Defending the Despised: William Moses Kunstler
American Indian Law Review
Volume 20 | Number 1
1-1-1995
Defending the Despised: William Moses Kunstler
Randall Coyne
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Recommended Citation
Randall Coyne, Defending the Despised: William Moses Kunstler, 20 Am. Indian L. Rev. 257 (1995),
https://digitalcommons.law.ou.edu/ailr/vol20/iss1/9
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SPECIAL FEATURES
DEFENDING THE DESPISED: WILLIAM MOSES
KUNSTLER
Randall Coyne*
Beginnings
"Care to join me in a little petty larceny?" With these words, radical
defense lawyer William Kunstler reached into the newspaper vending
machine at Will Rogers World Airport and removed two copies of the Daily
Oklahoman. Before I could answer, Kunstler handed one to me and made
me his accomplice. At that moment, I began to feel genuine affection for the
man whose work I had for so many years admired.'
Kunstler's death at age seventy-six, on September 4, 1995, ended a
remarkable career of frequently defending indefensible clients and, more than
occasionally, winning unwinnable cases.2 After a dozen years spent
maintaining a quiet and relatively undistinguished traditional civil practice,3
Kunstler received a phone call that dramatically altered the nature of his
practice and started him on a journey which culminated in Kunstler
*
Professor of Law, University of Oklahoma. J.D., 1986, Georgetown University Law
Center; B.Music Educ., 1980, University of Massachusetts. Professor Coyne is the coauthor, with
Lyn Entzeroth, of CapitalPunishment and the JudicialProcess (Carolina Academic Press 1994).
1. The night before, November 6, 1992, Kunstler had addressed a large and enthusiastic
audience at the University of Oklahoma in Norman. Students, faculty, and members of the
community had gathered for a screening of Incidentat Oglala,a documentary, directed by Robert
Redford, which focuses on the notorious case of Leonard Peltier. Peltier, a Native American, had
been convicted of the 1975 murders of two federal agents on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South
Dakota. Kunstler, a member of Peltier's appellate defense team, had been invited to give remarks
about the case and to explain the status of Peltier's appeals. For more about the Peltier case, see
infra notes 56-88 and accompanying text.
2. Kunstler's career in criminal defense appears all the more remarkable when one considers
its relatively late start. Kunstler graduated from Columbia Law School in 1948 and spent his first
twelve years of private practice specializing in civil matters. WILLIAM M. KUNSTLER, MY LIFE
AS A RADICAL LAWYER 82-84, 101-07 (1994) [hereinafter A RADICAL LAWYER]. Soon after he
passed the New York State bar exam, Kunstler formed a small law firm with his younger brother,
Michael. Their practice revolved around divorces and wills. William Kunstler summarized this
period of his life for a reporter: "I was bored out of my skull." Defending the Despised, PEOPLE,
Sept. 18, 1995, at 225.
3. Kunstler did perform at least one routine legal task for a client who, years later, would
become notorious in his own right. As a result of a referral from Roy Cohn, a Columbia Law
School classmate, Kunstler drafted a will for United States Senator Joseph McCarthy. Cohn and
McCarthy had not yet embarked on their unholy crusade to eradicate communism in America.
A RADICAL LAWYER, supra note 2, at 89.
Published by University of Oklahoma College of Law Digital Commons, 1995
258
AMERICAN INDIAN LAW REVIEW
[Vol. 20
becoming one of the most beloved4 - and despised' - attorneys to practice
this century.
Early on the morning of June 15, 1961, Rowland Watts of the American
Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) called Kunstler and asked him to travel to
Jackson, Mississippi to lend "moral support" to the "Freedom Riders." The
Freedom Riders, primarily young men and women of both races,.
courageously rode interstate buses, trains and airplanes throughout the South,
hoping to force the integration of segregated transportation facilities.6 As
Kunstler explained in his autobiography,
The Freedom Riders had been organized and sponsored by the
Congress for Racial Equality (CORE) to fight the Jim Crow laws
that ruled the South. Jim Crow mandated separation of the white
and black races in all places of public accommodation: buses,
bus terminals, airports, drinking fountains, toilets ....
Freedom
Riders began their historic bus rides on May 4, 1961. At every
place they stopped, they were harassed, arrested, and brutalized.
In Anniston, Alabama, for example, a bus was set afire, and its
occupants severely beaten.7
Kunstler flew to Jackson that same evening. What Kunstler saw - the
peaceful, dignified resolve of young demonstrators who bravely faced both
the certainty of jail and the uncertainty of far worse - marked him
permanently. Kunstler joined the battle, helping to draft habeas corpus
petitions seeking the immediate release of the Freedom Riders. Although the
4. According to Gerald Lefeourt, Kunstler received a letter dated January 23, 1994, which
read, in pertinent part, as follows:
Dear Bill:
You might be interested to know, if you didn't already know that amongst me and
my fellow prisoners you are a folk hero. There isn't a murderer, rapist, arsonist or
major drug dealer who doesn't think of you as a great man. That includes the
harasser of Joy Silverman.
-
Warmest regards,
[former New York Court of Appeals
Chief Judge] Sol Wachtler.
In Memoriam, MotrrHPICE (New York State Assoc. of Crim. Defense Lawyers), Sept./Oct. 1995,
at 7 (vol. 3, no. 5) [hereinafter MoUTHPIEcE].
5. In 1992, Ron Rosenbaum, writing for Vanity Fairmagazine, branded Kunstler "the most
hated lawyer in America." Gerald Lefcourt, who introduced Kunstler at the New York State
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers Annual Dinner in 1994, observed: "Bill Kunstler's
enemies loathe him to the same degree that his clients adore him, and he takes pride in both."
Id. at 8.
6. A RADICAL LAWYER, supra note 2, at 102.
7. Id.; see also MOUTHPIECE, supra note 4, at 8. "Waves of Freedom riders, violently
harassed in Montgomery and Birmingham, were arrested en masse as they arrived at the bus, rail
and air terminals of Jackson, Mississippi." Id.
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SPECIAL FEATURES
petitions were dismissed,8 forty-two-year-old William Kunstler had joined
the civil rights movement.9
Undeterred by the failure of his habeas corpus petitions, Kunstler simply
switched tactics. Personal experience taught Kunstler that the Freedom
Riders would not receive fair trials in southern state courts. To remove these
cases to federal court - and to re (...truncated)