inumumemimmow 26 Friday, May 4, 1984 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS Lawyer Continued from preceding page We also have Perfume • Dusting Powder • Body Lotion • Shower Gel • Soap & Deodorant all at discount prices! Oak Park Coolidge at 10 Mile 547-9669 Hours: Mon. thru Sat. 9 'til 6 West Bloomfield Plaza Orchard Lake Rd. S. of Maple Rd. 851-7323 Hours: Daily 'til 7 Visit Birmingham, Switzerland. For the First International Swiss Watch Festival. OVER 5 MILLION DOLLARS OF SWISS WATCHES ON SALE. ONE DAY ONLY: SATURDAY, MAY 5, 10:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M ONLY AT DAVID WACHLER & SONS. It's the First Inter- national Swiss Watch Festival one-day only sale. An outstanding collection of the world's finest watches at values never presented before. Come in and choose the perfect watch for Mother's Day, Father's Day, graduation, birthday or anniversary. C'OINcORI) MARINI R David Wachter &Sons THE FAMILY OF AWARD-WINNING JEWELRY DESIGNERS. Certified gemologists • Members of the American Gem Society ,100 S. Woodward (corner of Maple) Birmingham, MI (313) 540-4622 wasn't even a marginal student when attending New York's Yeshiva High School. He was worse. He slipped by on C's and D's in math and F's in conduct. He scored so well on standardized tests that his teachers assumed he was cheating. He was a world-class street fighter. His future was doubtful. A successful career that would take him from Brooklyn's Boro Park was so questionable that neighborhood girls had orders to stay away from him. If they wanted to marry a doctor or a dentist of the future, there were other boys on the block. Dershowitz's one saving grace was his mouth. Swift with a glib remark, his high school principal suggested that he become a lawyer — "something where you can use your mouth and don't need much brains." Dershowitz passed the entrance exam for Brooklyn College. He blossomed academically and was passed on to Yale Law School. There, he edited the law journal and finished first in his class. He applied to 32 Wall Street firms for a job. He was rejected by 32 Wall Street firms. Dershowitz later blamed this on anti-Semitism. Even without Wall Street, Dershowitz did well. He clerked for U.S. Appeals Court Judge David Bazelon and Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg. At '25, he was invited to join the faculty of the Harvard Law School. Dershowitz lost his jurisprudent virginity 12 years ago. He said he has always had "a cynical and skeptical streak" about American justice. But he had no idea of the (system's) outright lies and judicial distortions" until he was asked by the father of an old friend from Boro Park to defend his son on a murder charge. Sheldon Siegel, a member of the Jewish Defense League, was charged by New York City police with blowing up the offices of impressario Sol Hurok. The JDL wished to protest Hurok's sponsorship of Russian performers touring the United States. Hurok was uninjured; a 27-year-old Jewish employee was killed. Early on, the suspicion dawned that the police had an informer within the JDL. Then, "a hideous idea occured": the informer was one of the accused. That explained whx, the prosecutors were highly confident and why no deals were being offered. Dershowitz gradually — and correctly — concluded that the informer was his own client, an agent provocateur planted by the police. Siegel eventually admitted his complicity with the police, telling Dershowitz that he could not testify against his best friends. Police threats against his life, he claimed, had forced him to squeal. Not even his lawyer could believe Siegel's tale: Dershowitz was still an innocent. He still thought there was justice in the American justice system. Siegel wouldn't tattle on his friends. But he would squeal on the cops. He had hidden a tape recorder in his car and secretly recorded conversations with the police in which they threatened to kill him if he ever turned on them. They had also guaranteed that Siegel would beat the murder rap if he lied in court. "An officer of the law telling , witness to lie on the witness stand!" said the still-appalled Dershowitz. The crucial conversation in which the police ordered Siegel to perjure himself had not been recorded. But Dershowitz still had the street savvy he had picked up back in Boro Park; it had never been intellectualized out of him in the Ivy League. He used it to trap Santa Parola, the cop who had gotten Siegel to tattle on the JDL. Parola, a detective who had investigated every major bombing in New York, had also come from Boro Park. A tough Italian kid, he had lived on the other side of the elevated tracks and made periodic raids into the Jewish section. In the courtroom, it was one Boro Park kid against another. Dershowitz asked Parola some questions that he knew he would lie about and for which the true answers were on Siegel's tapes. After Parola lied, Dershowitz played the tape. Parola was shocked. Then Dershowitz asked him whether he had told Siegel to lie and that he would help him beat the murder rap. Assuming that conversation was also recorded, Parola confessed. The U.S. Court of Appeals later ruled that the government had illegally entrapped Siegel and charges against all defendants were dismissed. "I did not participate in the victory party that the Jewish Defense League had," Dershowitz said. "I sat for an hour in the courtroom with tears in my eyes. I did not think about Sheldon Siegel. I thought abour Iris Cohen (the woman who -had been killed by the bomb in Hurok's office). It was a terrible tragedy, but I had a job to do." Dershowitz's job — the job of defense attorney — frequently puts him in the -position of defending the guilty: "I've had very few innocent clients. I sometimes even root for the other side. Anyone who wants to spend his life defending the innocent has to go into a different professior There are just not enough of them . ■ go around." "Being a criminal lawyer is very difficult," Dershowitz admitted. "People ask me all the time; What's a nice guy like you defending people like that?' Defending Nazis. Defending pornographers. Defending killers. It's a very difficult role to be in. I don't enjoy defending terrible people. I don't enjoy it any more than would a surgeon working on a terrorist or a leading gangster. But a surgeon's job is to heal and cure