

1995 News Release Chronology:
December 1995 --
"Senate's Ruby Ridge Report Confirms: Law Enforcement Practice, Expansion Threaten
Constitutional Freedoms"
Washington, DC, December 21, 1995 -- "Growing and increasingly powerful law
enforcement agencies urgently require increased oversight," said Robert Fogelnest,
president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL), in
response to the report released today by the Senate subcommittee investigating the
August, 1992 tragedy at Ruby Ridge, Idaho. --more--
December 1995 --
"Attorney-Conducted Voir Dire is Fairer, More Efficient: Let Lawyers Question Prospective Jurors,
Professional Criminal Defense Bar Urges"
Washington, DC, December 14, 1995 -- Federal courts should be required to
permit attorneys to participate in pretrial questioning of jurors in criminal trials,
prominent Northern California attorney James Farragher Campbell will urge a
federal judicial panel at a hearing in Oakland, California on Friday. Campbell will
testify on behalf of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
(NACDL). --more--
December 1995 --
Bail is a Constitutional Right: Clinton Plan to Force Drug Tests on Everyone Arrested is 'Orwellian,' Criminal Defense Bar Declares
Washington, DC, December 15, 1995 -- "Forced drug testing of every citizen
who's arrested raises troubling Fourth Amendment questions, and it's a blatant
violation of the Eighth Amendment," declared Robert Fogelnest, president of the
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL), today in response
to President Clinton's announcement that he will order drug testing as a condition
of bail for all federal arrestees.--more--
December 1995 --
"Expanded 'Counter-Terrorism' Powers Unnecessary and Dangerous: 'Tap 'Em, Entrap 'Em, and Zap 'Em'
Antiterrorism Bill Imperils Americans' Rights, Puts Federal 'Big Brother' in Charge"
Washington, DC, December 6, 1995 -- "The only Americans who have any need
at all for sweeping new 'antiterrorism' legislation are politicians desperate to boost
their ratings back home before Congress adjourns for the year," noted John
Flannery, co-chair of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers'
(NACDL) Legislative Committee, at a Capitol Hill press conference organized by a
broad-based coalition of groups opposed to legislation the House is expected to
take up early next week. --more--
November 1995 --
"Stetson Law Students Win National Criminal Trial Competition; Hofstra, New Mexico, and Southwestern
Also in Top Four"
Washington, DC, November 9, 1995 -- Beating back fierce competition from 11
other law schools, a team of four students representing Stetson University College
of Law took top honors in the 1995 Cathy E. Bennett National Criminal Trial
Competition, sponsored by the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
(NACDL) and held at NACDL's Fall Meeting in Las Vegas, Nevada, October 25-28. --more--
November 1995 --
"Give Up Everything You Own -- Maybe You'll Get a Lighter Sentence: Court's Cursory Analysis in Libretti
Waters Down Property Rights of Citizens Who Plead Guilty"
Washington, DC, November 7, 1995 -- "America depends on the preservation of
fairness and constitutional protections for the guilty as well as the innocent. But
apparently today's Supreme Court -- with the exception of Justice Stevens -- is
untroubled about applying a watered-down standard to protect the property rights
of defendants in criminal forfeitures," declared Robert Fogelnest, president of the
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL), in reaction to
today's Supreme Court decision in Libretti v. U.S. --more--
October 1995 --
Preventing Future Wacos and Ruby Ridges: Joint Statement of Gerald H. Goldstein, Immediate Past President, and
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL)
Washington, DC, October 24, 1995 -- By virtue of their role in the justice system,
the nation's criminal defense lawyers are uniquely positioned to observe how law
enforcement and prosecutorial agencies perform their work. Before the
headline-grabbing events at Waco and Ruby Ridge, NACDL's members were
painfully aware of the increasingly militaristic culture growing throughout law
enforcement in the United States. --more--
October 1995 --
Jury Finds O.J. Not Guilty: Verdict Highlights 'Our Precious Jury System'
Washington, DC, October 3, 1995 -- "The 'not guilty' verdict in the O.J. Simpson
case highlights the importance of America's precious constitutional system of
justice," declared Robert Fogelnest, president of the National Association of
Criminal Defense Lawyers, reacting to today's verdict in the trial of O.J. Simpson. --more--
September 1995 --
"Criminal Defense Bar Leader To Criticize Hypocrisy of Congress on Crime Measures"
Washington, DC, September 21, 1995 -- The head of the nation's criminal defense
bar will criticize Congress' criminal justice agenda in a speech to the annual
meeting of the District of Columbia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
(DCACDL), to be held at Sfuzzi, in Washington's Union Station, on Friday
evening, September 22. --more--
September 1995 --
"Federal Appeals Court Rules: IRS Probe of Law Firm Was 'Pretext' Improperly Aimed at Obtaining
Information on Client"
Washington, DC, September 14, 1995 -- Ruling on an issue of huge importance to
law firms across the nation, a federal appeals court in Boston yesterday affirmed a
lower court finding that "the IRS's purported probe of [a] law firm's tax-related
affairs was a hoax" designed to obtain financial information about one of the firm's
clients without going through procedures established by Congress "specifically to
protect the civil rights, including the privacy rights, of taxpayers." --more--
September 1995 --
"Prevent Future Law Enforcement Lawlessness: Congress Should Act on the Common Lessons of
Waco and Ruby Ridge"
Washington, DC, September 6, 1995 -- With Congress now focusing public
attention on the law enforcement lawlessness that contributed to the tragedies at
the Branch Davidians' Mount Carmel Center near Waco, Texas, and the home of
the Weaver family on Ruby Ridge, Idaho, congressional leaders must adopt
reforms to strengthen Americans' constitutional protections against such
misconduct, and abandon proposals that would further weaken them, wrote
Robert Fogelnest, president of the National Association of Criminal Defense
Lawyers (NACDL) in a letter to congressional leaders on the eve of Senate
hearings on the Ruby Ridge incident. --more--
