Skip to product information
1 of 0

Collateral Damage

Regular price $29.95
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $29.95
Sold out
A riveting account of how the US criminal legal system punishes millions without conviction—asking us to rethink the freedoms we give up for the illusion of safety.Every encounter with the criminal...
Read More
  • 05 January 2027
View Product Details

A riveting account of how the US criminal legal system punishes millions without conviction—asking us to rethink the freedoms we give up for the illusion of safety.

Every encounter with the criminal legal system, from a traffic stop to a day in jail, carries a human cost. This cost rests on a fragile bargain at the heart of our democracy: we give the government power in exchange for protection. But how much of our liberty are we willing to surrender for the promise of safety? 

In Collateral Damage, attorneys Justin and Zach Brooks take readers on a devastating tour through the criminal legal system, exposing the real-life trade-offs of this false promise. Blending gripping personal stories with legal analysis, they trace the long arc of America’s struggle between fear and freedom—from the Red Scare and Japanese American internment to the evolution of criminal procedure, civil forfeiture, and today’s extrajudicial killings, offering pragmatic reforms along the way. The result is an eye-opening portrait of a system that punishes millions without ever sending them to prison and a powerful warning to rethink whether the balance we’ve struck truly reflects the values we claim to hold.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $29.95
Pages: 328
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 05 January 2027
ISBN: 9780520413788
Format: eBook
REVIEWS Icon

Contents


Notes from the Authors


Introduction
1 Stop and Frisk
2 Search and Arrest
3 The Longest Weekend
4 Plea Bargaining
5 Probation
6 The Need for Speed
7 Jails Are the New Asylums
8 The Trial Penalty
9 Multiple Prosecution
10 Sentencing and the Death Penalty
11 Civil Incapacitation and Civil Forfeiture
12 National Security and the Erosion of Liberty
Conclusion


Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index