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Extracted Text (OCR)
4.2.12
WC: 191694
As I previously mentioned, my initial assignment as Justice Goldberg’s law clerk was to write a
memorandum on the possible unconstitutionality of the death penalty. Here is how [ find
author] , in his book , describes the origins of this lifelong collaborative effort.
[Justice Goldberg] called his law clerk Alan Dershowitz into his office and advanced the
decidedly immodest idea of using the Constitution to end the death penalty in America.
“The Eighth Amendment prohibits cruel and unusual punishment,” Goldberg told
Dershowitz. “What could be more cruel than the deliberate decision by the state to take a
human life?”
Alan Dershowitz immediately understood the impudence of Goldberg’s proposal. It was
Dershowitz’s very first day on the job and the young clerk, already brimming with energy
and enthusiasm, was elated by the Justice’s proposed agenda.
When Goldberg sat down with Dershowitz in the summer of 1963, not even the American
Civil Liberties Union believed that capital punishment posed a potential violation of
constitutional rights. Dershowitz made this point to Goldberg. “At the time the Eighth
Amendment was enacted, the colonists were executing people all over the place.
Certainly the framers of the Constitution did not regard the death penalty as
unconstitutional.”
“Therein lies the beauty of our Bill of Rights,” Goldberg said. “It’s an evolving document.
It means something different today than it meant in 1792.”
In Alan Dershowitz, Goldberg found a kindred spirit and a life story that was in many
ways the New York parallel of his own Chicago childhood...Dershowitz had an aversion
to capital punishment, which traced back to his childhood. Dershowitz argued against
capital punishment as a member of his high school debating team. [I still have a
handwritten card from my first high school debate in which I advocate the “abolision of
C.P.” because “most murderers are products of invironment.”] In law school, he wrote a
letter to the Prime Minister of Israel...arguing that the death penalty was inappropriate
even for Adolf Eichmann.
Goldberg’s choice of Dershowitz to write his capital punishment opinion was no
coincidence. Goldberg passed on the issue during his first year on the bench in part
because he did not feel that he had the right clerks. He inherited his first set of clerks from
Felix Frankfurter. Though he had high regard for the retiring justice’s selections, he didn’t
feel they were right for the job.
They worked together through scholarship and advocacy against the death penalty for the
remainder of Goldberg’s life. It is difficult to imagine that Goldberg could have found a
more willing and able confederate than Alan Dershowitz.
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