Kobe Bryant and Intent
The NBA suspended Los Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant for one game as punishment for elbowing San Antonio Spurs guard Manu Ginobili in his previous game. Bryant and the Lakers objected to the suspension because, according to Bryant, he did not intend to elbow Ginobili. League officials disagreed, noting that Bryant threw his arms backwards (striking Ginobili) after attempting a shot, an "unnatural" motion in basketball, according to Stu Jackson of the NBA front office. Bryant had an explanation: He flailed his arms as he did in an effort to draw a foul call. He hoped to draw attention to himself but did not intend to hit Ginobili. Bryant's explanation is credible because there is no known animosity between him and Ginobili.
I'm not especially interested in the merits of this dispute (except to the extent that Bryant's absence was the key to the Knicks' victory over the Lakers), but I do think it interesting that Bryant's exculpatory account was that he was trying to con the referees! And he's right in that assessment. Pretending to have been fouled is an important skill in the NBA. The generally acknowledged master was Reggie Miller, who after attempting a shot with an opponent in shouting distance, would frequently fall to the floor as though he had been shot by a sniper. Sometimes Miller would get the call; sometimes he wouldn't; but no one ever suggested that what he was doing was against the rules or even unsportsmanlike.
That's quite peculiar, isn't it? Well, yes and no. Consider parallels in the law. Sometimes deception merits special punishment. For example, a witness who lies on the stand commits perjury, a serious offense. Likewise a tax cheat who tries to disguise an illegal deduction by using the form of a transaction that is otherwise legal will not only have to pay the tax but could also be charged with tax fraud. Yet in other contexts, we seem to expect people to engage in deception. For example, a defense lawyer acts within his rights---indeed, probably has a professional duty---to challenge the veracity, perception or memory of witnesses that he knows are providing accurate testimony. What is cross-examination along these lines if not a deliberate effort to mislead the jury?
Is there a coherent account of when the law treats intent to deceive as relevant and when it does not? One might take the view that intent is never relevant because of the difficulties of proof---but of course the criminal law typically makes intent (or at least knowledge, which can be equally difficult to prove) highly relevant to culpability. Interestingly, although conventional wisdom holds that the difference between a category 1 flagrant foul and the more serious category 2 flagrant foul (which results in a player's ejection) is that the latter requires an intent to injure, the actual NBA rule does not draw a distinction based on intent. So apparently Bryant was relying on the common law of basketball in his defense.
I'm not especially interested in the merits of this dispute (except to the extent that Bryant's absence was the key to the Knicks' victory over the Lakers), but I do think it interesting that Bryant's exculpatory account was that he was trying to con the referees! And he's right in that assessment. Pretending to have been fouled is an important skill in the NBA. The generally acknowledged master was Reggie Miller, who after attempting a shot with an opponent in shouting distance, would frequently fall to the floor as though he had been shot by a sniper. Sometimes Miller would get the call; sometimes he wouldn't; but no one ever suggested that what he was doing was against the rules or even unsportsmanlike.
That's quite peculiar, isn't it? Well, yes and no. Consider parallels in the law. Sometimes deception merits special punishment. For example, a witness who lies on the stand commits perjury, a serious offense. Likewise a tax cheat who tries to disguise an illegal deduction by using the form of a transaction that is otherwise legal will not only have to pay the tax but could also be charged with tax fraud. Yet in other contexts, we seem to expect people to engage in deception. For example, a defense lawyer acts within his rights---indeed, probably has a professional duty---to challenge the veracity, perception or memory of witnesses that he knows are providing accurate testimony. What is cross-examination along these lines if not a deliberate effort to mislead the jury?
Is there a coherent account of when the law treats intent to deceive as relevant and when it does not? One might take the view that intent is never relevant because of the difficulties of proof---but of course the criminal law typically makes intent (or at least knowledge, which can be equally difficult to prove) highly relevant to culpability. Interestingly, although conventional wisdom holds that the difference between a category 1 flagrant foul and the more serious category 2 flagrant foul (which results in a player's ejection) is that the latter requires an intent to injure, the actual NBA rule does not draw a distinction based on intent. So apparently Bryant was relying on the common law of basketball in his defense.
11 Comments:
At 9:52 AM,
Adam S. said…
I wonder, from a moral, rather than legal perspective, whether the common practice of baseball (out)fielders to pretend to have CAUGHT all balls that end up in the vicinity of their mitts, or of batters to walk quickly toward first base in the hopes that an ambivalent umpire will simply let inertia take over to allow the walk can be justified. My sense is that in a pickup game of softball, where there are no third party umpires, players (myself included) are far less likely to fake a catch or a walk (well walks don't exist, though foul tip strikeouts do--only fair given the slow pitch speed and huge ball size). The reason, of course, is that you feel you would be cheating your friends/opponents in such circumstances. Similarly, when playing pickup basketball, I would never knowingly deny stepping on the out-of-bounds line, though I would actively deceive with intent were it a game with officiation and scoring.
