The Many Stories of In re Gault
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Description
A book celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of In re Gault naturally begins with a description of the case itself. In re Gault reached the United States Supreme Court in the heyday of the Warren Court. In delinquency cases, as in criminal cases, the accused has the right to “confrontation and sworn testimony by witnesses available for cross-examination”. Harry Blackmun's blithe confidence in the wisdom and ideal behavior of juvenile court judges is particularly baffling given the facts of the cases that were before the Court in McKeiver v. Pennsylvania. The North Carolina case joined with McKeiver's in the United States Supreme Court, In re Barbara Burrus, was an even starker and graver example of judicial bias and impropriety. Victory in the Supreme Court came only after Jerry Gault spent more than two years at the Arizona Industrial School for Boys, a reformatory known as “desert Devil's Island”.
Source Publication
Rights, Race, and Reform: 50 Years of Child Advocacy in the Juvenile Justice System
Source Editors/Authors
Kristin Henning, Laura Cohen, Ellen Marrus
Publication Date
2018
Recommended Citation
Baharanyi, Zawadi and Hertz, Randy A., "The Many Stories of In re Gault" (2018). Faculty Chapters. 777.
https://gretchen.law.nyu.edu/fac-chapt/777
