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The Defender

The Battle to Protect the Rights of the Accused in Philadelphia

Edward W. Madeira Jr. Michael D. Schaffer

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Paperback

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English
Temple University Press,U.S.
29 March 2024
Long before the Supreme Court ruled that impoverished defendants in criminal cases have a right to free counsel, Philadelphia’s public defenders were working to ensure fair trials for all. In 1934, when penniless defendants were routinely railroaded through the courts without ever seeing a lawyer, Philadelphia attorney Francis Fisher Kane helped create the Voluntary Defender Association, supported by charity and free from political interference, to represent poor people accused of crime. 

When the Supreme Court’s 1963 decision Gideonv. Wainwright mandated free counsel for indigent defendants, the Defender (as it is now known) became more essential than ever, representing at least 70 percent of those caught in the machinery of justice in the city. Its groundbreaking work in juvenile advocacy, homicide representation, death-row habeas corpus petitions, parole issues, and alternative sentencing has earned a national reputation.

In The Defender, Edward Madeira, past president of the Defender’s Board of Directors, and former Philadelphia Inquirer journalist Michael Schaffer chart the 80-plus-year history of the organization as it grew from two lawyers in 1934 to a staff of nearly 500 in 2015.

This is a compelling story about securing justice for those who need it most.
By:   ,
Imprint:   Temple University Press,U.S.
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 18mm
Weight:   399g
ISBN:   9781439918531
ISBN 10:   1439918538
Pages:   256
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Edward W. Madeira Jr. (1928-2020)practiced law in Philadelphia for more than 60 years and is the Retired Chair Emeritus of Pepper Hamilton. As a young lawyer, he worked as a volunteer public defender, on loan from Pepper Hamilton to the Defender Association of Philadelphia. He was a member of the Defender’s Board of Directors from 1958 to 2016 and was Chairman of the Board from 1973 to 1998.  Michael D. Schaffer held a variety of reporting and editing posts at The Philadelphia Inquirer, including Book Review Editor, before retiring from the newspaper at the end of 2014. He worked at the National Portrait Gallery of the Smithsonian Institution before becoming a journalist. He is the co-author of two books, “The Dye Is Now Cast,”: The Road to American Independence, 1774-1776 published by the Smithsonian Institution as part of its Bicentennial observance, and 1787: Inventing America: A Day-by-Day Account of the Constitutional Convention.

Reviews for The Defender: The Battle to Protect the Rights of the Accused in Philadelphia

"""In The Defender, Madeira and Schaeffer piece together the strands that eventually portray the Defender, as the organization is widely known, as a coherent, functioning organization serving well the legal and other needs of poor defendants appearing in the city’s courts. The Defender has a significant history of extensive services directed at keeping defendants out of jail and planning for their release, whether from pretrial detention or on parole. Key to these achievements, Madeira and Schaeffer chronicle 'the unique stream of leadership' that ferried and propelled the Defender through periods of professional skepticism, fiscal crisis, and staffing limits. Notably, Madeira and Schaeffer also trace the Defender’s holistic defense work.""— Journal of Community Corrections  "


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