly and frankly, but do it civilly. And so to yell and cuss at somebody and that sort of thing, well, do that on your own space, but observe the norms of civil discourse at the university. So look, I think that the presumption ought to be that the most
Starting point is 00:30:30 difficult topics are appropriate to talk about at a university, that ought to be the presumption. Now, you know, should MIT, for example, give its improm- impromotor to someone who is exposing the flat earth theory, you know, the earth is flat, right? So there, if certain ideas are so contrary to the scientific and cultural thinking of the moment, yeah, there's space there to draw a line and say, yeah, we're not going to give you this platform to tell our students that the earth is flat. But a topic that's controversial but contestatory that's what university is uh... or four if you don't like the idea
Starting point is 00:31:30 present better ideas and articulate and i think there needs to be a mechanism outside of the space of ideas of humbling i got i've done martial arts for a long time i got my ass kicked a lot i think that's really important. I mean, the, in the space of ideas, I mean, even just in engineering, just all the math classes, my memories of math, which I love, it's kind of pain. It's basically coming face to face with the idea that I'm not special, that I'm much dumber than I thought I was, and that anything accomplishing anything in this world requires
Starting point is 00:32:13 really hard work. That's really humbling. That makes you, that puts you, because I remember when I was 18 and 19, and I thought I was going to be the smartest, the best fighter, the Nobel Prize winning, you know, all those kinds of things. And then you come with face to face with the reality and it hurts. And it feels like there needs to be efficient mechanisms from the best universities in the world.
Starting point is 00:32:38 Did without abusing you, it's a very difficult line to walk without like mentally or physically abusing you, be able to humble you. And that's what I felt was missing in these very difficult, very important conversations is the 19 year olds, when they spoke up, the mechanism for humbling them with ideas was missing. I kind of got broken down because, as you say, there does, like, isensed fear. Everything was permeated with fear. And fear is paralyzing. Fear is destructive, especially in a place that's supposed to be all about freedom of ideas. Right. And I don't know if you have anything
Starting point is 00:33:28 and you thought to say on this whole idea of cancel culture, where people, a lot of people use it as become political, so stay maybe outside of the world to politics. Is this, do you have thoughts about it? Does it bother you that people are sort of put in this bin and label this something and then thereby you can ignore everything they say? I mean, Stephen Pinkett, there's a lot of Harvard folks that are fighting against, against these set of ideas, but do you have thoughts? I think that we as a culture are way, way, way too quick
Starting point is 00:34:07 to cancel people. And it's become almost reflexive now. You know, someone say something or makes an off-air comment, even a mistake. There's a move to simply cancel folks. So I think that this quote-unquote cancel culture has really gotten out of control at this point. It's forcing people to be robotic in many ways.
Starting point is 00:34:44 No, but as I say, now I know I'm venturing into your intellectual domain. to be robotic in many ways. No offense. Yes. As I say, now I know I'm venturing into your intellectual domain for future robots watching there's no offense. And there are minutes discouraging a lot of good people from getting into public life in any sort of way because who needs the stress of it? When it's some sense you're in inspiration that you're able to withstand the pressure,
Starting point is 00:35:10 the pressure of the masses, but it is a sad aspect of human nature that we kind of get into these crowds and we start chanting and it's fun for some reason. And then you forget yourself and then you sort of wake up the next day, not having anticipated the consequences of all the chanting. And we would get ourselves in trouble in that.
Starting point is 00:35:33 I mean, there's some responsibility on social networks and the mechanisms by which they make it more frictionless to do the chanting, to do the cancelling, to do the outrage and all that kind of stuff. So I actually on the technology side have a hope that that's fixable, but it does seem to be, you know, it almost like the internet showed to us that we have a lot of broken ways about which we communicate with each other and we're trying to figure that out.
Starting point is 00:36:04 Same with the university, this mistake by Harvard showed that we need to reinvent what the university is. And I mean, all of this is it's almost like we're finding our baby dear legs and trying to strengthen the institutions that have been very successful for a long time. The really interesting thing about Harvey Weinstein, and you're choosing these exceptionally difficult cases, is also thinking about what it means to defend evil people. What it means to defend these, we can say, unpopular and you might push back against the word evil, but bad people in society. First of all, do you think there's such a thing as evil or do you think all people are
Starting point is 00:36:55 good and it's just circumstances that create evil and also is there somebody too evil for the law to defend? So that's a, so the first question, that's a deep philosophical question, whether the category of evil does any work for me. It does for me. I do think that, I do subscribe to that category that there is evil in the world as conventionally understood it. that there is evil in the world as conventionally understood. So there are many who will say, yeah, that just doesn't do any work for me. But the category evil, in fact, does intellectual work for me.
Starting point is 00:37:37 And I understand it as something that exists. Is it genetic or is it the circumstance? Like what kind of work does it do for you intellectually? I think that it's a highly contingent, that is to say that the conditions in which one grows up and so forth, begins to create this category that we may think of as evil. Now, there are studies and what not that show that certain brain abnormalities and so
Starting point is 00:38:16 forth are more prevalent in, say, serial killer. So there may be a biological predisposition to certain forms of conduct, but I don't have the biological evidence to make a statement that someone is born evil in. And, you know, I'm not a determinist thinker in that way. So you come out the womb evil and you're destined to be that way. To the extent there may be biological determinants, they're still require some nurture as well. So. But do you still put a responsibility on the individual? Of course. Yeah. We all make choices. And so some responsibility on the individual. Of course, yeah. We all make choices. And so some responsibility on the individual indeed, we live in a culture unfortunately
Starting point is 00:39:15 where a lot of people have a constellation of bad choices in front of them. And that makes me very sad. Yeah. That the people grow up with predominantly bad choices in front of them. And that makes me very sad. That the people grow up with predominantly bad choices in front of them. And that's unfair. And that's that's that's on all of us. But yes, I do think we make we make choices. Wow. That's so powerful. The constellation of bad choices.