While you might question why simply raising the stakes--playing professionally for money, e.g.--would alter the moral calculus (the moral acceptability of stealing hardly ever turns on the amount of pecuniary gain (or loss?)), you might alternatively wonder if the fact of a third party referee changes the moral calculus, and if this is justifiable. In other words, maybe the fact of a mistake-prone "ref" makes deceptive behavior tolerable because you assume a certain practical inability of the person with power to make a correct and procedurally justifiable decision?
Or maybe, this is all just simple Hobbesian thinking: in anarchic conditions where one's adversaries are also striving to lie, cheat, and elbow their way to the top, it is irresponsible to do otherwise?
At 10:30 AM,
Michael C. Dorf said…
Adam's comment lends some credence to the claim of judicial review skeptics that judicial review leads legislators not to take their own constitutional obligations seriously. With the Supreme Court "referee" available to decide the constitutional question, lawmakers feel liberated to feign constitutional compliance, as in the federal Partial Birth Abortion Ban Act, which recites as "findings" a number of demonstrably false factual claims.
At 8:07 PM,
Jamison Colburn said…
Ok, sure. But the real heart of the claim is the fact that Reggie Miller was, in all seriousness, the most heinous abuser of this tactic--trying to get a ref's attention to a player on the opposing team--in the history of the game. (The international rules give a technical to people like him.) Sure, anyone who has been ref'ed playing the sport knows that doing so's part of the game no matter how fair the officiating. A lot of strategically valuable fouling (like hand checks) simply goes unnoticed. But what Miller can look back on as his legacy is having contributed in no small way to the poisoned atmosphere of the NBA (and its officiating) that makes watching a game feel like taking sides in a political heat of some sort. To be more decorous (and less disgusted with pro sports), isn't this evolution what Justice Scalia fears in his attacks on "legislative history"--a worry the legislators will start adapting play accordingly?
At 7:30 PM,
kb2188 said…
Some comparative law on perjury:
In civil law countries, there is usually no exclusion of evidence, on the principle that judges are competent to evaluate all evidence with its proper weight. This extends so far as to require criminal defendants to testify at their trials. Obviously that would be a harsh rule if it were combined with a perjury. But instead, defendants are allowed, indeed expected, to lie.
At 8:20 PM,
Octopus Grigori said…
