Ken Armstrong Profile picture
May 4, 2022 18 tweets 5 min read Read on X
In Justice Alito’s draft opinion reversing Roe, he writes about “an unbroken tradition of prohibiting abortion on pain of criminal punishment,” up until Roe in 1973.

He cites, as historical authority, Sir Matthew Hale.

Let me tell you about Hale & his views toward women.
THREAD
2/ The Alito draft says Hale “described abortion of a quick child who died in the womb as a ‘great crime’ and a ‘great misprision.’”
3/ Hale became Lord Chief Justice of England in 1671. In his views of women, he was not a forward-thinking fellow — *even* by the abysmally low standards of his era.

(Here's an illustration of Hale, from the National Portrait Gallery in London.)
npg.org.uk/collections/se… Image
4/ To Hale, English gentlewomen were “the ruin of families.” Young women were a particular source of despair. They “learn to be bold,” he complained, and “talk loud.”
5/ I researched Hale while writing, with @txtianmiller, the book “Unbelievable.” The book was an extension of a story we wrote for @propublica and @MarshallProj called “An Unbelievable Story of Rape.”
propublica.org/article/false-…
6/ Hale believed that for women, it was easy to accuse a man of rape. He believed that for men, such accusations were hard to defend, even if innocent. He advised that jurors be warned — explicitly, and at length — about the threat of the false accuser.
7/ He came up with quite the list of factors for jurors to weigh. Jurors, he wrote, should consider: Is the woman claiming rape of “good fame” — or “evil fame?” Did she cry out? Try to flee? Make immediate complaint afterward? Does she stand supported by others?
8/ Hale’s words became a standard feature of criminal trials in the U.S.

As long as 300 years after Hale’s death in 1676, many an American jury would be cautioned with what courts called the “Hale Warning”: an instruction to be especially wary of false accusations of rape.
9/ But that wasn’t Hale’s only legacy.

In 1662, at Bury St. Edmunds, Hale presided at the trial of two women accused of witchcraft. Hale instructed the jury that witches were real, saying Scripture affirmed as much.
10/ The jury convicted Amy Denny and Rose Cullender, after which Hale sentenced both women to hang.

Thirty years later, Hale’s handling of this trial, preserved in written record, served as model in Salem, Massachusetts, in the infamous witch trials of 1692.
11/ Hale is known for his legal treatises. But just as revealing is a letter he wrote to his granddaughters, dispensing individually tailored advice.

Granddaughter Mary, he wrote, needed to “govern the greatness of her spirit,” lest she become “proud, imperious and revengeful.”
12/ Granddaughter Frances could make a good housewife, Hale wrote, provided she be “kept in some awe, especially in relation to lying and deceiving.”
13/ As for granddaughter Ann, Hale perceived a “soft nature,” and therefore forbade plays, ballads or melancholic books, “for they will make too deep an impression upon her mind.”
14/ This letter was 182 pages long. When it came to advice, Sir Matthew Hale was full of it.
15/ Young women, Hale wrote, “make it their business to paint or patch their faces, to curl their locks, and to find out the newest and costliest of fashions.” …
16/ “If they rise in the morning before ten of the clock, the morning is spent between the comb, and the glass, and the box of patches; though they know not how to make provision for it themselves, they must have choice diet provided for them…”
17/ The letter reveals a man about as cheerful as his portrait suggests.

Wrote Hale: “The whole constitution of the people of this kingdom is corrupted into debauchery, drunkenness, gluttony, whoring, gaming, profuseness, and the most foolish, sottish prodigality imaginable.”
18/ If you want to learn more about Hale (in addition to all of the above, he was also responsible for the legal notion that a husband can't be prosecuted for raping his wife), I just wrote this up for @propublica.
propublica.org/article/aborti…

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More from @bykenarmstrong

Mar 22
10 years ago today, I was working a weekend shift @seattletimes when word came in of a landslide near a small town named Oso.

It turned out to be the deadliest landslide in U.S. history.

It also became an exhibit for why local journalism matters in a time of crisis.
1/
43 people died in the slide.