August 1995 --
"House Bill Abolishes Death Penalty Legal Centers: Depriving Death Row Inmates of Qualified Lawyers
'Abdicates Constitutional and Moral Responsibility'"
Washington, DC, August 14, 1995 -- "Wanting to appear 'tough' on crime is one
thing, but depriving people who have been condemned to death of the counsel
they need is dead wrong. It's a moral embarrassment and an abdication of our
nation's constitutional and moral responsibilities. It's beyond the pale," declared
Robert Fogelnest, of New York City, in taking office as president of the National
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL). --more--
August 1995 --
"'Three Strikes' Laws: 'Absurd and Unnecessary'"
Washington, DC, August 14, 1995 -- "The federal 'three strikes' law tried to fix a
system that wasn't broken," according to Robert Fogelnest, of New York City,
president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL). --more--
July 1995 --
"Constitutional Limits on Law Enforcement Are Our Only Protection from the 'Arrogance of Power':
Government Deceit Before, During and After Waco Raid, Defense Attorneys Will Show"
Washington, DC, July 20, 1995 -- "Rather than teaching new lessons, the events
at Waco serve to reaffirm the lessons the framers of the Constitution knew very
well. They knew then what we must not forget -- that there will always be people
in law enforcement who are ambitious, who enjoy power and who will be willing
to distort the truth to achieve their objectives or to hide from blame," criminal
defense lawyer Tim Evans, of Houston, Texas, will tell the House subcommittees
examining the 1993 events at the Branch Davidian compound near Waco when he
testifies on behalf of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
(NACDL) on Friday, July 21. --more--
July 1995 --
"Hypocrisy on the Hill: Proposals in Congress Make Future Wacos More Likely, Not Less"
Washington, DC, July 19, 1995 -- "Even as these Subcommittees begin to review the tragic
debacle at Waco, ironically both Houses of Congress are considering measures to expand still further
the powers of the very federal agencies responsible for that and other disasters. Those measures
would bring about dramatic increases in the unchecked power, authority, and role of federal officials
in everyday American life," according to National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers
(NACDL) President Gerald H. Goldstein.--more--
June 1995 --
"New Study Documents Sentencing Waste: Unfair
Crack Sentences Cost Taxpayers $3.5 Billion"
Washington, DC, June 15, 1995 -- Racially discriminatory federal sentences for
drug offenses involving crack cocaine will waste $3.5 billion of taxpayers' money
if Congress fails to follow the recommendations of the U.S. Sentencing
Commission to reduce those sentences, a report prepared for the National
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL) reveals. --more--
June 1995 --
"Congress Considers Muzzling Defense Lawyers: Proposal is 'Anathema' to Constitutional System"
Washington, DC, June 29, 1995 -- "If Congress is going to give federal
prosecutors the power to indict opposing lawyers for arguments they advance in
court, it might as well repeal the Sixth Amendment and burn the Bill of Rights,"
according to National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL)
President Gerald H. Goldstein, of San Antonio. --more--
June 1995 --
"Chairman Hyde Advances Reforms: Civil Forfeiture Laws Trash the Constitution"
Washington, DC, June 22, 1995 -- "A worse example of police state tactics would
be hard to find. Civil forfeiture laws have perverted law enforcement agencies by
allowing them summarily to seize property from innocent citizens and
corporations," National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL)
President Gerald H. Goldstein, of San Antonio, said today. --more--
June 1995 --
Abandoning Constitutional Liberties Won't Cure Crime! Criminal Defense Bar To Urge Congress to Come to Its Senses
Washington, DC, June 12, 1995 -- The broad-based abandonment of
constitutional liberties contained in the current congressional crime agenda
represents a dangerous surrender of long-cherished American rights and will be
futile in making our society safer, criminal defense lawyers from across the U.S.
will tell congressional leaders on Wednesday, June 14 when they arrive in
Washington for the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers' (NACDL)
Fourth Annual Legislative Fly-In. --more--
June 1995 --
South Africa Surpasses United States as Respecter of Human Rights, Decision Further Isolates U.S. in Executing Citizens
Washington, DC, June 6, 1995 -- "This is a historic day, not just for South Africa,
but for the entire world community," said an ecstatic National Association of
Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL) President Gerald H. Goldstein, of San
Antonio, Texas, in praising what he called the "wonderful, beautiful decision" of
South Africa's Constitutional Court to outlaw capital punishment in that country.
Goldstein noted that the decision further isolates the United States as the only
Western country that still executes its citizens. --more--
May 1995 --
Oklahoma City Bombing: Criminal Defense Bar Urges Transfer of Case
and Permitting Appointed Counsel to Withdraw
Washington, DC, May 2, 1995 -- To ensure justice and due process, National
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers President Gerald H. Goldstein today
urged the federal court in Oklahoma City to transfer the bombing case to another
jurisdiction and permit the two local attorneys appointed to represent defendant
Timothy McVeigh to withdraw from the case. --more--
April 1995 --
"NACDL President Warns Against Legislative Overreaction to Oklahoma City Bombing"
Washington, DC, April 26, 1995 -- Gerald H. Goldstein, president of the National
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL), today warned members of
Congress against using the tragic Oklahoma City bombing as an excuse for
stampeding to enact "anti-terrorism" legislation that tramples basic American
principles of due process and limited government power. --more--
March 1995 --
"Provisions in Senate Crime Bill Would Eviscerate Fourth and Fifth Amendments"
Washington, DC, March 23, 1995 -- Proposals that would corrode the constitutional
pillars of our legal system and undermine our cherished American democracy are now making
their way through Congress.
--more--



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