home

Say Hello

Say Hello to a new TalkLeft guest blogger, Last Night in Little Rock. Like TChris, he is a criminal defense lawyer of the highest caliber, whose politics match those of TalkLeft.

Last Night in Little Rock is known in real life as John Wesley Hall. John is the author of two seminal texts, Search and Seizure (3d ed.) and Professional Responsibility in Criminal Defense Practice. Each book has a website with daily updates of court decisions: FourthAmendment.com and LawofCriminalDefense.com. He is also the author of Trial Handbook for Arkansas Lawyers, now in its 6th edition.

John is an Officer of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, (NACDL) a lecturer at national continuing legal education conferences, and, one of 80 lawyers in the defence bar of the International Criminal Court defending those accused of war crimes. For the past year he has been in a part-time trial in Sierra Leone defending the country's Defense Minister. John has argued twice in the U.S. Supreme Court.

John was a certified 60's liberal and a Vietnam war protester. Being pragmatic, he realizes that as much as we still feel like "taking it to the streets," in 2005, that's an anachronism. The only way to affect public opinion now, is by "taking it to the keyboard." He says he is only capable of writing one letter a month to the editor of his local paper, so he would like to join the "101st Keyboarders" both to blow off steam and, to borrow another outdated phrase from the '60's, "tell it like it is."

I hope you will give a nice welcome to John, whose posts will be marked at the top as being written by "Last Night in Little Rock."

John adds, "I do know "Sweet, Sweet Connie," but not in the Biblical sense."

"On the road for forty days,
Last night in little rock put me in a haze.
Sweet, sweet connie -- doin’ her act
....We’re an American band."

< Rehnquist Retirement: Good for Dems? | A Senate Out of Practice >
  • The Online Magazine with Liberal coverage of crime-related political and injustice news

  • Contribute To TalkLeft


  • Display: Sort:
    Re: Say Hello (none / 0) (#1)
    by sarcastic unnamed one on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:00 PM EST
    Welcome aboard John - and hold onto your hat! :-) "whose politics match those of the TalkLeft" This is interesting and something I was thinking about the other day - TChris & JM (and now John) are there topics that you present here on TL where your opinions are not in total agreement? No agenda here, just curious...

    Re: Say Hello (none / 0) (#2)
    by Talkleft Visitor on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:00 PM EST
    I can't think of one. It's pretty obvious stuff to us. But I have learned a lot from reading TChris and I bet John will have the same effect on me.

    Re: Say Hello (none / 0) (#3)
    by sarcastic unnamed one on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:00 PM EST
    Thanks J.

    Re: Say Hello (none / 0) (#4)
    by Talkleft Visitor on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:00 PM EST
    I know another lawyer named John Hall. He's also the lead singer/poet/activist from the band King Missile III (of "Detachable Penis," "Jesus Was Way Cool," and "America Kicks A*s" fame)... yes, they're still together and playing around the NYC area. heh.

    Re: Say Hello (none / 0) (#5)
    by TChris on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:00 PM EST
    Welcome, John!

    Re: Say Hello (none / 0) (#6)
    by Talkleft Visitor on Sat Dec 17, 2005 at 01:01:01 PM EST
    Jeez, I was all set to welcome you and then you had to quote the worst song that GFR ever recorded;-) I prefer the Arkansas Traveler And instead of 'hold on to your hat', I'd say 'fasten your seat belt, it's going to be a bumpy ride';-) Welcome John.
    In the spring of 1958, two fifteen-year-old boys shivered and chunked up their fire while the sky turned to a pre-dawn gray along a stretch of the Ouachita River in Hot Springs County, Arkansas. They should have been making one last run of their trotlines but, instead, they rolled tightly into their blankets and slept another hour. One of them was a reader of history and, drifting back to sleep, he half-dreamed, as young boys do, about explorers in some faraway wilderness, opening new land for king and country. History, to him, consisted of great things that took place somewhere else. He never imagined that the place where he slept would soon yield evidence of a successful Caddo civilization that lived for half a millinium along those riverbanks. He didn't know to look nearby for shards of storage jars scattered by men from De Soto's expedition when they raided a granary stocked by the Caddo, and for minie balls left by General Steele's Civil War troops. He didn't know that he and his buddy had strung a trotline over huge, sunken pine logs from the sawmill that started a half century sweep of Ouchita Mountain timber. He didn't suspect that power lines near the riverbanks had been among the first in the nation to carry hydroelectric power. The stories had been there, but he had never heard them. The stories are everywhere in Arkansas, as they are in every other place. They are best found and told by those nearest them but, with these songs, we offer a handful we have found. We hope for more to come. - Charley Sandage