Two days afterward, the county’s head of emergency management held a news conference & said the area “was considered very safe. This was a completely unforeseen slide. This came out of nowhere.”

That same day, I discovered the opposite was true.
2/
I had found a 1999 U.S. Army Corps of Engineers report on the hill, warning of “the potential for a large catastrophic failure.”

I called the report's author, then drove to his office, above a church. He gave me 6 manila folders chronicling the hill’s long history of slides.
3/
Read 12 tweets
Dec 8, 2023
Been getting a lot of requests to update this thread. So...

Since we published our first story on the juvenile justice system in Rutherford County, TN:

One state lawmaker said she was “horrified.” Another called it a “nightmare.” A third labeled it “unchecked barbarism.”
THREAD
2/ For years, the judge at the heart of our investigation had taught a course on juvenile justice at Middle Tennessee State University.

Four days after our story, the university cut ties with her.
propublica.org/article/outrag…
3/ The NAACP Legal Defense Fund called for a civil rights investigation. So did 11 members of Congress, writing:

“Tennessee’s children deserve to enjoy their childhoods without the fear of being unjustly searched, detained, charged, and imprisoned.”
propublica.org/article/tennes…
Read 10 tweets
Nov 23, 2022
A young mom with 4 kids—including twin boys, one with cerebral palsy, the other with autism and epilepsy—moves into a rental home near Milwaukee.

She’s been evicted twice before, so this, her new home, seems “a dream come true.”

She has no idea of the home’s history.
(THREAD) A two-story house with a st...
2/ Her name is Angelica Belen.

The landlord, when she moves in, is Todd Brunner.

He’s known around Milwaukee as the “foreclosure king.” He buys homes others have lost to banks. City inspectors know him well. He’s got lots of building-code violations and outstanding fines.
3/ Belen’s life has been defined by abuse and deprivation.

Brunner’s life has been defined by excess.

So in this two-story house, at 7750 West Hicks Street in West Allis, Wisconsin, two decidedly different lives intersect.
propublica.org/article/milwau…
Read 24 tweets
Mar 20, 2022
To understand how KOMO—once a trusted news source in Seattle—has become what you see below, it’s worth revisiting this @KromanDavid story on how the station changed after being bought by Sinclair Broadcast Group.
crosscut.com/2018/04/how-li…
The tweet I was referring to has now been deleted. ("This Tweet was deleted by the Tweet author," Twitter says.) But here's a screen grab of it:
For more on Sinclair, it's also worth revisiting this @sheelahk story for @newyorker:
newyorker.com/magazine/2018/…
Read 4 tweets
Oct 8, 2021
Three police officers went to an *elementary* school in Tennessee & arrested four Black girls.

One girl fell to her knees. Another threw up. Police handcuffed the youngest, an 8 yo with pigtails.

Their supposed crime? Watching some boys fight — and not stopping them. (THREAD)
2/ The police wound up arresting 11 kids in total, using a charge called “criminal responsibility.”

The arrests created outrage. State lawmakers called the case “unconscionable,” “inexcusable,” “insane.”

So how did this happen?
3/ These arrests took place in Rutherford County, which had been illegally jailing kids for years, all under the watch of Judge Donna Scott Davenport.
Read 24 tweets
Oct 7, 2020
Arise Virtual Solutions, which helps companies like @Disney & @Airbnb shed labor costs, loathes the word supervisor. It prefers Quality Assurance Performance Facilitator.

Many businesses use jargon.

But Arise uses bewildering language as a defense against lawsuits. Here's how:
2/ What is Arise?

Arise, in its words, “delivers radical flexibility and on-demand burst capacity at scale.”

Arise, in our words (i.e., @propublica’s), signs up customer service agents who work from home. It then sells this network of agents to companies like Comcast or Intuit.
3/ Arise has been accused of violating federal labor law.

It defends itself, in part, through a dizzying vocabulary of its own making.

One opposing lawyer has dubbed it “Arise-speak.”
Read 25 tweets

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