Starting point is 00:39:42 That's such a powerful way to think about sort of equality, which is the set of trajectories before you that you could take if you just roll the dice. Because life is a kind of optimization problem. So you take us into math over a set of trajectories under imperfect information. So you're going to do a lot of stupid shit to put it in technical terms. But the fraction of the trajectories that take you into bad places or into good places is really important. And that's ultimately what we're talking about. And evil might be just a little bit of a predisposition biologically, but the rest is just
Starting point is 00:40:31 trajectories that you can take. I'm studying Hitler a lot recently. I've been reading probably way too much. And it's interesting to think about all the possible trajectories that could have avoided this individual developing, the hate that he did, the following that he did, the actual final. There's a few turns in him psychologically where he went for being a leader that just wants to conquer and to somebody who allowed his anger and emotion to take over. So he started making mistakes in terms of military, really speaking, but also started doing evil
Starting point is 00:41:19 things. And all the possible trajectories that could have avoided that are fascinating, including he wasn't that bad at painting at a drawing. Right, that's true. That is from the very beginning. And it's time in Vienna, there's all these possible things to think about. And of course, there's millions of others like him that never came to power and all those kinds of things. So, but that goes to the second question on the side of evil. Do you think, and Hitler's often brought up as like an example of somebody who is like they pity me of evil?
Starting point is 00:41:55 Do you think you would, if you got that same phone call, after World War II, and Hitler survived during war, you know, the trial for war crimes? after World War II and Hitler survived. During war, you know, the trial for war crimes, would you take the case defending Adolf Hitler? If you don't want to answer that one, is there a line to draw for evil for who to not to defend? No, I think everyone, I'll do the second one first, everyone has a right to a defense if you're charged criminally not to defend. No, I think I think everyone I'll do the second one first. Everyone has a right to a defense if you're charged criminally in the United States of America. So I know
Starting point is 00:42:32 I do not think that there's someone so evil that they do not deserve a defense process matters. Process helps us get to results more accurately than we would otherwise. So it is important and it's vitally important. And indeed, more important for someone deemed to be evil to receive the same quantum of process and the same substance of process that anyone else would. It's vitally important to the health of our criminal justice system for that to happen. So, yes, everybody Hitler included were he charged in the United States for a crime that occurred in the United States. Yes, whether I would do it, if I were a public defender and assigned a case. Yes, I started my career as a public defender.
Starting point is 00:43:26 I represent anyone who was assigned to me. I think that is our duty. In private practice, I have choices. And I likely based on the hype, oh, you gave me. And I would tweak it a bit because it would have to be a US prime. You're not safe, man. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:50 But I get the broader point and don't wanna bog down and technicalities, I'd likely pass right now as I see it unless it was a case where nobody else would represent him. Then I would think that I have some sort of duty and obligation to do it. But yes, everyone absolutely deserves a right to competent counsel. That is a beautiful idea. It's difficult to think about it in the face of public
Starting point is 00:44:26 pressure. It's just, I mean, it's kind of terrifying to watch the masses. During this past year of 2020, to watch the power of the masses, to make a decision before any of the data is out. If the data is ever out, any of the details, any of the processes, and there is an anger to the justice system, there's a lot of people that feel like even though the ideal you describe is a beautiful one, it does not always operate justly. It does not operate to the best of its ideals. It operates unfairly. Can we go to the big picture of the criminal justice system? What do you, given the ideal, works about our criminal justice system? And what is it broken? Well, there's a lot broken right now, and I usually focus on that.
Starting point is 00:45:29 But in truth, a lot works about our criminal justice system. So there's a there's an old joke. And it's it's funny, but it carries a lot of truth to it. And the joke is that in the United States, we have the worst criminal justice system in the world except for every place else. Yeah. And yes, we certainly have a number of problems
Starting point is 00:46:01 and a lot of problems based on race and class and economic station. But we have a process that privileges a liberty. And that's a good feature of the criminal justice system. So here's how it works. The idea of the relationship between the individual and the state is such that in the United States, we privilege liberty over and above very many values, so much so that a statement by increased matter, not terribly far from where
Starting point is 00:46:35 we're sitting right now, has gained traction over all these years, and it's that better 10 guilty go free than one innocent person convicted. That is an expression of the way in which we understand liberty to operate in our collective consciousness. We would rather a bunch of guilty people go free than to impact the liberty interests of any individual person. So that's a guiding principle in our criminal justice system, liberty. So we set a process that makes it difficult
Starting point is 00:47:15 to convict people. We have rules of procedure that are cumbersome and that slow down the process and that exclude otherwise reliable evidence. And this is all because we place a value on liberty. And I think these are good things. And it says a lot about our criminal justice system. Some of the bad features have to do
Starting point is 00:47:41 with the way in which this country sees color as a proxy for criminality and treats people of color in radically different ways in the criminal justice system, from arrests to charging decisions to sentencing. People of color are disproportionately impacted on all sorts of registers. One example, and it's a popular one, that although there appears to be no distinguishable difference between drug use by whites and blacks in the country. Blacks, though only 12% of the population represent 40% of the drug charges in the country. There's some disequities along race and class in the criminal justice system
Starting point is 00:48:40 that we really have to have to have to fix. And they've grown to more than bugs in the system that we really have to have to have to fix. And they've grown to more than then bugs in the system and have become features, unfortunately, of our system. Each of us all to to make it more efficient to make judgments. So the racism makes it more efficient. It it it efficiently moves people from society to the streets. And that's, and a lot of innocent people get caught up in that. Well, let me ask in terms of the innocence. So you've gotten a lot of people who are innocent. I guess revealed their innocence,
Starting point is 00:49:24 demonstrated their innocence. What's that process like emotionally, psychologically? What's it like legally to fight the system through the process of revealing the innocence of a human being? Yeah, emotionally and psychologically, it can be taxing. I follow a model of what's called empathic representation, and that is I get to know my clients and their family, that I get to know their strivings, their aspirations, their fears, their sorrows. So that certainly sometimes can do psychic injury on one.
