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William M. Kunstler - The Most Hated Lawyer in America (Paperback)
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William M. Kunstler - The Most Hated Lawyer in America (Paperback)
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The true story of the defender of the Chicago 7 Alternately
vilified as a publicity-seeking egoist and lauded as a
rambunctious, fearless advocate, William Kunstler consistently
embodied both of these qualities. Kunstler's unrelenting, radical
critique of American racism and the legal system took shape as a
result of his efforts to enlist the federal judicial system to
support the civil rights movement. In the late 60s and the 70s,
Kunstler, refocusing his attention on the Black Power and anti-war
movement, garnered considerable public attention as defender of the
Chicago Seven, and went on to represent such controversial figures
as Leonard Peltier, the American Indian Movement leader charged
with killing an FBI agent, and Jack Ruby, the killer of Lee Harvey
Oswald. Later, Kunstler briefly represented Colin Ferguson, the
Long Island Railroad mass murderer, outraging fans and detractors
alike with his invocation of the infamous "black rage" defense.
Defending those most loathed by mainstream, conventional America,
William Kunstler delighted in taking on fiercely political cases,
usually representing society's outcasts and pariahs free of charge
and often achieving remarkable courtroom results in seemingly
hopeless cases. Though Kunstler never gave up his revolutionary
underpinnings, he gradually turned from defending clients whose
political beliefs he personally supported to taking on apolitical
clients, falling back on the broad rationale that his was a general
struggle against an oppressive government. What ideological and
tactical motives explain Kunstler's obsessive craving for media
attention, his rhetorical flourishes in the courtroom and his
instinctive and relentless drive for action? How did Kunstler
migrate from a comfortable middle-class background to a life as a
staunchly rebellious figure in social and legal history? David
Langum's portrait gives depth to the already notorious breadth of
William Kunstler's life.
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