cover image Inadmissible Evidence: The Story of the African-American Trial Lawyer Who Defended the Black Liberation Army

Inadmissible Evidence: The Story of the African-American Trial Lawyer Who Defended the Black Liberation Army

Evelyn Williams. Lawrence Hill Books, $22.95 (229pp) ISBN 978-1-55652-183-6

Criminal trial lawyer Williams pays attention to gritty details while relating the events of her life: growing up black and female in pre-World War II America; coursing through a white-male-dominated legal academy; being aunt and legal counsel to JoAnne Chesimard, aka Assata Shakur, a Black Liberation Army member hunted by the FBI. Williams's parents had migrated north to escape the virulent racism of the South, but they made sure their daughter knew the history and condition of blacks in America. As a trial lawyer, Williams dedicated herself to protecting the rights of poor blacks in New York City. With Shakur implicated in reports of violence by the Black Liberation Army, Williams's family endured increased assaults and surveillance by federal officers. Shakur's notoriety climaxed in the spring of 1973, with her involvement in a shootout on the New Jersey Turnpike that left one state trooper and a civilian dead. Williams's account of the trial, in which she defended Shakur, is the pragmatic, legal counterpart of her niece's own sensational autobiography; Williams is keenly dispassionate about the events leading to the latter's famed escape attempt from a maximum security prison in 1979. (Dec.)