Starting point is 00:50:07 If you get really invested and really sad and, or happy, it does become emotionally taxing. But the idea of someone sitting in jail for 20 years completely innocent of a crime. Can you imagine sitting there every day for 20 years doing that you factually did not do the thing that you were convicted of by a jury of your peers? It's got to be the most incredible thing in the world. But the people who do it and the people who make it and come out on the other side as productive citizens are folks who say they've come to an inner peace in their own minds and they are not bitter, which is amazing. I tend to think that I'm not that good of a person. I would be bitter for every day of 20 years if I were in jail for something, but you know,
Starting point is 00:51:14 but people tell me that, you know, that they can't survive, like the one cannot survive, like that, and you have to come to terms with it. And the people whom I've exonerated, I mean, they come out, most of them come out and they just really just take on life with a vim and vigor without bitterness. And it's a beautiful thing to see. Do you think it's possible to eradicate racism from the judicial system? I think it's possible to eradicate racism from the judicial system. I do.
Starting point is 00:51:46 I think that race insinuates itself in all aspects of our lives, and the judicial system is not immune from that. So to the extent we begin to eradicate dangerous and deleterious race thinking from society generally, then it will be eradicated from the criminal justice system. I think we've got a lot of work to do, and I think it'll be a while, but I think it's doable. The country, so historians will look back 300 years from now and take note of the incredible journey of diasporic Africans in the US, an incredible journey from slavery to the heights of politics and business and the judiciary, the academy and so forth. It's not a lot of time. It's actually not a lot of time.
Starting point is 00:52:52 If we can have that sort of movement historically, let's think about what the next 175 years will look like. I'm not saying it's going to be short, but I'm saying that if we keep at it, keep getting to know each other a little better, keep enforcing laws that prohibit the sort of race-based discrimination that people have experienced and provide as a society opportunities for people to thrive in this world, then I think we can see a better world and we see a better world, we'll see a better judicial system. So I think it's kind of fascinating, if you look throughout history and race, it's just part of that, is we create the other and treat the other with disdain to the legal system, but just through human nature.
Starting point is 00:53:48 I tend to believe we mentioned offline network with robots. It sounds absurd to say, especially to you, especially because we're talking about racism and it's so prevalent today. I do believe that there will be almost like a civil rights movement for robots. Because with the I think there's a huge value to society of having artificial intelligence systems that are that interact with humans and are human like. And the more they become human-like, they will start to ask very fundamentally human questions about freedom, about suffering, about justice. And we'll have to come face to face, like look in the mirror, and ask in the question, just because we're biologically based, just because we're sort of,
Starting point is 00:54:48 well, just because we're human, does that mean we're the only ones that deserve the rights? Again, giving, forming another other group, which is robots, and I'm sure there could be along that path And I'm sure there could be a long that path, different versions of other that we form. So racism, race is certainly a big other that we've made, as you said, a lot of progress on throughout the history of this country. But it does feel like we always create, as we make progress, create new other groups. And of course, the other group that perhaps is outside the legal system that people talk about is the essential, now I eat a lot of meat, but the torture of animals, you know, the people talk about when we look back from, you know, a couple centuries from now
Starting point is 00:55:38 look back at the kind of things we're doing to animals, we might regret that. We might see that in a very different way. And it's kind of interesting to see the future trajectory of what we wake up to about the injustice in our ways. But the robot one is the one I'm especially focused on because at this moment in time it seems ridiculous, but I'm sure most civil rights movements throughout history seem ridiculous at first. Well, it's interesting.
Starting point is 00:56:07 Sort of outside of my intellectual, Bayley Wick, robots, as I understand the development of artificial intelligence, though the aspect that still is missing is this notion of consciousness and that it's consciousness. That is the thing that will move if it were to exist. And I'm not saying that it can or will, but if it were to exist would move robots from machines to something different, that is something that experienced the world in a way analogous to what how we experience it. And also as I understand the science, there's a unlike what you see on television that we're not there yet in terms of this notion of the machines having consciousness.
Starting point is 00:57:19 Or a great general intelligence, all those kinds of things. Yeah, a huge amount of progress has been made. And it's fascinating to watch. So I'm on both minds. As a person who's building them, I'm realizing how sort of quote unquote, dumb they are. But also looking at human history and how poor we are predicting the progress of innovation and technology,
Starting point is 00:57:45 it's obvious that we have to be humble by our ability to predict, coupled with the fact that we keep, to use terminology carefully here, we keep discriminating against the intelligence of artificial systems. The smarter they get, the more ways we find to dismiss their intelligence. So this has just been going on throughout. Where I... It's almost as if we're threatened in the most primitive human way, animalistic way. We're threatened by the power of other creatures and we want to lessen, dismiss them. So consciousness is a really important one, but the one I think about a lot in terms of consciousness, the very engineering question is whether the display of consciousness is the same as the possession
Starting point is 00:58:40 of consciousness. So if a robot tells you they are conscious, if a robot looks like they're suffering when you torture them, if a robot is afraid of death and says they're afraid of death and are legitimately afraid, like, for in terms of just everything we as humans use to determine the ability of somebody to be their own entity. They're the one that loves, one that fears, one that hopes, one that can suffer. If the robot, like in the dumbest of ways, is able, it changes, it starts changing things very quickly. I'm not sure what it is, but it does seem that there's a huge component to consciousness that is a social creation. Like we together create our consciousness. Like we believe our common humanity together alone. We wouldn't be aware of our humanity and the law as it
Starting point is 00:59:48 protects our freedoms seems to be a construct of the social construct. And when you add other creatures into it, it's not obvious to me that like you have to build, there will be a moment when you say this thing is now conscious I think there's going to be a lot of fake it until you make it and there'll be a very great area between fake and make That is going to force us to contend with what it means to be an entity that deserves rights We're all men are created equal The the men part might have to expand in ways that we are not yet anticipating. It's very interesting. I mean, my favorite, the fundamental thing I love about artificial intelligence is it gets smarter and smarter. It challenges to think of what is right,
Starting point is 01:00:41 the questions of justice, questions of freedom, it basically challenges us to understand our own mind, to understand what, like, almost from an engineering first principles perspective, to understand what it is that makes us human, that is at the core of all the rights that we talk about and all the documents we write. So even if we don't give right, artificial intelligence systems, we may be able to construct more fair legal systems to protect us humans.
