Renewed War on Drugs, harsher charging policies, stepped-up criminalization of immigrants — in the current climate, joining the NACDL is more important than ever. Members of NACDL help to support the only national organization working at all levels of government to ensure that the voice of the defense bar is heard.
Take a stand for a fair, rational, and humane criminal legal system
Contact members of congress, sign petitions, and more
Help us continue our fight by donating to NFCJ
Help shape the future of the association
Join the dedicated and passionate team at NACDL
Increase brand exposure while building trust and credibility
NACDL is committed to enhancing the capacity of the criminal defense bar to safeguard fundamental constitutional rights.
NACDL harnesses the unique perspectives of NACDL members to advocate for policy and practice improvements in the criminal legal system.
NACDL envisions a society where all individuals receive fair, rational, and humane treatment within the criminal legal system.
NACDL’s mission is to serve as a leader, alongside diverse coalitions, in identifying and reforming flaws and inequities in the criminal legal system, and redressing systemic racism, and ensuring that its members and others in the criminal defense bar are fully equipped to serve all accused persons at the highest level.
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This month Elizabeth Kelley reviews Quest for Justice: Defending the Damned – 2nd ed. by Richard S. Jaffe.
This month Allan F. Brooke II reviews Solitary: Unbroken by Four Decades in Solitary Confinement by Albert Woodfox with Leslie George.
This month Linda Friedman Ramirez reviews Deported to Death: How Drug Violence Is Changing Migration on the US-Mexico Border by Jeremy Slack.
This month Cara Wieneke reviews The Meaning of Life: The Case for Abolishing Life Sentences by Marc Mauer and Ashley Nellis.
This month Lisa B. Kauffman reviews Lawyer X: A True Story by Jake Banks.
Mark P. Rankin reviews Cultural Issues in Criminal Defense, edited by Linda Friedman Ramirez; Mark H. Allenbaugh reviews Federal Prison Guidebook, edited by Alan Ellis and J. Michael Henderson; Matthew G. Kaiser reviews Michael D. Cicchini and Amy B. Kushner's But They Didn’t Read Me My Rights: Myths, Oddities, and Lies About Our Legal System; Angela J. Moore reviews Margaret Regan's The Death of Josseline: Immigration Stories From the Arizona — Mexico Borderlands; and Michelle Inderbitzin reviews David Chura's I Don’t Wish Nobody to Have a Life Like Mine: Tales Of Kids in Adult Lockup.
Robert Batey and Judith A.M. Scully review Irene Sullivan's Raised by the Courts: One Judge’s Insight Into Juvenile Justice and Rafael E. Silva reviews Lyn Haber and Ralph Norman Haber's Challenges to Fingerprints.
This month Lissa Griffin reviews The Mueller Investigation and Beyond by Ellen S. Podgor et al.
This month Tony Bornstein reviews The Master Plan: My Journey from Life in Prison to a Life of Purpose by Chris Wilson with Bret Witter.
This month Susan Elizabeth Reese reviews Stories from Trailblazing Women Lawyers: Lives in the Law by Jill Norgren.
This month Dionne R. Gonder-Stanley reviews No Justice: One White Police Officer, One Black Family, and How One Bullet Ripped Us Apart by Robbie Tolan and Lawrence Ross.
This month Wendy Lee reviews Disrupt, Discredit, and Divide: How the New FBI Damages Democracy by Mike German.
This month Robert Sanger reviews Capital Defense: Inside the Lives of America’s Death Penalty Lawyers by Jon B. Gould and Maya Pagni Barak.
This month Ian Nawalinski reviews Habeas Data by Cyrus Farivar.
This month Gail Gianasi Natale reviews The Pretender: My Life Undercover for the FBI by Marc Ruskin.