Essence. I have already written a post on it, and as you (should have) read, the essence can lie with fame and power. The attornies get these clients that they try so hard to prove innocent, and what do they get out of it? A little bit of power? The question that I would like to ask in this post as well as help answer, is this; Is that little bit of power and fame worth compromising your beliefs, and selling your soul to the devil persay?
Take Roger Clemens’ lawyer, Rusty Hardin, for example. The man claims that he loves the sport of baseball, http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/5377578.html, but then he goes and defends a man who if you watch his growth progression in the major leagues, clearly was not all natural. Hardin clearly does not love the sport of baseball if he is willing to kep a man that has the potential of being known as the greatest pitcher of all time, and there being a slight possibility that it was not all him. That is taking away from men like Sandy Colfax, and Randy Johnson, and Jamie Moyer who put their blood, sweat, tears, and arms into the game that they love. Not to mention the kids, how could Hardin take the case…the case that will leave an imprint on the vulnerable little minds of kids that love baseball. Now they will think that they have to take steriods if they want to become good, and no consequences will fall on them. Great job Rusty, you no longer have a soul.
Another “man” that needs to be mentioned again is Johnny Cochran. Here is a guy who got a man off of murder. From previous blogs of mine you will know how I feel based on the evidence about the O.J Simpson case. That takes no heart at all. All that little Johnny wanted was fame. Any self-respecting person would not take that case, people need to be punished for their crimes, not get off without any reprocussions.
If there is one thing that people should get from this post, and hopefully from this blog, it is that athletes are people. Their fame does not give them special privelages or make it so they can not be held accountable for their acts. If anything they should have more responsibilities to be good people, and those few choice lawyers who decide to help these people, should be punished just as the atheletes because they are just as guilty.

http://i.a.cnn.net/si/2008/writers/david_epstein/02/10/waxman.clemens/T1_0210_hardin.jpg Image
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/Simpson/Evidence.html O.J. Stuff

O.J.’s Lawyer, Johnny Cochran