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Books > Humanities > History > World history > From 1900
In 1992, three hundred innocent Haitian men, women, and children
who had qualified for political asylum in the United States were
detained at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba -- and told they might never be
freed. Charismatic democracy activist Yvonne Pascal and her fellow
refugees had no contact with the outside world, no lawyers, and no
hope . . . until a group of inspired Yale Law School students vowed
to free them.
Pitting the students and their untested professor Harold Koh
against Kenneth Starr, the Justice Department, the Pentagon, and
Presidents George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton, this real-life legal
thriller takes the reader from the halls of Yale and the federal
courts of New York to the slums of Port-au-Prince and the windswept
hills of Guantanamo Bay and ultimately to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Written with grace and passion, "Storming the Court" captures the
emotional highs and despairing lows of a legal education like no
other -- a high-stakes courtroom campaign against the White House
in the name of the greatest of American values: freedom.
"How civil liberties triumphed over national insecurity"
Between the two major red scares of the twentieth century, a
police raid on a Communist Party bookstore in Oklahoma City marked
an important lesson in the history of American freedom.
In a raid on the Progressive Bookstore in 1940, local officials
seized thousands of books and pamphlets and arrested twenty
customers and proprietors. All were detained incommunicado and many
were held for months on unreasonably high bail. Four were tried for
violating Oklahoma's "criminal syndicalism" law, and their
convictions and ten-year sentences caused a nationwide furor. After
protests from labor unions, churches, publishers, academics,
librarians, the American Civil Liberties Union, members of the
literary world, and prominent individuals ranging from Woody
Guthrie to Eleanor Roosevelt, the convictions were overturned on
appeal.
Shirley A. Wiegand and Wayne A. Wiegand share the compelling
story of this important case for the first time. They reveal how
state power--with support from local media and businesses--was used
to trample individuals' civil rights during an era in which
citizens were gripped by fear of foreign subversion.
Richly detailed and colorfully told, "Books on Trial "is a
sobering story of innocent people swept up in the hysteria of their
times. It marks a fascinating and unnerving chapter in the history
of Oklahoma and of the First Amendment. In today's climate of
shadowy foreign threats--also full of unease about the way
government curtails freedom in the name of protecting its
citizens--the past speaks to the present.
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