Starting point is 01:01:15 Well, I mean, interesting ontological question between the performance of consciousness and actual consciousness to the extent that it's, that actual consciousness is anything beyond some contingent reality. But you've posed a number of interesting philosophical questions, and then there's also, it strikes me that philosophers of religion would pose another set of questions as well when you deal with issues of structure versus soul, body versus soul. And it will be a complicated mix, and I suspect I'll be dust by the time those questions get worked out. And so yeah, the soul, the soul is a fun one. There's no soul. I'm not sure if maybe you can correct me, but there's very few discussion of soul in our legal system, right?
Starting point is 01:02:19 Right, correct. So, but there is a discussion about what constitutes a human being and I mean you gestured at the notion of the potential of the law widening the domain of so of a human being. So in that sense, right, you know, people are very angry because they can't get sort of pain and suffering damages if someone negligently kills a pet because a pet is not a human being. And people say, well, I love my pet, but the law sees a pet as chattel, as property like this water bottle. So the current legal definitions trade on a definition of humanity that may not be worked out in any sophisticated way, but certainly there's a broad and shared understanding of what it means. So probably doesn't explicitly contain a definition of something like soul, but it's more robust
Starting point is 01:03:31 than a carbon-based organism. That there's something a little more distinct about what the Lord thinks a human being is. So if we can dive into, we've already been doing it, but if we can dive into more difficult territory. So 2020 had the tragic case of George Floyd. When you reflect on the protests, on the racial tensions over the death of George Floyd, how do you make sense of it all? What do you take away from these events? Like the George Floyd moment occurred at, at, and historical
Starting point is 01:04:14 moment where people were in quarantine for COVID. And people have these cell phones to a degree greater than we've ever had them before. And this was a sort of a straw that broke the camels back after a number of these sorts of cell phone videos surface. surface, people were fed up. There was unimpeachable evidence of a form of mistreatment, whether it constitutes murder or manslaughter, the trial is going on now and jurors will figure that out, but there was widespread appreciation that a fellow human being was mistreated, that we were just talking about humanity, that there was not a sufficient recognition
Starting point is 01:05:17 of this person's humanity. The common humanity of this person. The common humanity of this person, well said, and people were fed up. So we were already in this COVID space where we were exercising care for one another. And there was just an explosion, the likes of which this country hasn't seen since the, you know, civil rights protests of the 1950s and 1960s, and people simply said enough, enough, enough, enough. This has to stop.
Starting point is 01:05:52 We cannot treat fellow citizens in this way, and we can't do it with impunity. And the young people say, we're just, we're not going to stand for it anymore. They took to the streets. But with millions of people protesting, there is nevertheless taken us back to the most difficult of trials. You have the trial, like you mentioned, that's going on now of Derek Showin' of one of the police officers involved. What are your thoughts? What are your predictions on this trial
Starting point is 01:06:29 where the law, the process of the law is trying to proceed in the face of so much racial tension? Yeah, it's gonna be an interesting trial. I've been keeping an eye on it. They're in jury selection now. Today as we're talking, so a lot's gonna depend on what there in jury selection now, today as we're talking. So a lot's gonna depend on what sort of jury gets selected.
Starting point is 01:06:49 Yeah, how the, sorry to take, sorry to interrupt, but it's one of the interesting qualities of this trial, maybe you can correct me if I'm wrong, but the cameras are a lot in the courtroom, at least during the jury selection. So you get to watch some of this stuff. And the other part is the jury selection. So you get to watch some of this stuff. And the other part is the jury selection, again, I'm very inexperienced,
Starting point is 01:07:10 but it seems like selecting and what is it, unbiased jury? It's really difficult for this trial. It's almost like, I don't know, me as a listener, like listening to people that are trying to talk their way into the jury kind of thing, trying to decide, is this person really unbiased, or are they just trying to hold on to their like deeply held emotions and trying to get onto the jury? I mean, it's incredibly difficult process. I don't know if you can comment on a case so difficult,
Starting point is 01:07:47 like the ones you've mentioned before, how do you select a jury that represents the people and carries the sort of the ideal of the law? Yeah, so a couple things. So first, yes, it is televised and it will be televised as they say, gavled a gavel, so the entire trial, so the whole thing is going to be televised as they say, gavold or gavold. So the entire trial, so the whole thing is going to be televised.
Starting point is 01:08:07 So people are getting a view of how laborious jury selection can be. I think as of yesterday, they had picked six jurors and it's taken a week. They have to get to 14. So they've got, you know, probably another week or more to do. I've been in jury trials where it took a month to choose a jury.
Starting point is 01:08:31 So that's the most important part. You have to choose the right sort of jury. So unbiased in the criminal justice system has a particular meaning. And it means that, let me tell you what it doesn't mean. It doesn't mean that a person is not aware of the case. It also does not mean that a person has informed an opinion about the case. Those are two popular misconceptions.
Starting point is 01:09:01 What it does mean is that not withstanding whether an individual has formed an opinion, not withstanding whether an individual has formed an opinion, not withstanding whether an individual knows about the case, that individual can set aside any prior opinions, can set aside any notions that they've developed about the case and listen to the evidence presented at trial in conjunction with the judges' instructions on how to understand and view that evidence. So if a person can do that, then they are considered unbiased. So as a long time defense attorney, I would be hesitant in a bit case like this to pick a juror who's never heard of a case or anything going around because I'm thinking
Starting point is 01:09:46 Well, who is this person and what what what in the world do they do? So or are they lying to me? I mean, how can you not have heard about this case? So they may bring other problems So you know, I don't mind so much people who've heard about the case or folks who've formed initial opinions, but you, what you don't want is people who have tethered themselves to that opinion in a way that, you know, they can't be convinced otherwise. So, but you also have people who, as you suggested, who just lie, because they want to get on the jury or lie, because they want to get off the jury. So, sometimes people come and say, you know, the most ridiculous, outrageous offensive things to know on the jury. So they're just, they
Starting point is 01:10:48 pretend to be the most neutral unbiased person in the world. What the law calls the reasonable person, we have in law the reasonable person standard. And I would tell my class, the reasonable person in real life is the person that you would be least likely to want to have a drink with. They're the most boring, neutral, not interesting sort of person in the world. And so a lot of jurors engage in the performative act of presenting themselves as the most sort of even killed killed rational, reasonable person because they really want to get on the jury.
