Just pursuit A black prosecutor's fight for fairness

Laura Gayle Coates

Book - 2022

"A powerful true story and groundbreaking account of bias in the courtroom from CNN senior legal analyst Laura Coates, recounting her time as a Black female prosecutor for the US Department of Justice"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Simon & Schuster 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Laura Gayle Coates (author)
Edition
First Simon & Schuster hardcover edition
Physical Description
ix, 257 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781982173760
  • Introduction
  • 1. Please Don't Come Here
  • On What Happens When a Black Woman Must Aid in a Deportation Arrest
  • 2. Wanna See Something Funny?
  • On Being Trained by a White Male Colleague How to Interrogate a Black Defendant
  • 3. "I Want No Part of This"
  • On the Older Black Woman Victim Who Pleads for Lenience for a Young Black Defendant
  • 4. She Needed Me to Believe Her
  • On the Domestic Violence Survivor Afraid to Be Judged
  • 5. That's Not Me
  • On the Real Case of Mistaken Identity
  • 6. A Seat at the (Right) Table
  • On the Tension Between Black Defense Attorneys and Prosecutors
  • 7. Babyface
  • On the Conviction of a Baby-Faced Defendant Who Acts Against His Self-interest
  • 8. There's Still Time
  • On Prosecuting a Mother for Child Abuse While Faced with the Prospect of Losing My Own
  • 9. Not Their Son, Too
  • On Watching the Victim's Family Beg Not to Have Their Son's Murderer Go to Prison
  • 10. No One Who Had Been Raped Would Have
  • On Watching a Female Judge Victim-Blame a Teenage Girl Based on Her Courtroom Attire
  • 11. She's Always Been Such a Good Girl
  • On Cross-Examining a Naive and Helpless Mother Trying to Defend Her Daughter on Trial
  • 12. Grandstanding for Justice
  • On the Roles We Play Within the Grand Jury
  • 13. "The Chew"
  • On the Role of Privilege in Charging Decisions
  • 14. I Just Don't Believe In It!
  • On the Tension Between Illegal and Wrong
  • 15. Chess Pie
  • On a Prosecutor Embraced Outside of the Courtroom
  • 16. It Didn't Have to Happen to Me
  • On the Haunting Effect of Secondary Trauma
  • Conclusion
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Choice Review

This book is both powerful and inquisitorial. Coates, a former federal prosecutor, counters the traditional belief that the American legal system is always fair, just, and equal. By offering her own lived experiences, Coates courageously and unapologetically reveals the biases, prejudices, and sexism that exist among court personnel--the very fabric of the judicial system. Although the title might suggest that the focus of this book is entirely on anti-Black racial discrimination in the legal system, Coates delivers instances of prejudices toward undocumented Latino citizens and white rape victims, accurately showing that injustice in the legal system can affect anyone. This reviewer has practiced criminal defense law for almost 17 years and has experienced nearly every scenario Coates offers, corroborating the author's understanding that justice is not always just. In conclusion, Coates's writing will educate many readers--who may blithely believe that the American judicial system systematically protects their constitutional rights and guarantees adequate legal representation and that officers of the law always uphold the law--that the American judicial system is fraught with implicit biases and, consequently, needs repair. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Undergraduates through faculty, practitioners, general readers. --Autumn Ann Walden, Elmira College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

In fictionalized courtroom dramas, the prosecutor is often stereotyped as a rigid ideologue, there to deliver justice through an iron-clad combination of witness intimidation, withering questions, and wily summations. In actual courtrooms, however, lawyers representing the government are rarely so one-dimensional. First as a voting rights attorney in the Civil Rights Division and then as an Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Department of Justice, Coates has bucked clichés. She is that rarity, a Black female prosecutor, Ivy League-educated, and, perhaps most important, a mother of two children. So when another mother sits in the courtroom witnessing her only son being sentenced, Coates sympathizes. Or when a pre-teen rape victim is openly disdained by a hypercritical judge, Coates is outraged. Currently a senior legal analyst for CNN, Coates reveals how motherhood and her experiences as an African American have deepened her sensitivity to issues of fairness and empathy, impartiality and legality. The result is a personal, heartfelt, eloquent, and sobering examination of the nexus of justice and humanity.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

