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Elenco: Douglas O. Linder
24 episodios
1. The Trial of Anne Hutchinson

1. The Trial of Anne Hutchinson
There was no toleration of religious dissent in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 1600s. And there certainly was no room for religious argument for a woman! When Anne Hutchinson shared with others her religious ideas and gathered a following, the governor put her on trial for heresy. Explore the trials, defense, and punishment of the woman sometimes called “America’s first feminist.”
31 min
2 ene 2020
2. The Trial of John Peter Zenger

2. The Trial of John Peter Zenger
Freedom of speech was not a recognized liberty in the early years of American colonies. Speech critical of the powers that be could land one in legal trouble, even if everyone involved agreed the statements were true. Explore the colonial history of the press freedom, voter suppression, and attempts to influence juries as they all came together to affect the libel trial of John Peter Zenger.
29 min
2 ene 2020
3. Two Slave Trials

3. Two Slave Trials
The citizens of the newly formed United States could not agree on the overall moral issue of slavery, but they were willing to take up its more narrow legal issues. Gain a greater understanding of the many ways in which the legal system supported the institution of slavery by examining the trials of two slaves: Anthony Burns and Celia (no last name).
29 min
2 ene 2020
4. The Trial of John Brown

4. The Trial of John Brown
John Brown's plan to end slavery came to a tragic end at Harper’s Ferry, VA, when guards were killed as he seized the federal armory and only a few slaves joined his revolt. Instead, Brown was charged with treason, murder, and slave insurrection. Learn how John Brown’s trial and execution nevertheless played a significant role in the eventual end of slavery in the United States.
29 min
2 ene 2020
5. The Trial of Susan B. Anthony

5. The Trial of Susan B. Anthony
Susan B. Anthony believed she was a citizen of the United States according to the Fourteenth Amendment and, as such, had the right to vote. But in 1872, the law was not on her side. So when she dropped her ballot into the box at the West End New Depot in Rochester, NY, on Election Day, she was arrested. Learn about the trial that brought nationwide attention to the issue of women’s suffrage.
30 min
2 ene 2020
6. The Trial of the Haymarket Eight

6. The Trial of the Haymarket Eight
Labor tensions were already at the boiling point in Chicago, when someone threw a bomb into a group of police officers. Although the bomb thrower was never found, eight defendants were tried by a jury handpicked by the bailiff, and seven were found guilty and sentenced to death for inciting violence. Explore the ways in which this trial became a key event in the history of free speech in America.
30 min
2 ene 2020
7. The Trial of John T. Scopes

7. The Trial of John T. Scopes
In 1925, Tennessee enacted a law making the teaching of evolution in any state-supported school a crime. John Scopes was a young science teacher at the time who agreed to serve as a test case for the law, defended by Clarence Darrow. Explore the heated opinions expressed on both sides and how the trial’s publicity brought the issue directly into American homes.
32 min
2 ene 2020
8. The Sweet Trials, Race, and Self-Defense

8. The Sweet Trials, Race, and Self-Defense
In 1925, Dr. Ossian Sweet, an African American, bought a home for his family in a white neighborhood of Detroit. When a white crowd gathered around the house and violence broke out, one member of the crowd was killed. Police charged everyone in the Sweet home with premeditated murder. Explore Clarence Darrow’s defense, and what the trial revealed about American society at that time.
31 min
2 ene 2020
9. Jehovah’s Witnesses and Flag-Salute Cases

9. Jehovah’s Witnesses and Flag-Salute Cases
Between 1938 and 1946, the Supreme Court handed down 23 opinions involving civil liberties issues raised by Jehovah’s Witnesses. Explore two of those cases, both of which address whether or not Jehovah’s Witnesses can be forced to salute the flag and recite the Pledge of Allegiance in public schools. Learn why the Court came down first on one side of the issue, and then the other.
28 min
2 ene 2020
10. Korematsu v. United States

10. Korematsu v. United States
In 1942, two months after Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt signed an executive order requiring that all Japanese Americans move to “relocation camps” as a matter of national security. Fred Korematsu refused, was arrested for violating an “exclusion order,” and convicted. Learn how Korematsu carried his fight against what he thought was an “un-American” law all the way to the Supreme Court.
30 min
2 ene 2020
11. Segregation on Trial

11. Segregation on Trial
Learn about Charles H. Houston, the African American lawyer who made it his life’s work to challenge Jim Crow laws and who won a Supreme Court victory in the case of Gaines v. Missouri, paving the way for the Court’s landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education. Houston’s work for the NAACP to end segregation led his successor, Thurgood Marshall, to say he was just carrying Houston’s bags.
31 min
2 ene 2020
12. The Lenny Bruce Trials

12. The Lenny Bruce Trials
Today, Lenny Bruce is considered a trailblazer of American stand-up comedy addressing the now-common themes of politics, sex, and religion. But in the 1950s and ‘60s, he was considered an obscene subversive, and arrested numerous times. Explore the ways in which Bruce and the First Amendment affected each other. Today’s authors, publishers, poets, and comedians owe a debt of gratitude to Bruce.
31 min
2 ene 2020
13. The Evolving Right to Marry