Might be of interest that in soccer players can receive yellow cards for pretending to fall during a play (i.e., for trying to draw a foul call).
At 12:25 AM,
koko said…
出会い人妻 出会い人妻 出会い人妻 出会い熟女 出会い熟女 出会い熟女 出会いセフレ 出会いセフレ 出会いセフレ 出会いセフレ 出会い熟女不倫人妻 出会いセフレ 出会いセフレ 出会い人妻 出会いセフレ 出会い人妻 出会いセフレ 出会い人妻 出会いセフレ 出会い熟女 出会い熟女 出会いセフレ 出会い人妻 出会い人妻 出会い人妻 出会い人妻 出会いセフレ 出会いセフレ 出会いセフレ 出会いセフレ 出会い人妻 出会いセックスフレンドセックスフレンドセックスフレンド 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いセックスフレンド 出会い不倫 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いセフレ 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いセックスフレンドセックスフレンドセックスフレンド 出会いセフレ 出会いセフレ 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いセフレセックスフレンド 出会いセフレセフレセックスフレンドセックスフレンド人妻 出会いセフレセフレ熟女セックスフレンドセフレ人妻 出会い熟女熟女 出会いセックスフレンドセフレセフレセフレ 出会い熟女 出会い熟女 出会いセフレセフレ人妻 出会い人妻 出会いセックスフレンドセックスフレンド熟女セックスフレンドセフレ人妻 出会い熟女 出会い人妻 出会い人妻 出会いセフレ 出会い大人 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いアダルト 出会い人妻 出会い熟女 出会いセフレ 出会い大人 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いアダルト 出会い人妻 出会い熟女 出会いセフレ 出会い大人 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いアダルト 出会い人妻 出会い熟女 出会いセフレ 出会い大人 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いアダルト 出会い人妻 出会い熟女 出会いセフレ 出会い大人 出会いセックスフレンド 出会いアダルト 出会い人妻 出会い熟女 出会い投資顧問株式投資競馬予想投資顧問株式投資投資顧問株式投資オンラインカジノオンラインカジノブックメーカー年末ジャンボ宝くじ年末ジャンボ宝くじ年末ジャンボ宝くじ年末ジャンボ宝くじ年末ジャンボ宝くじ商品先物商品先物海外投資海外投資海外投資海外投資海外投資海外投資海外投資
At 4:20 AM,
泡面 said…
免費A片, ut聊天室, AV女優, 美女視訊, 免費成人影片, 成人論壇, 情色交友, 免費AV, 線上a片, 日本美女寫真集, 同志聊天室, 聊天室交友, 成人文章, 成人圖片區, 色情網站, 辣妹視訊, 美女交友, 微風成人區, 色美媚部落格, 色情影片, 成人影片, 成人網站, 免費A片, 上班族聊天室, A片,H漫, 18成人, a漫, av dvd, 一夜情聊天室, 微風成人, 成人圖片, 成人漫畫, 情色網, 日本A片, 免費A片下載, 性愛, 成人交友, 嘟嘟成人網, 嘟嘟成人網, 成人貼圖, 成人電影, 成人, 中部人聊天室, 080中部人聊天室, 成人貼圖, 成人小說, 成人文章, 成人圖片區, 免費成人影片, 成人遊戲, 微風成人, 愛情公寓, 成人電影, A片, 情色, 情色貼圖, 情色文學, 做愛, 成人遊戲, 成人影城, 色情聊天室, 色情小說, 一葉情貼圖片區, 情色小說, 色情, 寄情築園小遊戲, 色情遊戲, 成人網站, 麗的色遊戲, 色情網站, 成人論壇, 情色視訊, 情色電影, aio交友愛情館, 言情小說, 愛情小說, 色情A片, 情色論壇, 自拍, 癡漢, , 俱
樂部, 豆豆聊天室, 聊天室, 色情影片, 視訊聊天室, 免費視訊聊天, 免費視訊, 視訊美女, 視訊交友, 視訊聊天, 伊莉討論區, AV, 免費視訊聊天室, a片下載, aV, av片, A漫, av dvd, UT聊天室, 尋夢園聊天室, av成人網, 聊天室, 成人論壇, 正妹牆, 正妹百人斬, aio,伊莉, 本土自拍, 自拍, A片, 愛情公寓, 情色, 舊情人, 男同志聊天室, 色色網, ,嘟嘟情人色網, UT男同志聊天室, 情色貼圖, 情色文學, 情色交友, 色情聊天室, 色情小說, 成人聊天室, 成人小說, 一葉情貼圖片區, 情色小說, 日本A片, 成人網站, 色情, 色情遊戲, 情色視訊, 情色電影, 聊天室尋夢園, 080聊天室, aio交友愛情館, 色情a片, 一夜情, 辣妹視訊, 視訊聊天室, 免費視訊聊天, 情色論壇, 做愛, 做愛影片, av片, 色情網站, 免費視訊, 視訊, 視訊美女, 美女視訊, 女同志聊天室, 小高聊天室, 視訊交友, 視訊聊天, 免費視訊聊天室, 情人視訊網, 080苗栗人聊天室, 6K聊天室, 影音視訊聊天室, 視訊交友90739, 成人影片, 成人交友, 本土自拍, 美女交友, 情色聊天室, 寄情築園小遊戲, AV女優, A片下載,
At 10:14 PM,
xw said…
TheWorld of Kung fu Gold seems also important. His only since ancient immutable law. WoKf gold in the game is just like the money in the life. It is different of the buy World of Kung fu Gold online in the game world. You can have cheap World of Kung fu Gold to update your weapons. And the World of Kung fu money should be more and more.