Starting point is 01:11:27 Yeah, there's an interesting question that I apologize I haven't watched the lock because it is very long. I watched it. You know, there's certain questions you've asked in the jury, you asked in the jury selection. I remember, I think one jumped out at me, which is something like, does the fact that this person is a police officer make you feel any kind of way about them? So trying to get at that, I don't know what that is, I guess that's biased. And it's such a difficult question to ask, like I asked myself of that question,
Starting point is 01:12:07 like how much, you know, we all kind of want to pretend that we're not racist, we're not judged, we don't have, we're like these were the reasonable human, but, you know, legitimately asking yourself, like, are you, what are the, what are the prejudgments you have in your mind? Is that even possible for a human being like when you look at yourself in the mirror and think about it? Is it possible to actually answer that? Yeah, I look, I do not believe that people can be completely unbiased. We all have baggage and bias and bring it wherever we go, including to court. What you want is to try to find a person who can at least recognize when a bias is working and actively try to do the right thing. That's the best we can ask.
Starting point is 01:13:06 So for jurors, say, yeah, you know, I grew up in a place where I tend to believe what police officers say. That's just how I grew up. But if the judge is telling me that I have to listen to every witness equally, then I'll do my best and I won't weigh that testimony any higher than I would any other testimony. If you have someone answer a question like that, that sounds more sincere to me.
Starting point is 01:13:31 That sounds more honest. And if you want a person, you want a person to try to do that. And then in closing arguments, that's the lawyer, I'd say something like ladies and gentlemen, you know, we chose you to be on this jury because you swore That you would do your level best to be fair That's why we chose you and I'm confident that you're gonna do that here So when you heard that police officer testimony the judge told you you can't Give more credit to that testimony just because it's a police officer. And I trust that you're going to do that. And that you're going to look at witness number three.
Starting point is 01:14:12 You know, John Smith, you're going to look at John Smith. John Smith has a different recollection. And you're duty bound. Duty bound to look at that testimony testimony and this person's credibility, you know, the same degree as that other witness, right? And now what you have is just that he said, she said matter, and this is a criminal case, that has to be reasonable doubt. Right. So, you know, so you, and really someone who's trying to do the right thing, it's helpful, but no, you're not going to just find 14 people with no biases.
Starting point is 01:14:46 That's absurd. Well, that's fascinating that, especially the way you're inspiring the way you're speaking now is, I mean, I guess you're calling on the jury. That's kind of the whole system. Is you're calling on the jury, each individual in the jury to step up and really think, you know, to step up and be their most thoughtful selves, actually, most introspective, like you're trying to basically ask people to be their best selves. And that's, and they, I guess a lot of people step up to that.
Starting point is 01:15:20 That's why the system works. I'm very, I'm very pro jury. Jury, they get it right. It works. A lot of the time, most of the time. And they really work hard to do it. So what do you think happens? I mean, maybe, I'm not so much on the legal side of things,
Starting point is 01:15:44 but on the social side, it's like with OJ Simpson trial. Do you think it's possible that Derek Schoen does not get convicted of the, what is the second degree murder? How do you think about that? How do you think about the potential social impact of that, the riots, the protests, the either direction, any words that are said, the tension here could be explosive, especially with the cameras. Yeah, yeah. So, yes, there's certainly a possibility that he'll be acquitted for homicide homicide charges for the jury to convict, they have to make a determination as to officer
Starting point is 01:16:30 Chauvin's former officer Chauvin's state of mind, whether he intended to cause some harm, whether he was grossly reckless in causing harm so much so that he disregarded a known risk of death or serious bodily injury. And as you may have read in the papers yesterday the judge allowed a third degree murder charge in Kentucky which is the mindset the state of mind which is the mindset, the state of mind,
Starting point is 01:17:10 there is not an intention, but it's depraved in difference. And what that means is that the jury doesn't have to find that he intended to do anything. Rather, they could find that he was just indifferent to a risk. As dark. Yeah, yeah. I'm not sure what's the worst. just indifferent to a risk. That's dark. Yeah, yeah. I'm not sure what's the worst.
Starting point is 01:17:29 Well, that's a good point, but it's another basis for the jury to convict. But look, you never know what happens when you go to a jury trial. So there could be a an acquittal. And if there is, I imagine there would be massive protests. If he's convicted I don't think that would happen because I just don't see at least nothing I've seen or read suggested there's a big pro-Chauvin camp out there ready to protest.
Starting point is 01:18:06 Well, there could be a, is there also potential tensions that could arise from the sentencing? I don't know how that exactly works. Sort of not enough years kind of thing. Yeah, it could be. All that kind of stuff. It could be, I mean, it's a lot could happen.
Starting point is 01:18:19 So it depends on what he's convicted of, you know, one count I think is, like up to 10 years, another counts up to 40 years. So it depends what he's convicted of. One count, I think, is up to 10 years, and other counts up to 40 years. So it depends what he's convicted of. And yes, it depends on how much of the, how much time the judge gives him if he is convicted. There's a lot of space for people to be very angry.
Starting point is 01:18:39 And so we will, we will see what happens. I just feel like with a judge and the lawyers, there's an opportunity to have really important long lasting speeches. I don't know if they think of it that way, especially with the cameras. It feels like they have the capacity to heal or to divide. Do you ever think about that as a lawyer,
Starting point is 01:19:08 as a legal mind, that your words aren't just about the case, but they'll reverberate through history potentially? That is certainly a possible consequence of things you say. I don't think that most lawyers think about that in the context of the case Your role is much more narrow You're the partisan advocate as a defense lawyer partisan advocate for That client as a prosecutor your minister of justice Attempting to prosecute that particular case.
Starting point is 01:19:46 But the reality is you are absolutely correct that sometimes that things you say will have a shelf life. And you mentioned OJ Simpson before, you know, if the glove doesn't fit, you must acquit. It's going to be, you know, just in our lexicon for probably a long time now. So it happens, but that's not and it shouldn't be foremost on your mind. Right. What do you make? What do you make of those?
