The Trial of Our Century: People v. Clarence Darrow

Santa Clara Law Centennial

A Trial Re-enactment to Celebrate the Centennial
of the Founding of Santa Clara Law

Click here to view the Trial of Our Century video

Saturday, September 10, 2011
10:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
Mayer Theatre
Santa Clara University

As part of our law school centennial celebration we have arranged a truly special event. In recreating the atmosphere of 1911, the year the law school was founded, we decided to reenact the trial of Clarence Darrow for bribing jurors in Los Angeles. Darrow was actually put on trial twice, with one acquittal and one hung jury, but the verdict of historians is still divided. We have lined up an all-star cast for the re-enactment. Darrow himself will be portrayed by U.S. District Judge Charles Breyer. His defense lawyer will be nationally known law professor and defense attorney Michael Tigar. The prosecutor will be Senior Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit Stephen Trott of Boise, Idaho. Chief Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit Alex Kozinski will preside. The chief witness against Darrow will be portrayed by law school dean, Donald Polden.

Final Jury Booklet
Statute 1324

In 1911, the year that Santa Clara University established its new School of Law, legendary criminal defense lawyer Clarence Darrow came to California to defend the McNamara brothers, two labor organizers accused of planting a bomb which destroyed the printing plant of the Los Angeles Times and killed 21 workers.

The McNamara case took a surprising turn when the brothers entered guilty pleas after Darrow’s chief investigator, Bert Franklin, was arrested on a Los Angeles street corner passing a bribe to a prospective juror. When Franklin implicated Darrow in a scheme to bribe two jurors, Darrow himself became a defendant in two separate trials. In the first trial, he was defended by Earl Rogers, himself a legend, and the jury acquitted Darrow. The second trial, in which Darrow represented himself, ended in a hung jury. Ever since, historians and legal scholars have debated whether the most famous criminal defense lawyer of all time was, in fact, a jury briber. As we celebrate our Centennial, Santa Clara University School of Law will address this question by again placing Clarence Darrow on trial.

Cast of Characters:

Presiding Judge:

 

Clarence Darrow:

 

District Attorney J.D. Fredericks:

 

Defense Counsel Earl Rogers:

 

Investigator Bert Franklin:

 

Juror George Lockwood:

 

Bailiff/Clerk of the Court:

 

Jurors

Hon. Alex Kozinski, Chief Judge,
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

 

Hon. Charles Breyer, U.S. District Judge, Northern District of California

 

Hon. Stephen Trott, Senior Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

 

Michael Tigar, Professor of Law Emeritus at Duke University School of Law and American University Washington College of Law

 

Donald Polden, Dean, Santa Clara Law

 

Robert Peterson, Professor of Law, Santa Clara Law

 

Gerald Uelmen, Professor of Law, Santa Clara Law

 

Twelve graduates of the Centennial Class of 2011,Santa Clara Law