The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Why law should be gender blind

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When Donna Rotunno defended Harvey Weinstein against charges of sexual harassment back in 2020, there were some who criticized her for betraying the sisterhood. A writer for Slate explained it this way: “This special role for women who prop up misogyny is also inextricab­ly bound up with the ‘traitor to your sex’ narrative, which rests on the idea that all women have common interests and a common experience of womanhood.”

That’s a very perceptive notion, and one that has deep roots in society, and it’s still at play today with the most recent example of a female defending a male: Carmen Vasquez, Esq. Vasquez was one of the high-profile attorneys on Johnny Depp’s defense team, and she was rightly praised for her extremely effective cross-examinatio­n of Amber Heard.

But others weren’t too happy that a woman was representi­ng a man who had been accused of abusing another woman. There were articles and commentari­es about how Vasquez was ignoring the plight of her gender, for personal gain. But the most toxic and, to my mind, unfair criticism came from a female law professor at Stanford named Michele Dauber, who issued a series of scathing tweets ridiculing Depp’s defender for “sucking up” to men, and trying to curry favor with them at the expense of true victims of abuse. In one of the tweets she wrote “of all the women who suck up to male power, women lawyers are the absolute worst of the bunch. Desperate to prove they are ‘real lawyers’ and understand­ing that being a woman undermines their identity as lawyers, they throw women under the bus as hard and fast as they can.”

The rank misogyny of Dauber’s tweets does not represent the majority of women who practice

law, but does nonetheles­s reflect a disturbing and not insignific­ant constituen­cy in the legal profession. I have avoided belonging to any “women in the law” organizati­ons for a variety of reasons, but this one tops the list: I am not a woman in the law. I am a lawyer, who happens to be a woman.

When I’ve said that in the past, including in articles in legal journals, I’ve heard the

usual things like “it’s easy for you to discount your gender, you didn’t have to struggle for anything.” I’ve also heard that I needed to support women, even if this meant that I was turning my back on due process or the standards of the profession.

The criticism of Donna Rotunno, Monique Pressley, who successful­ly represente­d Bill Cosby in his appeals, and now Carmen Vasquez is very clearly based on a misunderst­anding of the law and the profession. It is often said that the law should

be color blind. It is less often said that it should be gender blind, but that is equally true.

These women who are criticizin­g Vasquez are still defining their sisters by gender, only this time they are using that irrelevant characteri­stic to shame independen­t thinkers for displaying what feminism always taught was its guiding principle: female autonomy.

According to Michelle Dauber, who strangely still has a job teaching male and female law students at Stanford, Carmen Vasquez wasn’t giving us an example of excellent lawyering and uncommon skill. She wasn’t using her law degree to do exactly the thing she was taught to do in law school: lawyer. She wasn’t proving herself as a cracker jack litigator. For Dauber, Vasquez used her gender to make the case that she was no threat to the guys, that she was cool, on the team, etc. Dauber and her fellow travelers see this accomplish­ed young attorney as one of those girls in high school who say and do all the right things so the boys will take notice and ask them to prom.

It’s really quite disgusting, if you think about it. Women make up more than half of law school students, and law school graduates. We are partners in law firms, fill the federal benches and soon there will be four of us on the Supreme Court, two white, one Latina and one African American. We pass the bar at roughly the same rate as men. We are shaking the glass out of our hair, since the ceiling shattered a long time ago.

But some women still think that if we ignore the gender of our clients and only look at their guilt or innocence, or whether we think they deserve representa­tion, we are infidels and apostates. Some women think that we are wedded to our gender, and that this should be the predominan­t factor that guides our personal and profession­al lives.

That is the sort of reasoning that is much more toxic and dangerous to the sisterhood than anything Johnny Depp or Harvey Weinstein has been accused or convicted of doing.

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