Starting point is 01:20:14 Jason's in trial. Do you have thoughts about it? He's out and about non-social media now. Is it public figure? Is there a lessons to be drawn from that whole saga? Well, you know, that was an interesting case. I was a young public defender. I want to say in my first year,
Starting point is 01:20:32 as a public defender when that verdict came out. So that case was important in so many ways. One, it was the first DNA case, major DNA case. And there were significant lessons learned from that. One mistake that the prosecution made was that they didn't understood the science and was able to translate that into a vocabulary that he bet that that jury understood. So Cochrane was dismissive of a lot of DNA. They said, he said something like, oh, they say they found such and such amount of DNA, they say, you know, he said something like, oh, you know, they say they found, you know, such and such amount of DNA. That's just like me, you know, wiping my finger
Starting point is 01:21:30 against my nose and just that little bit of DNA. And that was effective because the prosecution hadn't done a good job of establishing that, yes, it's microscopic. You don't need that much. You must wipe in your hand on your nose and touching something. You can transfer a lot of DNA, and that gives you good information. But it was the first time that the public generally and that jury maybe since high school science
Starting point is 01:21:58 had heard, you know, nucleotide. I mean, it was just all these terms getting thrown at them. And, but it was not weaved into a narrative. So, Cochrane taught us that no matter what type of case it is, no matter what science is involved, it's still about storytelling. It's still about a narrative. And he was great at that narrative and was consistent with his narrative all the way out. Another lesson that was relearned is that you never ask a question to what you don't
Starting point is 01:22:38 know the answer. That's like trial, think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true.
Starting point is 01:22:51 I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true.
Starting point is 01:22:59 I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. I think it's true. the glove just wouldn't fit. And he got to do this in ham in front of the camera and all of that. And it was big.
Starting point is 01:23:08 Do you think about representation of storytelling, like you yourself and your role? Absolutely. Absolutely. We tell stories. It is fundamental. We, since time in memorial, we have told stories to help us make sense of the world around us. So as a scientist
Starting point is 01:23:28 you tell a different type of story but we as a public have told stories from time and memorial to help us make sense of the physical and the natural world. And we are still a species that is moved by storytelling. So that's first and last in trial work. You have to tell a good story. And the basic introductory books about trial work teach young students and young lawyers to start in opening with this case is about. This case is about, and then you fill in the blank, and that's your narrative.
Starting point is 01:24:13 That's the narrative you're going to tell. Of course you can do the ultra dramatic, the glove doesn't fit the climax and all those kinds of things. Yes, the best of narratives, the best of stories. Yes. Speaking of other really powerful stories that you were involved with is the Aaron Hernandez trial and the whole story, the whole legal case. Can you maybe overview the big picture story and legal case of Aaron Hernandez?
Starting point is 01:24:44 Yeah. So Aaron, whom I missed a lot. So he was charged with a double murder in the case that I tried. And this was a unique case in one of those impossible cases, in part because Aaron had already been convicted of a murder. And so we had a client who was on trial for a double murder after having already been convicted of a separate murder. And we had a jury pool just about all of whom
Starting point is 01:25:19 knew that he had been convicted of a murder because he was a very popular football player in Boston, which is a big football town with the Patriots. So, you know, so everyone knew that he was convicted murderer and here we are defending for in a double murder case. So that was the context. It was not a case in the sense that this murder had gone unsolved for a couple of years. And then a nightclub bouncer said something to a cop who was working at a club that Aaron Hernandez was somehow involved in that murder that happened in the theater district
Starting point is 01:26:07 That's a district where all the clubs are embossed in and where the homicide occurred and once the police heard Air Hernandez's name then it was you know, they went all out in order to to do this they found a guy named Alexander Bradley who was a very significant drug dealer in the sort of Connecticut area, very significant, very powerful. And he essentially, in exchange for a deal, point it to Aaron. Yeah, I was with Aaron, and Aaron was the murderer. So that's how the case came to court. Okay, so that's the context.
Starting point is 01:27:03 What was your involvement in this case? Like legally, intellectually, psychologically, when this particular second charge of murder. So a friend called me Jose Bias, who is a defense attorney and he comes to a class that I teach every year at Harvard, the trial advocacy workshop, as one of my teaching faculty members. It's a class where we teach students how to try cases. So Jose called me and said, hey, I got a call from Massachusetts, Aaron Hernandez. You want to go and talk to him with me. So I said, Sure, so we went up to the to the prison and met Aaron and spoke with him for two or three hours at first time. And before we left, he said he wanted to retain us.
Starting point is 01:28:07 He wanted to work with us. And that started the representation. What was he like? What in that time? What was he worn down by the whole process? Was there still light in that? He was not. He had, I mean, more than just a light,
Starting point is 01:28:22 he was luminous almost. He had a radiant million dollar smile whenever you walked in. My first impression, I distinctly remember was, wow, this is what a professional athlete looks like. He walked in and he's just bigger and more fit than anyone, anywhere. And it's like, wow, this. And, you know, when you saw him on television, he looked kind of little. And I was like, so I remember thinking, well, what do those other guys look like in person? And he's extraordinarily
Starting point is 01:28:57 polite, young, I was surprised by how young he was both in mind and, uh, I'm body, but chronologically, I was, you know, thinking he was in his, you know, in his early 20s, I believe, uh, but there seemed to be like an innocence, don't, uh, in terms of just the way he saw the world, uh, they picked that up from the, up from the documentary just taking that in. I think that's right. Yeah. Yeah. So there is a Netflix documentary titled killer inside the mind of Aaron Hernandez. What are your thoughts on this documentary? I don't know if you got any chance to see it. I did not I've not seen it. I did not participate in it. I know I was in it because of there was news footage. But I did not participate in it.