CNN legal analyst Coates debuts with a revealing account of her time as a federal prosecutor in Washington, D.C. Reflecting on the tension between her commitment to upholding the law and her perspective as a Black woman, Coates highlights cases that exposed fault lines within the criminal justice system. These include a prosecutor and a defense attorney colluding to pressure a young Black defendant into becoming an informant, a judge disbelieving an abuse victim's testimony because of the way she was dressed in court, and Coates's obligation to report a crime victim's "outstanding immigration issue," knowing that it would likely lead to his deportation. She also tells the story of an elderly Black woman requesting in her victim impact statement that the young Black man who stole her car not be sent to jail for a mistake her children could have made when they were young. In another poignant example, the parent of a man who was murdered in a petty dispute pleads with the judge not to give the defendants a life sentence because "there has been enough loss already." Though she makes a persuasive case that racial discrimination is baked into the criminal justice system, Coates doesn't outline specific reforms. Still, this is a troubling and well informed report from the front lines of the U.S. justice system. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In this eye-opening work, Coates (law, George Washington Univ.), a former federal prosecutor, confronts the many injustices in the American legal system, particularly for non-white people and women. Coates takes readers through her experiences as a prosecutor, including the time when a white male colleague relished showing her his over-the-top interrogation of a Black youth; another time when a witness in a court case was deported even as Coates attempted to stop the process; and cases of victim-shaming of women in courtrooms based on attire. Coates originally became a prosecutor to right the wrongs she saw happening in communities across the United States, but she describes coming to realize throughout her tenure that the "pursuit of justice creates injustice." Now a law professor and CNN legal analyst, Coates invites readers to examine their own actions as the nation grapples with reforming the. legal system, where non-white people are overrepresented and unfairly treated in criminal courts and prisons. Her engaging narrative has a personal touch that will hold readers' interest from start to finish. VERDICT Readers will appreciate Coates's much-needed fresh perspective of the inner workings of the prosecutorial system, and the book's heartfelt storytelling. Consider as a critical addition to collections focused on criminal law, discrimination, and racism.--Mattie Cook, Flat River Community Lib., MI

