evidence or statutory evidence, let people commit perjury, said in the room and sat in the room to destroy evidence to convict someone who was innocent. and that is how i started my career as a lawyer. when i started that case, i began thinking this was a big conspiracy to frame this man. what i learned is and i discussed this with geronimo we are experiencing men and women who thought the end justified the means. they thought they had a bad man and it was ok to do anything necessary to convict him. as i look back on my career, present and future, i think we see that that is the concept that runs through police misconduct. i am sure there are officers who were just bad, let s say. i think officers see what they consider bad people, and they feel like they have to do what ever it takes to convict them. and i have seen it when i was a young lawyer, when we had narcotics teams, we would get clients to said they arrested me with $20,000 and they said i only had $10,000. and
and racism, and they took it to the streets, and they cried out loud, and they demonstrated, chanted, boycotted tax. we have to wake up! we re in a slumber because life is fat in the united states. and we re willing to surrender constitutional rights for our own, you know, image of self-protection. and terrorism abounds. and isn t the police force, you know, wonderful to protect us? that s all era. and what we have to do is point at what is wrong and seek in every fashion or address it within the circle of your own ability to communicate. [applause] my book is called lust for justice and the word lust imply a certain passion. i think that what is missing over the decades as i have lived is exactly what tony is saying. the dissident voice has become either silent or is yawning itself to sleep. and we can all do something about that. i wrote this book because i wanted tony s dissident voice to be heard. i wanted the art that i did of him showing his passion and his alivenes
my view, be more activistic, have more courage, where there s manifest, protest it. everyone should choose an issue. everyone then should be behind that issue and strive for change. the first thing is identify. and then to demonstrate. and then to do actions. and maybe, you know, i m old and i m thinking how the 1960 s sought to reform things like war and racism, and they took it to the streets, and they cried out loud, and they demonstrated, chanted, boycotted tax. we have to wake up! we re in a slumber because life is fat in the united states. and we re willing to surrender constitutional rights for our own, you know, image of self-protection. and terrorism abounds. and isn t the police force, you know, wonderful to protect us? that s all era. and what we have to do is point at what is wrong and seek in every fashion or address it within the circle of your own ability to communicate. [applause] my book is called lust for justice and the word lust imply a certain passi
my view, be more activistic, have more courage, where there s manifest, protest it. everyone should choose an issue. everyone then should be behind that issue and strive for change. the first thing is identify. and then to demonstrate. and then to do actions. and maybe, you know, i m old and i m thinking how the 1960 s sought to reform things like war and racism, and they took it to the streets, and they cried out loud, and they demonstrated, chanted, boycotted tax. we have to wake up! we re in a slumber because life is fat in the united states. and we re willing to surrender constitutional rights for our own, you know, image of self-protection. and terrorism abounds. and isn t the police force, you know, wonderful to protect us? that s all era. and what we have to do is point at what is wrong and seek in every fashion or address it within the circle of your own ability to communicate. [applause] my book is called lust for justice and the word lust imply a certain passi
have more courage, where there s manifest, protest it. everyone should choose an issue. everyone then should be behind that issue and strive for change. the first thing is identify. and then to demonstrate. and then to do actions. and maybe, you know, i m old and i m thinking how the 1960 s sought to reform things like war and racism, and they took it to the streets, and they cried out loud, and they demonstrated, chanted, boycotted tax. we have to wake up! we re in a slumber because life is fat in the united states. and we re willing to surrender constitutional rights for our own, you know, image of self-protection. and terrorism abounds. and isn t the police force, you know, wonderful to protect us? that s all era. and what we have to do is point at what is wrong and seek in every fashion or address it within the circle of your own ability to communicate. [applause] my book is called lust for justice and the word lust imply a certain passion. i think that what is missin