Contrary to a long legal tradition, the Warren Court interpreted the Fourteenth Amendment as applying many federal rights and practices to the states in general, and the state courts in particular.229 Quite aside from the question of whether this was justified constitutional interpretation, or even whether the specific federal practices were better or worse than existing state practices, this created dual channels of legal appeal, between which a defendant could go back and forth — repeatedly adjudicating each of numerous new rights in two whole systems of multiple courts. The lowest federal district judge could now overturn the decision of a state supreme court, and the federal courts in general now assumed jurisdiction over procedures used in state trial and appellate courts. Moreover, some of these newly discovered or newly created rights were made retroactive, so that a criminal could, for example, challenge prior convictions on grounds that the state court could not
The increased litigation made possible by the decisions of the Warren Court was litigation over
The social costs of the Warren Court’s procedural changes were not simply those particular instances of freeing dangerous criminals which outraged the public, but also included an exponential increase in litigation which backed up
For all our work on thousands of state prisoner cases I have yet to hear of one where an innocent man had been convicted. The net result of our fruitless search for a nonexistent needle in the ever-larger haystack has been a serious detriment to the administration of justice by the states.235
A California appellate judge likewise observed:
It is with almost melancholy nostalgia that we recall how only five years ago it was possible to sustain a judgment of conviction entered in such a clear case of unquestionable guilt and to accomplish it without undue strain. Today, however, the situation is vastly changed.236