At 9:21 AM,
. said…
酒店喝酒,禮服店,酒店小姐,制服店,便服店,鋼琴酒吧,兼差,酒店兼差,酒店打工,伴唱小姐,暑假打工,酒店上班,日式酒店,ktv酒店,酒店,酒店公關,酒店小姐,酒店兼差,酒店上班,酒店打工,禮服酒店,禮服店,酒店小姐,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,台北酒店,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,台北酒店,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,台北酒店,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,台北酒店,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,台北酒店,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,台北酒店,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,台北酒店,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,台北酒店,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,台北酒店,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,禮服店 ,酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店小姐,經紀 彩色爆米花,經紀人 彩色爆米花,酒店傳播,酒店經紀 彩色爆米花,爆米花,童裝,童裝拍賣,童裝大盤,童裝寄賣,童裝批貨,酒店,酒店,童裝切貨,酒店,GAP童裝,酒店,酒店 ,禮服店 , 酒店小姐,酒店經紀,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,招待所,酒店小姐,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,酒店上班,暑假打工,酒店公關,酒店兼職,酒店經紀, 禮服店 , 酒店小姐 ,酒店經紀 ,酒店兼差,寒暑假打工,
At 2:45 AM,
cvxv said…
看房子,買房子,建商自售,自售,台北新成屋,台北豪宅,新成屋,豪宅,美髮儀器,美髮,儀器,髮型,EMBA,MBA,學位,EMBA,專業認證,認證課程,博士學位,DBA,PHD,在職進修,碩士學位,推廣教育,DBA,進修課程,碩士學位,網路廣告,關鍵字廣告,關鍵字,課程介紹,學分班,文憑,牛樟芝,段木,牛樟菇,日式料理, 台北居酒屋,日本料理,結婚,婚宴場地,推車飲茶,港式點心,尾牙春酒,台北住宿,國內訂房,台北HOTEL,台北婚宴,飯店優惠,台北結婚,場地,住宿,訂房,HOTEL,飯店,造型系列,學位,SEO,婚宴,捷運,學區,美髮,儀器,髮型,看房子,買房子,建商自售,自售,房子,捷運,學區,台北新成屋,台北豪宅,新成屋,豪宅,學位,碩士學位,進修,在職進修, 課程,教育,學位,證照,mba,文憑,學分班,台北住宿,國內訂房,台北HOTEL,台北婚宴,飯店優惠,住宿,訂房,HOTEL,飯店,婚宴,台北住宿,國內訂房,台北HOTEL,台北婚宴,飯店優惠,住宿,訂房,HOTEL,飯店,婚宴,台北住宿,國內訂房,台北HOTEL,台北婚宴,飯店優惠,住宿,訂房,HOTEL,飯店,婚宴,結婚,婚宴場地,推車飲茶,港式點心,尾牙春酒,台北結婚,場地,結婚,場地,推車飲茶,港式點心,尾牙春酒,台北結婚,婚宴場地,結婚,婚宴場地,推車飲茶,港式點心,尾牙春酒,台北結婚,場地,居酒屋,燒烤,美髮,儀器,髮型,美髮,儀器,髮型,美髮,儀器,髮型,美髮,儀器,髮型,小套房,小套房,進修,在職進修,留學,證照,MBA,EMBA,留學,MBA,EMBA,留學,進修,在職進修,牛樟芝,段木,牛樟菇,關鍵字排名,網路行銷,PMP,在職專班,研究所在職專班,碩士在職專班,PMP,證照,在職專班,研究所在職專班,碩士在職專班,SEO,廣告,關鍵字,關鍵字排名,網路行銷,網頁設計,網站設計,網站排名,搜尋引擎,網路廣告,SEO,廣告,關鍵字,關鍵字排名,網路行銷,網頁設計,網站設計,網站排名,搜尋引擎,網路廣告,SEO,廣告,關鍵字,關鍵字排名,網路行銷,網頁設計,網站設計,網站排名,搜尋引擎,網路廣告,SEO,廣告,關鍵字,關鍵字排名,網路行銷,網頁設計,網站設計,網站排名,搜尋引擎,網路廣告,EMBA,MBA,PMP
,在職進修,專案管理,出國留學,EMBA,MBA,PMP
,在職進修,專案管理,出國留學,EMBA,MBA,PMP,在職進修,專案管理,出國留學,婚宴,婚宴,婚宴,婚宴,漢高資訊,漢高資訊,比利時,比利時聯合商學院,宜蘭民宿,台東民宿,澎湖民宿,墾丁民宿,花蓮民宿,SEO,找工作
住宿,民宿,飯宿,住宿,民宿,美容,美髮,整形,造型,美容,室內設計,室內設計,室內設計,室內設計,室內設計,漢高資訊,在職進修,漢高資訊,在職進修,漢高資訊,在職進修,漢高資訊,在職進修,漢高資訊,在職進修,住宿,民宿,飯店,旅遊,美容,美髮,整形,造型,設計,室內設計,裝潢,房地產,進修,在職進修,MBA,EMBA,羅志祥,周杰倫,五月天,蔡依林,林志玲,羅志祥,周杰倫,五月天,蔡依林,林志玲,羅志祥,羅志祥,周杰倫,五月天,蔡依林,住宿,民宿,飯宿,旅遊,住宿,民宿,飯宿,旅遊,美髮,整形,造型,美容,美髮,整形,造型,設計,室內設計,裝潢,房地產,設計,室內設計,裝潢,房地產,比利時聯合商學院,在職進修,MBA,EMBA,比利時聯合商學院,在職進修,MBA,EMBA,漢高資訊
At 4:30 AM,
wsty said…
www.eshooes.com .
www.pumafr.com.
www.myshoess.com.
www.eshooes.com .
www.pumafr.com.
www.myshoess.com.
[url=http://www.pumafr.com]puma shoes[/url]
[url=http://www.eshooes.com]chaussures puma[/url]
[url=http://www.myshoess.com]nike air max ltd[/url]
Post a Comment
<< Home