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A former federal prosecutor depicts a judicial system compromised by racism and ineptitude. "The pride I felt working for the DOJ was immeasurable, but the bureaucracy was unbearable." So writes Coates, now a CNN senior legal analyst, of her early work in the federal government, investigating voting rights issues consistently hampered by lobbyists and corrupt elected officials. She enlisted for a four-year term as a litigator with a variety of cases, large and small, on the docket. An early one posed a moral quandary: A crime victim who came forward was found to be in the country illegally. "Turn him in. It will make you look good to the office," one colleague advised. She did not, but neither did she warn her witness that immigration was on the way to the courthouse to arrest and then deport him, a decision that, she writes, will haunt her forever. In another case, a White supervisor stepped far over the line of racist caricature to mansplain to her, a Black woman, how to interrogate Black suspects. Another: An elderly Black woman, on the stand as the victim of a crime, requested that the young Black man who was on trial for committing it be given clemency. "I know young men like him," she told the judge. "They were twenty once too…and likely as dumb as this young boy seemed to act that night." Anecdote after anecdote builds to a moving conclusion: "Justice is an ecosystem, as complex as it is interconnected with those at its helm and at its mercy." Coates also clearly demonstrates how our sense of justice is conditioned by who we are. A White suburbanite will likely have a different definition of it than a Black man who is sure that a random police stop could end in violence. Sobering reading and an eloquent case for reform for a more equitable distribution of justice. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Introduction The pursuit of justice creates injustice. Before I became a prosecutor, I never imagined that could be true. I thought that the job would be an uncomplicated act of patriotism and that justice was what happened when a person was fairly tried and convicted for their crime. For years, I stood inside a courtroom, representing the people of the United States. I witnessed firsthand how our just pursuits caused collateral damage in ways I couldn't have imagined when I answered my calling to leave private practice as a civil litigator and join the Department of Justice. My time at Justice began as a trial attorney in its Civil Rights Division. As a child, I knew the stories of Ruby Bridges and the Freedom Riders better than the tales of Dr. Seuss. My mother grew up in a segregated North Carolina, only migrating north when her parents found work--her mother as a domestic worker and her father, a butler and chauffeur--for some of the wealthiest White families in the Northeast. These families were the namesake of industry leaders--companies that I later happened to represent while working for large law firms. My father spent most of his childhood in foster care, and, although he was raised in a relatively integrated Massachusetts, he was still a Black boy in 1950s America. In spite of their humble beginnings, my parents propelled themselves to becoming among the first  generation in their families to not only go to college but also earn advanced degrees. My parents' paths crossed in western Massachusetts, when they were students at neighboring Smith and Amherst Colleges, each only one of a relative handful of Black students at their respective schools. They met just two years after Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, when the fight for equality was far from over. They spoke often of the housing discrimination they had experienced while raising my two older sisters and me, and I watched the economic struggles faced by my father while trying to build a dental practice in a country where financing eluded Black people. While laws were in place, the nation's conviction for equity never seemed to catch up. I was taught to understand the civil rights era not as finite but as a movement that we were all duty-bound to keep in motion. Joining the Civil Rights Division in their work to enforce the Voting Rights Act was in service of that duty. The pride I felt working for the DOJ was immeasurable, but the bureaucracy was unbearable. Unsurprisingly, lobbyists and elected officials at the state and federal levels were particularly interested in our voting rights work, and would often interfere, rendering an investigation futile. I needed a reprieve from the paperwork. I thought being in trial would help, but federal trials in the enforcement of voting rights were few and far between. One of my Black colleagues told me about a program he had participated in early in his career that allowed DOJ attorneys with few trial opportunities to go on temporary detail to a U.S. Attorney's office in Washington, D.C. He always spoke so glowingly about his experience, regaling me with hilarious stories of courtroom antics and theatrics. My request to participate was repeatedly denied, however, since the program wasn't readily available to voting rights lawyers, so I applied to work at the United States Attorney's office directly. When I received my offer, I headed to my colleague's office for his congratulations. Instead, his normally jovial mood darkened when I told him that it was not a temporary six-month detail but a permanent position with a four-year commitment. He closed the door, saying, "Two words, Coates: human misery." He counted each word on his fingers. "I don't know how to describe it other than to say that you're not going to be able to get used to that type of human misery every day. There is nothing you can really do about it either. It just keeps coming." I was shocked. As a prosecutor, I assumed he would have been the only one in the courtroom who actually could have done something about the misery. Isn't that what was meant by justice? "Look, all I can tell you is be careful. You gotta protect yourself. You're better off staying here at Main Justice," he said, distinguishing our work from that of United States Attorneys across the country. "It's a lot to deal with." I felt apprehensive as I watched him close his eyes in remembrance. But I wasn't leaving the Department of Justice, I told myself, just working in a different capacity. I assumed it would be similar enough and that my work as a federal prosecutor in a criminal courtroom would be held in the same high regard as my work within the Civil Rights Division. I chalked up his admonishment to an assumption that he lacked what I clearly believed I had: fortitude. In fact, the transition from enforcing civil rights legislation to criminal prosecution represented a seismic shift in how others perceived me, and even how I perceived myself. I had been a trusted champion of people who looked like me. But now, I was often distrusted as an agent of a system that disproportionately filled prisons with people who looked like me. This created a struggle, an internal battle of allegiance, between the competing facets of my identity. It wasn't always clear which should win. For seven years, I upheld my oath as a public servant, but my work put me at odds