Justice William O. Douglas, (1898-1980), U. S. Supreme Court Justice Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Comment on this quote Share via Email Print this Page Famous Justice William O. Douglas Quote “It is better, so the Fourth Amendment teaches us, that the guilty sometimes go free than the citizens be subject to easy arrest.”Justice William O. Douglas ~ Justice William O. Douglas (1898-1980), U. S. Supreme Court JusticeHenry v. United States, 1959 Constitution , Crime , Freedom , Justice , Liberty , Police , Power , Tyranny Ratings and Comments Reply Logan, Memphis, TN 11/22/06 Unless you live in a "terrorist" world, eh? 2 Reply Joe, Rochester, MI 11/22/06 Today, it has become "just a guideline," but the Constitution used to be the foundation upon which laws were built, not built around. Reply Mike, Norwalk 11/22/06 Reply Anonymous, Reston, VA US 11/22/06 1 Reply E Archer, NYC 11/22/06 In the name of 'security' we have allowed our government (particularly the Executive Branch) to make it easier to arrest 'terrorists', but in the end the law is applied mostly to American citizens on most any pretext -- carrying arms, criticizing government, or fitting the 'profile'. Reply Ken, Allyn, WA 11/22/06 I'll bet Douglas would never have imagined someone like O.J. Simpson. Even so, he's still right. Reply David L. Rosenthal 11/22/06 I will have to take your word for it. I have TRIED to get arrested on several occasions, without success...maybe I need a new deodorant. Reply Joe, Rochester, MI 11/22/06 Rosenthal, what did you do to try to get arrested? Archer, the Second Amendment is the original carry permit. 1 Reply E Archer, NYC 11/22/06 The right to a lawful arrest and fair trial includes the right to defend ANY right in court as inalienable whether or not that right has been abridged by legislative statute. Right now 'federal emergency powers' are used to disarm law-abiding citizens and to intimidate (and arrest without warrant or trial) people who publicly denouce new totalitarian rules. Reply David L Rosenthal 11/22/06 Joe: I tried to get arrested for protesting without a permit, for disobeying a police order to leave places where I was lodging complaints (twice), for disobeying police orders to move farther away from a voting precinct while carrying signs (twice), and I really can't recall now the other two uninteresting incidents. When I worked for the postal service, I sometimes said openly on the workroom floor "The worst thing I could do to anyone here would be to let them live, as then they would have to keep working here, which is punishment enough for anyone." The inspectors came one day and asked whether I had said this, and I answered that I had said exactly that. Then they asked what I had meant, and I said that I had meant exactly what I said. Later, I was removed from employment, for stating that "I could have strangled" my manager, but a year and a month later I was reinstated with back pay and benefits. After all, I did not threaten to strangle anyone. I could have. Reply David L. Rosenthal 11/22/06 Archer: I do not have an accurate count of the number of letters and e-mails I have sent to hundreds of people, as well as the major press outlets, severely criticizing the federal government for a variety of abusive practices. No one arrests me, threatens me, tells me to shut up, insinuates a threat, or otherwise shows signs of life. What am I doing wrong? One day at a protest, I shouted that a certain public official should be burned, not in effigy. Am I such a terrible figure that no one dares to approach me, even armed? I do not think so. I guess maybe they just see me as a total nut-case. But still, no response? Reply David L Rosenthal 11/22/06 Oh, Joe, I had forgotten: Until fairly recently I had sent letters to several government agencies, including the White House and the CIA and the people "in charge" of the Cuban transition problem, criticizing the government's handling of the Castro problem and stating clearly that I intended to participate in an invasion of Cuba to overthrow the Castro regime. No response. I must be a dangerous nut-case, huh? Reply Joe, Rochester, MI 11/22/06 David, let someone else do something remotely similar to your threats and letters, then see if the government doesn't come smashing thru your front door with a dozen agents. Reply Me Again 11/23/06 I think that there can be a better balance.Somehow. 1 Reply E Archer, NYC 11/26/06 Well, David, yes, you are a nut case, and keep it up -- insanity is a good defense. What would the authorities care about your desire to overthrow the Cuban government? It is hardly a challenge to authoritarian rule at home. Just try to keep your guns if FEMA comes to your neighborhood after a hurricane, or try simply protesting a law by breaking it. See, you have to actually stop colluding with fascist government to get arrested, not propose more versions of it. The fact is your views are not a threat to fascism -- they are very much in tune with it. Reply Cynthia, South Texas 2/15/09 Good quote. Stop fighting guys!!! Reply t. parr, sonoma ca 12/6/15 E. Archer, Don't stop speaking out. SaveOk2 SaveOk2 View CommentsClick to view or comment. Share on Facebook Tweet Email Print This Justice William O. Douglas quote is found in these categories: Constitution quotes Crime quotes Freedom quotes Justice quotes Liberty quotes Police quotes Power quotes Tyranny quotes About Justice William O. Douglas Bio of Justice William O. Douglas Quotations by Justice William O. Douglas Books by/about Justice William O. Douglas Justice William O. Douglas videos Justice William O. Douglas on Wikipedia Astrological chart for Justice William O. Douglas