Starting point is 01:29:48 I did not talk to Aaron about press or anything before he died. My strong view is that the attorney client privilege survives death. And so I was not inclined to talk about anything that Aaron and I talked about. So I just didn't participate in and I've never watched. Not even watch, huh? So is that does that apply to
Starting point is 01:30:13 most of your work? Do you try to stay away from the way the press perceives stuff? During, yes, I try to stay away from it. I will view it afterwards. I just hadn't gotten around to watching air and it's kind of sad. So I just haven't watched it. But I definitely stay away from the press during trial. And there are some lawyers who watch it religiously to see what's going on. But I'm confident in my years of training and so forth that I can actively sense what's going on in the courtroom and that I really don't need advice from Joe for seven six at Gmail. You know, some random guy on the internet telling me how to try cases.
Starting point is 01:31:04 So it's just to yeah, it's just to me, it's just confusing. And I just keep it out of my mind. And even if you think you can ignore it, just reading it will have a little bit of an effect on your mind. I think that's right. Over time, I might accumulate. So the documentary, but in general, it mentioned or kind of emphasized and talked about Aaron's sexuality or sort of they were discussing basically the idea that he was a homosexual and some of the trauma, some of the suffering that he endured in his life had to do with sort of fear given the society of What his father would think of what others around him sort of especially in sport culture and football and so on so I don't know in your interaction with him was
Starting point is 01:32:03 Do you think that maybe even leaning up to a suicide? Do you think his struggle with coming to terms with a sexuality had a role to play in much of his difficulties? Well, I'm not going to talk about my interactions with him and anything I derive from that. my interactions with them and anything I derive from from that, but you know what I will say is that a story broke on the on the radio at some point during the the trial that Aaron had been in the same sex relationship with someone and some sport local sportscasters local Boston sportscasters are being really
Starting point is 01:32:50 mushroomed the the story so He and everyone Was aware of it You'll you also may know from the court record that the prosecutors floated a species theory for a minute, but then backed off of it that Aaron was, that there was some sort of,
Starting point is 01:33:17 I guess, gay rage at work with them and that might be a cause motive for the killing. And luckily, they really backed off of that. That was quite an offensive claim and theory. So, but I'll answer your question more directly. I have no idea why he killed himself. It was a surprise and a shock. I was scheduled to go see him like a couple days after it happened.
Starting point is 01:33:47 I mean, he was anxious for Jose and I to come in and do the appeal from the murder which he was convicted for. He wanted us to take over that appeal. He was talking about going back to football. I mean, he said, well, you talk about the sort of earlier, you talked about the sort of innocent aspect of him. He said, you know, well, Ron, maybe not, maybe not the patriots, but, you know, I'm going to get back in the league. And I was like, you know, Aaron, that's, that's going to be tough, man. But he really, but, you know, he really believed it. And then, you know, for a few days later, that to happen, it was just, it was a real shock to me. Like when you look back at that, at his story, does it make you sad?
Starting point is 01:34:38 Very, very. I thought, so one, I believe he absolutely did not commit the crimes that we could acquitted him on. I think that was the right answer for that. I don't know enough about Bradley, the first case, I'm sorry, to make an opinion on, but in our case, you know, it was just, he had the misfortune of having a famous name and the police department just really just really got got on them there. So, yes, I miss him a lot. It was very, very sad, surprising. Yeah, and I mean, just on the human side, of course, we don't know the full story, but just everything that led up to suicide, everything led up to an incredible professional football
Starting point is 01:35:38 player, you know, that whole story. It's a remarkably talented athlete. And it has to do with all the possible trajectories that we can take to the life as we were talking about before and some of them lead to suicide, sadly enough. And it's always tragic when you have somebody with great potential, result in the things that happen. People love it. When I ask about books, I don't know if I, whether technical, like legal or fiction, nonfiction books throughout your life have had an impact on you. If there's something you could recommend or something you could
Starting point is 01:36:25 speak to about something that inspired ideas, insights about this world, complicated world of ours. Oh wow. Yeah, so I'll give you a couple. So one is a contingency irony and solidarity by Richard Warty. He's passed away now, but was a philosopher at some of our major institutions, Princeton, Harvard, Stanford. Contingency irony and solidarity, at least that's a book that really helped me work through That's a book that really helped me work through a series of thoughts. So it stands for the proposition that our most deeply held beliefs are contingent. That there's nothing beyond history or prior to socialization that's the finatory of the human being.
Starting point is 01:37:23 It's worthy And he says that our most deeply held beliefs are received wisdom and highly contingent along a number of registers and he does that but then goes on to say that he nonetheless Can hold strongly held, recognizing their contingency, but still believes them to be true and accurate. It helps you to work through what could be an intellectual tension. So you don't delve into one doesn't delve into relativism, everything is okay. But it gives you a vocabulary to think about how to negotiate these realities. Do you share this tension? I mean, there is a real tension.
Starting point is 01:38:16 It seems like the law, the legal system is all just a construct of our human ideas. And yet, the construct of our human ideas. And yet it seems to be almost feels fundamental to what a what a justice idea. Yeah, I definitely share the tension and love his vocabulary in the way he's helped me resolve the tension. So, right, I mean, yeah, so like, you know, in fantasied, for example, perhaps it's socially contingent, perhaps it's received wisdom, perhaps it's anthropological, you know, we need to propagate the species. And I still think it's wrong. And Rorti has helped me develop a category to say that, no, I can't provide any in Rorti's words, non-circular theoretical backup for this proposition.
Starting point is 01:39:17 At some point, it's gonna run me in a circularity problem. But that's okay. I hope there's none the less and for recognition of its contingency, but what it does is makes you humble. And when you're humble, that's good because this notion that ideas are always already in progress, never fully formed, I think is the sort of intellectual I strive to be. And if I have a sufficient degree of humility that I don't have the final answer, capital A, then that's going to help me to get to better answers, lowercase A. And Rudy does. And Rory does. And he talks about in the solidarity part of the book, he has this concept of imaginative, the imaginative ability to see other different people as we instead of
Starting point is 01:40:17 they. And I just think it's a beautiful concept. But he talks about this imaginative ability and it's this active process. So I mean, so that's a book that's done a lot of work for me over the years. So, the black folk by W.B. the boys was absolutely essays in the Western literary tradition. And it's a deep and profound sociological, philosophical and historical analysis of the predicament of blacks and America from one of our countries great as polymaths. It's just a beautiful text and I go to it yearly. So for somebody like me, so going up in the Soviet Union, the struggle, the civil rights movement, the struggle of race and all those kinds of things that is, you know, this universal, but it's also very much a journey of the United States.