with my principles and lived experience as a Black woman. Over this time, I prosecuted in the name of justice while injustice unfolded on the national stage. I gave birth to my son the year Trayvon Martin was killed. I nursed my son while watching Trayvon's mother fight for justice for her own. As the country debated whether Trayvon had been racially profiled by a wannabe cop, I consoled myself with the fact that I was in a position to punish a real one who might profile another woman's child. Then I had my daughter. Three months later, Michael Brown was killed. I followed the case and saw the way the grand jury process was used to undermine the potential prosecution of the police officer who had shot Brown. As the country vilified the prosecutor's decision not to indict the officer, I told myself that I was different from that prosecutor. As a Black woman and mother, I believed that I would never exploit the power I had over a grand jury to somehow deny justice. I convinced myself that I needed to remain a prosecutor to balance the system. And then Tamir Rice was killed. And I heard the familiar script of officers attempting to justify their use of force. The same script used by officers testifying against defendants in my own cases. And I looked at my growing son, who always tracked at the highest percentiles of height, and was terrified that he may one day be the little boy mistaken for a man. And then I looked at my husband, a Black man who now feared his own death at the hands of police officers. He would ask me to explain why it was so hard to charge the officers in these cases. "There's no recourse? How can that be? Isn't there some way . . ." My answers could never alleviate his fear, only explain the process by which I had been trained. I again tried to distinguish myself, assuring him that prosecutors like me would make different decisions. But a part of him was resigned to the possibility that I might be the exception and not the rule. I was terrified that he was right, or worse, that I had fooled myself into thinking I could actually be the exception. We wondered how soon to have "the talk" and not the one White people have with their kids. We needed to teach our children how to interact with police officers, and refused to let either of them play with toys that even slightly resembled a weapon. I knew it wasn't fair to limit my children this way, but I didn't know how not to be afraid. And then came the day my husband stopped asking me questions about prosecutors' charging decisions and instead installed a camera in our car. I laughed, thinking that he had purchased another unnecessary gadget for himself. His expression dissolved my smile. He told me that the camera was for me. If he were ever killed by a police officer in a traffic stop, he just wanted me to know what happened. He had heard me talk so often about the rehearsed scripts officers used to justify their excessive use of force, he hoped this would be a way to capture the truth. It was his love letter to me, and it broke my heart. As an insider, I felt powerless to ensure justice. I eventually became distrustful of a system in which I was a decision maker. I looked around the courtroom through the eyes of a prosecutor, but also as a Black woman, daughter, sister, wife, and mother. I couldn't stomach the homogeneity of the defendants inside the gate compared to the people outside of it. Out of the hundreds of criminal matters I prosecuted in court, I can count the number of White defendants I saw on one hand. The imbalance was revolting. I cringed at how accustomed the courtroom had become to a choreographed routine, with everyone knowing their place and role. Two armed marshals wearing rubber gloves would stand behind the defendants, waiting for the judge to nod--a command to restrain them. As natural as it was for me to clasp my hands together in front of my body, so it was for the defendants to hold their hands behind their backs without prompting, expecting to feel the metal of handcuffs. I questioned my own role within the system. Others did too. Black defendants would pass me with an air of surprise that I was standing where they assumed a White man would be. My allegiance was also on trial. Was it to the laws of the United States? To the Black community? To the officers? To the powers that be? These constituencies were increasingly at odds. When I first became a prosecutor, I had thought each case could represent a dot on the arc that Dr. King hoped would bend toward justice. Now, I wondered if I was bending the arc of justice or breaking it, and afraid the justice system might just break me. I was no longer confident that my presence in the system was an asset and not somehow a betrayal. Even guilty verdicts couldn't prevent collateral damage to the victims. I knew these stories needed to be told, but my position as prosecutor served to muzzle me. I debated whether to leave my job, unsure whether I could make a bigger impact as a participant or a spectator of the justice system. After four years, four words revealed the clear choice. I was standing in the hallway of the courthouse after having won yet another trial, securing yet another guilty verdict against yet another Black person. My White supervisor had watched my closing argument and had accompanied me for the verdict. He was showering me with praise as he held his hand up for a high five. My hand met his. "We got another one!" he exclaimed, wrapping his hand around my flat palm and pumping it in the air. Before I could respond, he walked away, disappearing into another courtroom to watch another colleague's trial. I didn't need to meet the eyes of another Black person standing in the hallway to know that my own should have been lowered. I replayed that moment for days, turning the phrase over in my head. "We . . . got . . . another . . . one!" My entire being recoiled. I tried not to project my own feelings on my supervisor and extend the benefit of the doubt, but his words felt like an indoctrination. For my conscience, it was the proverbial final straw. I walked away the day my four-year commitment ended, not knowing whether I had been a proud champion or a coward, complicit or exonerated, the public's humble servant or its slave. What I did know was that one day my children would realize that I was only human, and I needed to be able to look them in their eyes when they did. I wanted them to know what it meant to pursue justice, and what could happen along the way to the people with the power and to those who are powerless. I gave birth to my two children while a prosecutor, and I wanted them to understand the thoughts I carried within me as I carried them into the world. I wanted that world to be just. I removed the muzzle and used my experiences in the courtroom as a guide to educate the public as a law professor, news analyst, and radio talk show host. In that, I have found a new calling. When I left the job, I left the files on my desk, but I took the memories with me in the hopes that by sharing the injustices I'd witnessed, justice itself might one day be possible. What follows are those stories. Excerpted from Just Pursuit: A Black Prosecutor's Fight for Fairness by Laura Coates All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.