Praise

 

“Ordinary Injustice takes the reader to unexamined fiefdoms across the country and brings them deep into the heart of the way justice truly happens on a day-to-day level. It shows how dangerous it is when any one of the clearly defined roles in the system malfunctions. No one concerned with the state of this country’s democracy can afford to ignore this necessary book.”

Barry Scheck, co-founder and co-director of The Innocence Project, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law

 

“Amy Bach sets out to uncover and, more important, explain widespread failures of the legal process. That she achieves this is reason enough to read and respect Ordinary Injustice. But she does it in a way that turns a necessary study into a hard-to-put down narrative that sometimes reads like a screenplay. Best of all , Bach exudes understanding, even empathy, for those bad actors whom she rightly concludes shouldn’t be blamed alone—because, as she writes, ‘pinning the problem on any one bad apple fails to indict the tree from which it fell.’”

Steven Brill, founder of Court TV and The American Lawyer

 

“This is a magnificent work, a crusading call for reform in the tradition of Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring or Ralph Nader’s Unsafe at Any Speed. With her remarkable skills as a reporter and her masterful storytelling ability, Amy Bach provides a fascinating range of individual stories to reveal the systemic, everyday problems in our courts that must be addressed if justice is truly to be served. This groundbreaking book deserves widespread attention.”

Doris Kearns Goodwin, author of Team of Rivals

 

“This is a very important book for any one seriously concerned about the continuing struggle for civil rights in this nation. Amy Bach takes us into courtrooms, judges’ chambers, and prosecutors’ offices and reveals what years of bias, neglect, and indifference have left: a system where the accused, victims, and their families get little or no individual attention, are often bewildered by the process and, at the end of the day are left without justice. As I read through these revealing and shocking pages, I was saddened, angered and outraged. I hope outrage will push citizens everywhere to demand fulfillment of the birthright of every American: equal justice under the law.”

Reverend Joseph E. Lowery, Co-Founder and President Emeritus of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference

 

“Every judge, prosecutor, and defense lawyer should read Ordinary Injustice. I hope it will compel us to reevaluate the injustice that occurs with impunity and regularity in our criminal justice system and I recommend it with great enthusiasm to anyone concerned about inequality and the law.”

Charles J. Ogletree Jr., Jesse Climenko Professor of Law, Harvard Law School, and Founding and Executive Director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice

 

“Moving, illuminating, damning. Bach gets beyond the usual suspects, exposing a corrosive culture. It is a tribute to its honesty that Ordinary Injustice will make readers squirm.”

Steve Bogira, author of Courtroom 302: A Year Behind the Scenes in an American Criminal Courthouse

 


 

Reviews

 

Ordinary Injustice looks at a part of the criminal justice system that largely goes unexamined – relatively minor cases where seemingly little is at stake. What it finds is deeply troubling. What it suggests is that larger problems are buried in those bigger cases.”

Chicago Tribune

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"Bach has done something different: shown us the reality of the criminal justice process in microscopic, human detail. In different places across the country she watched went on in courtrooms. Her accounts of what she saw should open others' eyes to unwelcome reality. It is a revealing and important book."

The New York Review of Books

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"It takes an attorney to investigate state county courtrooms, and Bach’s research reads like a novel....Ordinary Injustice reveals the sorry condition of certain state county courtrooms. Amy Bach is a hero to the faceless numbers who have stood before them, alone, convicted, without the guaranteed benefit of a zealous defense."

The Providence Journal

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A vulnerable young woman suffers severe injuries at the hands of a boyfriend wielding a tire iron, yet the district attorney declines to prosecute the assailant. A zealous judge sets bail at $25,000 for a defendant accused of riding a bike without a warning bell. A clueless indigent spends 13 months in jail on a loitering charge. Bach captures her readers’ attention with stunning cases of legal injustice. However, her argument finally fits these particular cases into a broad indictment of an American judicial system in which judges, prosecutors, and defenders routinely collude in practices that render the courtroom efficient but unjust. Bach particularly deplored the ways the internal checks and balances within the legal process break down, as prosecutors abuse their discretion by ignoring difficult cases; as judges become prosecutors, pressing impoverished defendants into unwarranted plea bargains; and as public defenders ignore evidence that might clear their hapless clients. Yet an opaque system hides such problems from an ignorant and apathetic public. A disturbing and urgent call for reform.

Booklist

 

In the tradition of Lincoln Steffens, Bach’s investigative reporting works not so much to expose the individual rogues and villains, but rather to examine how American institutions, in this case the criminal-justice system, fall so far short of our ideals. To demonstrate the erosion of our society’s commitment to fairness, and to illustrate the systemic problem of legal professionals so accustomed to lazy and expedient collusion that they cannot see themselves at fault, Bach usefully focuses on four state criminal-court stories. She introduces us to a Georgia public defender who fails to investigate the facts of various charges and neglects even to meet with clients until the moment he plea bargains their cases. The author examines an upstate New York judge who often doesn’t inform defendants of their right to counsel, regularly imposes excessive nail and frequently coerces guilty pleas from the scared and befuddled who come before him. Bach looks at a Mississippi prosecutor who declines to prosecute bloody crimes and an Illinois prosecutor, caught up in an intraoffice drive to convict who takes thin cases to trial. In each instance there are reasons, many understandable and fairly set out by Bach, as to why these lapses routinely occur. But to work properly, the justice system requires a zealous defense, an attentive prosecution and an impartial judge enforcing rules of evidence and procedure. Numerous Supreme Court decisions, many effortlessly translated here for the nonprofessional, offer a roadmap for proper practice. Instead, only the roughest sort of justice is meted our, and very few appear to notice or care. To address the problem, Bach calls for greater transparency and outside monitoring of the court system, but at a time when some states are verging on bankruptcy and the budgets of many others are strained to breaking , this widespread pattern of injustice will likely persist. A clear exposure of a dirty secret well known to lawyers and apt to outrage everyone else.

Kirkus Review

 

Lawyer and journalist Bach exposes a litany of failures and systematic shoddiness at the core of the American criminal justice system that goes unchecked because the people affected tend to be poor, minorities or both, and because problems are so pervasive that they have become invisible to defenders, prosecutors and judges alike. Bach sees this blindness as a product of a public that cares little for the rights of the accused so long as someone – anyone – is convicted and a courthouse community where prosecutor, defending attorney and judge share a commitment to maintaining order, even at the expense of justice.

Publisher’s Weekly

“It takes a community of legal professionals to let a sleeping lawyer sleep.”