Confluence Noted: New York Times Opinion Piece, "The Military and the Death Penalty" and Our Houston Mutiny and Riots Collection

By Jessica R. Alexander, J.D., M.L.S., Reference Librarian

The issue of race, military tribunals and the imposition of the death penalty is an issue that has been shaped by events that occured in August 1917 in Houston. African-American soldiers who were involved in the construction of Camp Logan, a World War I military encampment were the subjects. They rioted and murdered white citizens and police officials in August 1917. The catalyst was the police beating of two soldiers and a false report that one of them had died. The racial hostility from the white population and law enforcement authorities contributed to the atmosphere of violence. As a result, sixty-three African-American soldiers were court-martialed. Five of the accused were acquitted, thirteen were sentenced to death, forty-one were sentenced to life in prison, with only four receiving lesser sentences. See the article written by Fred L. Borsch, III, The Army Lawyer, February 2011, under the byline, Lore of the Corps, "The Largest Murder Trial in the History of the United States: The Houston Riots Courts-Martial of 1917." at page 1. (The table of contents does not refer to the piece, but scroll to page 1 to read it.)
The issues in the Houston riots are still reverberating. The rush to judgment and near summary executions involved in the Houston incident has shaped military justice ever since.

When the The New York Times published an editorial on August 31 called "The Military and the Death Penalty," it called to mind the 1917 executions. The editorial highlights the results of a study co-authored by David Balthus which showed that "Minority service members are more than twice as likely as whites — after accounting for the crimes’ circumstances and the victims’ race — to be sentenced to death." (David Baldus died in June).

The Fred Parks Library is fortunate that Mark Lambert, our former archivist, acquired the entire microfilm collection of the trial proceedings. We asked the Law Library Microform Consortium (LLMC) to digitize the film and our present archivist Heather Kushnerick has loaded the digital files into our South Texas College of Law Digital Collection and provided indexing and other annotations of the resource.

To highlight this unique accomplishment we are planning a symposium on the Houston Mutiny and Riots for the spring of 2011. Stay tuned for more information about this event. Professor Geoffrey has volunteered to spearhead this event, along with Professors Kenneth Williams and Val Ricks. Professor Corn has already recruited Fred Borsch,III to be one of the keynotes. Professors David Cowan, Library Director and Dean Helen Jenkins are supporting the event from an institutional standpoint.

BNA’s United States Law Week is for all Comers.

Jessica R. Alexander, J.D., M.L.S., Reference Librarian

Prior to the ability to obtain up to date case law via databases such as Lexis and Westlaw, United States Law Week, a print publication of the Bureau of National Affairs, now known as BNA, was the traditional way to get weekly updates of federal case law. It is available in print, KF101.U5 (current volumes on reserve, non-current volumes on main (3rd floor) and on-line. http://news.bna.com/lwln/).

The print version is split into the Supreme Court and the General editions. Opinions are summarized by the editors. Full Supreme Court opinions follow the case summaries. In the online edition look for links to full opinions in original format (PDF) at the end of the article. It is well worth a user's time to study the search features and customization abilities of the database.
  • Circuit Splits --This very important feature notes circuit splits on various legal issues. This is a tried and true method for identifying research topics.
  • Law Firm Authors -- A student who has an interview scheduled with a firm can search for articles written by firm members.
  • Customization -- Sign in by providing your name and email address. Click on Preferences. You can choose to display highlights or headlines (case alerts). Create folders to save your searches and make notes about search results.
  • Advanced Searches -- Search by headings (terms in headlines and headings), topics (subject thesaurus), case names, authors and states.
  • Split Screens -- This feature makes navigation inside a topic or list easier – the results list appears on the left side, while the selected item appears on the right.