13. The Evolving Right to Marry
Richard Loving wanted to marry the woman of his dreams. But Richard was white, and Mildred, according to the commonwealth of Virginia, was “colored,” which made it illegal for them to marry. Learn how the case of this modest, unassuming couple went all the way to the Supreme Court, and how the Court’s ruling eventually led to marriage equality for same-sex couples, as well.
29 min
2 ene 2020
14. Wisconsin v. Yoder

14. Wisconsin v. Yoder
In the 1960s, the Amish had several disagreements with the state concerning their children’s education. But most important, they did not believe their children should be required to attend school past the age of 16. Learn how the issue made it to the Supreme Court, which conflicting liberties were considered, and why the Court decided in favor of the parents.
29 min
2 ene 2020
15. Furman v. Georgia

15. Furman v. Georgia
In 1972, when the US Supreme Court ruled that capital punishment as then administered was unconstitutional, many legal experts (including some justices) believed that would end the death penalty. Learn why that was not the case, and explore the deep complexities of the law as it relates to capital punishment.
29 min
2 ene 2020
16. The Trial of Daniel Ellsberg

16. The Trial of Daniel Ellsberg
Is it legal for an individual to copy top-secret documents and release them to the press? Can the government legally stop a newspaper from publishing classified material? Explore how these questions affected the country’s political life during the Nixon administration, and ultimately led to the president’s resignation.
30 min
2 ene 2020
17. The Road to Roe v. Wade

17. The Road to Roe v. Wade
Desperate for an abortion, Norma McCorvey agreed (under the name “Jane Roe”) to take the case to court, and ultimately the Supreme Court. As you learn about the famous decision that resulted, you’ll also gain a better understanding of the many other ways in which American courts have intervened in personal decisions related to sterilization and birth control, as well as abortion.
29 min
2 ene 2020
18. The Right to an Intimate Life

18. The Right to an Intimate Life
Should the government interfere in activities in your bedroom? Well into the 20th century, every state had laws prohibiting at least one sexual act, even between heterosexual married couples in the privacy of their own home. Explore the numerous lawsuits and trials that eventually extended the protection of privacy to include intimacy, regardless of sexual orientation.
29 min
2 ene 2020
19. The Ruby Ridge Trial

19. The Ruby Ridge Trial
Do we Americans have the freedom to isolate ourselves, express views considered racist and hateful by the majority, and stockpile legally purchased weapons? Do we have the liberty to sell a sawed-off shotgun? Explore the complex story and resultant trial that started with Randy and Vicki Weaver wanting to separate themselves from mainstream society, and ended with three dead at Ruby Ridge.
30 min
2 ene 2020
20. The Trials of Jack Kevorkian

20. The Trials of Jack Kevorkian
Jack Kevorkian helped hundreds end their pain and suffering. Legally tried, having escaped conviction time after time, a final trial proved his undoing. Explore Dr. Kevorkian’s work on behalf of an individual’s right to euthanasia, why he believed he was taking a stand for liberty, and why he was eventually convicted of second-degree homicide.
30 min
2 ene 2020
21. Boy Scouts of America v. Dale

21. Boy Scouts of America v. Dale
When the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) expelled scout leader James Dale because he way gay, Dale challenged the BSA’s authority to use sexual orientation as a basis for exclusion. In a case pitting Dale’s claimed right to be free from discrimination against the associational rights of the Scouts, the Supreme Court sided with the Boy Scouts. Examine the reasons for, and effects of, the ruling.
28 min
2 ene 2020
22. Kelo v. City of New London

22. Kelo v. City of New London
Does a city have the right to use eminent domain to take private property and sell it for private development if the city believes that development will improve the city’s economy? Learn how Susette Kelo’s refusal to sell her “little pink house” in New London, CT, led to a Supreme Court case addressing what she described to Congress as “eminent domain abuse," and why she lost the case.
29 min
2 ene 2020
23. The Citizens United Case

23. The Citizens United Case
US candidates have a long history of trying to outraise and outspend their opponents to win elections with help from big corporations and wealthy donors. Explore why, then, in 2010, the Supreme Court declared any ban on political spending by corporations to be unconstitutional, and why, at the same time, most polls show strong support for a constitutional amendment to overturn the ruling.
30 min
2 ene 2020
24. Liberty for Nonhumans?

24. Liberty for Nonhumans?
Many Americans were initially excluded from “liberty and justice for all.” Could future trials result in greater liberties for apes, cetaceans, and elephants? Learn how “Tommy” became the first chimpanzee to have a suit for his freedom filed on his behalf, and why one judge on the New York Court of Appeals says the issue of fundamental rights for nonhuman animals is not going away.
34 min
2 ene 2020
Liberty on Trial in America: Cases That Defined Freedom
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