OCDLA
Oklahoma Criminal Defense Lawyers Association
The Clarence Darrow Award

Clarence Darrow was born in Ohio in 1857.  After being admitted to the bar in 1878, he became a small-town lawyer for nine years.

     During WWI he defended anti-war activists and was critical of The Espionage Act that was used to stifle anti-war activities.  You need only mention the names of his famous cases to realize his impact on criminal defense; the Scopes Monkey Trial, the Scottsboro 9 and the Leopold-Loeb Murder Trials.  A 1936 FBI memo to Clyde Tolson, aide-de-camp to J. Edgar Hoover, gave Mr. Hoover some quotes that Clarence Darrow had made in an article entitled Attorney for the Defendant.  It was suggested that Mr. Hoover could use these quotes in speeches to point out how unscrupulous criminal lawyers stimulate disrespect for law and influence crime conditions.

     The award recognizes the efforts of an individual who has, during the year, exemplified the zealous criminal defense advocacy that befits the namesake of the award "Clarence Darrow".  It is in the deeds and spirit of Clarence Darrow that this award is given each year for the zealous criminal defense advocacy by an individual attorney.  The only qualification requirement is that the event(s) upon which the nomination is based must have taken place during the current year.