Starting point is 01:41:32 It was kind of a foreign thing that I stepped into. Is that something you will recommend to somebody like me to read or is there other things about race that are good to connect because my my Flavor of suffering in just some of you as well. My flavor has dual or two and the studies of that You know all the injustices there. So I'm now stepping into a new set of injustices and trying to learn The landscape. I would I would say the landscape. I would say anyone is a better person for having read Du Bois. It's just a remarkable writer and thinker.
Starting point is 01:42:14 And to the extent you're interested in learning another history, he does it in a way that is quite sophisticated. So it's interesting. I was going to give you three books. I noted the accent when I met you, but I didn't know exactly where you're from. But the other book I was going to say is Dostoevsky's crime and punishment.
Starting point is 01:42:40 I've always wanted to go to St. Pete's just to see with my own eyes what the word pictures that Dostoevsky created in crime and punishment. And I love others of this stuff too, the brothers care myself and so forth. But crime and punishment, I first read in high school as a junior or senior. And it is a deep and profound meditation on both the meaning and the measure of our lives. And Dostoevsky, obviously in conversation with other thinkers really gets at the the the crux of a fundamental philosophical problem. What does it mean to be a human being? And and for that crime and punishment captured me as a teenager and that's another text that I return to often.
Starting point is 01:43:45 as a teenager and that's another text that I return to often. We've talked about young people a little bit at the beginning of our conversation. Is there advice that you could give to a young person today thinking about their career, thinking about their life, thinking about making their way in this world? Yeah, sure. I'll share some advice.
Starting point is 01:44:05 It actually picks up one question we talked about earlier in the Academy in schools, but it's some advice that a professor gave to me when I got to Harvard. And it is this that you have to be willing to come face to face with your intellectual limitations and keep going. And that's, and it's hard for people. I mean, you mentioned this earlier to, to face really difficult tasks to, and particularly in these sort of elite spaces where you've excelled all your life and you come to MIT and you're like, wait a minute, I don't understand this. and you come to MIT and you're like, wait a minute, I don't understand this.
Starting point is 01:44:43 Yeah. Wait, this is hard. I've never had something really hard before. And there are a couple of options. And a lot of people will pull back and take the gentleman or just a woman's beat and just go on, or risk going out there giving it your all and still not quite getting it.
Starting point is 01:45:04 And that's a risk But it's a risk well worth it Because you're just going to be the better person the better student for it And you know and even outside of the academy. I mean come come face to face with your fears Yeah, keep going and keep going in and life and you're going to be the better person, the better human being. Yeah, it does seem to be, I don't know what it is, but it does seem to be that fear is a good indicator of something you should probably face. Yes. Like fear kind of shows the way a little bit, not always. You might not want to go to the cage with a lion, but
Starting point is 01:45:48 but it's, uh, maybe you should. Maybe. Uh, let me ask sort of a darker question because we're talking about the St. Yavsky, we might as well. Do you, uh, do you and connected to the? Freeing innocent people do you think about mortality? Do you think about your own death? Are you afraid of death? I'm not afraid of death. I do think about it more now because I'm now in my mid fifties So I used to not think about it much at all, but the harsh reality is that I've got more time behind me now that I do in front of me. And it kind of happens all of a sudden to realize, wait a minute, I'm actually on the back nine now. So yeah, my mind moves to it from time to time. I don't dwell on it. I'm not afraid of it. My own personal religious commitments. I'm Christian and my religious commitments
Starting point is 01:46:56 buoy me that death. And I believe this death is not not the end. So I'm not afraid of it. Now, this is not to say that I want to I want to rush to the afterlife. I'm good right here for a long time. I hope I've got, you know, 30, 35, 40 more years to go. But, but no, I don't really, I don't fear death, though. We're finite creatures. We're all gonna die. Well, the mystery of it, you know, for somebody, at least for me, we human beings want to figure everything out.
Starting point is 01:47:38 Whatever the afterlife is, there's still a mystery to it. That uncertainty can be terrifying if you pondered. But maybe what you're saying is, you haven't pondered it too deeply so far, and it's worked out pretty good. It's worked out. Yeah, no complaints. So you said, again, the Staevsky kind of was exceptionally good at getting to the core of what it means
Starting point is 01:48:07 to be human. Do you think about like the why of why we're here, the the meaning of this whole existence? Yeah, no, I do. I think and I actually think that's the purpose of an education. And I actually think that's the purpose of an education. What does it mean to be a human being? And in one way or another, we set out to answer those questions. And we do it in a different way. I mean, some may look to philosophy to answer these questions,
Starting point is 01:48:42 why is it in one's personal interest to do good, to do justice, some may look at through the economist lens, some may look at it through the microscope in the laboratory that the phenomenal world is the meaning of life. Others may say that that's one vocabulary that's one description, but the poet describes a reality to the same degree as a physicist, but that's the purpose of an education. It's to sort of work through these issues. What does it mean to be a human being? And I think it's a fascinating journey.
Starting point is 01:49:36 And I think it's a lifelong endeavor to figure out what is the thing that nugget that makes us human. Do you still see yourself as a student? Of course. Yes, I mean, that's the best part about going into university teaching. You're a lifelong student.
Starting point is 01:49:55 I'm always learning. I learn from my students and with my students and my colleagues. And you continue to read and learn and modify opinions opinions and I think it's just a wonderful thing. Well Ron, I'm so glad that somebody like you is carrying the fire of what is the best of Harvard. So it's a huge honor that you spend so much time way so much of your valuable time with me. I really appreciate that conversation. Not a waste at all. I think a lot of people love it. Thank you so much for talking today. Thank you. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Ronald
Starting point is 01:50:35 Sullivan. And thank you to Brooklyn and Sheets Wine Access online wine store, Monkpack, Lowcarb Snacks, and Blinkist app that summarizes books. Click their links to support this podcast. And now let me leave you with some words from Nussel Mandela. When a man is denied the right to live the life he believes in, he has no choice but to become an outlaw. Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time. you

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.