Page 6 (The ^ n r tla n b (©bsertier Holistic Law Note: This is a follow-up o f the article by the interviewee in the Martin Luther King special edi­ tion that was published on Janu­ ary 13 (page 9,Section C). Maurice J. Attie is a Los Ange­ les based attorney who has been practicing law forclose to 35 years. Mr. Attie has received several honors and awards from UCLA where he attended college and law school. He is known as a “lawyer’s lawyer” by his colleagues. Maurice’s unique approach to law has changed the lives o f many o f his clients, and has also “lost” him several clients, he is quick to add. Mr. Attie encourages all cli­ ents to resolve their external dis­ putes through the processing of their internal issues. He gives them powerful techniques with which to do this work. While most law­ yers as a group are working against change and trying to maintain the status quo, Mr. Attie is at the forefront o f presenting refreshing new ideas to people in and outside the legal profession. There are often many more choices avail­ able than those conventionally offered, he says. Mr. Attie ex­ presses them publicly and pri­ vately in his unique way. Q: What is Holistic Law? Maurice Attie: A Holistic Law­ yer is focused on the whole per­ son: physical, psychological, emo­ tional andspiritual. It’snotaques- tion o f just solving the problem as the client presents it. It’s a ques­ tion o f looking at all the parties concerned and all the issues and Interview by Joy Ramos all levels of the client. When we get a client who comes in with a legal problem, we see this as an opportunity to benefit every­ body - how everybody can progress, become more evolved and become better off as a result o f the apparent conflict that brought the client through the door. Q: What lead you to becoming a Holistic lawyer? Maurice Attie: I was a con­ ventional lawyer from the time I started in January, 1965 through about 1990. Even though 1 met my spiritual teacher in 1974, I didn’t understand the principles o f Living Ethics he was teaching also applied to the practice of law. But I became more and more uncomfortable with the legal as­ pect o f my life. I was seeing how things work on a deeper level and watching and experiencing the practice o f law done in a conven­ tional way. In time, it became impossible forme to practice con­ ventionally, so in 1990 or 1991,1 shifted to a holistic practice. I thought I was the only holistic lawyer,but it w asn’t true. Q: How do you use Holistic Law in your practice? Maurice Attie: I offer clients three options rather to solve their legal problem rather than one. I say to a client, “Your first option, with regard to all issues is inner processing.” Everything we ex­ perience in the physical reality is just a reflection o f some inner issue. When the outer stuff ap­ pears to be troublesome, it means there’s some inner stuff that hasn’t been taken care of. It’s just a calling card from the Soul. The inner processing can make the outer stuff shift which is ex­ actly why the Soul is giving us that experience. The second option is what I call the “Mediative Option” where we view the situation as an op­ portunity to better all the parties involved. In other words, I say to the client, “How can I best im­ prove the situation o f the person who is your opponent?” We work together in the process o f creat­ ing betterment for all parties. The third and last is what I call the “Relegated Option”, the last and least one I like. T hat’s where we actually do the legal work - whether it be litigation or nego­ tiation - on the surface at least in a relatively conventional way. I instruct the client by explaining, “Look, you’re the person that brought this issue in. This is the reality you created. It’s impor­ tant for you to stay conscious and aware o f all stages o f what we ’ re going through.” The c 1 ient is encouraged to actively partici­ pate in a multi-level way: physi­ cal, emotional and spiritual with regard to each stage o f w hat’s going on, so that the client basi­ cally is able to track the flow o f the case. This attunement is the learning process for the client. Q: Why do you prefer law in this manner? M aurice A ttie: Feeling the shift in consciousness o f my cli­ ents is very fulfilling and gratify­ ing for me. The pleasure 1 get in seeing people do the inner pro­ cessing and knowing that it has touched their Soul is what this work isallabout forme. It’s likea calling. It’s now clear to me that my mission in this life is to be in the justice system and to help the practice o f law shift for others. The main reason 1 travel around the world and lecture on this sub­ ject is to share this passion. It is that powerful a force within me to get the message out to as many people as I can. Q: Are there other lawyers practicing Holistic Law? M aurice Attie: The latest stud­ ies show that two out o f every three are dissatisfied with the practice oflaw. The latest studies show that two out o f every three are dissatisfied with the practice o f law. Quite a few are joining organizations which are holisti­ cally oriented. The organization 1 belong to is called The International Alliance o f Holistic Lawyers which was founded in 1991 in Vermont by 10 people. The I.A.H.L. now has about 300 members and an inter­ est list o f over 6,000 lawyers and others involved in the justice field. Q . What does the International Alliance o f Holistic Lawyers do? M aurice Attie: Thel.A.H.L.is a growing, powerful, energetic organization. Our current Board o f Directors is very active. Our Maurice J. Attie plans are to reach out into as many areas as possible. To local bar as­ sociations, to related fields, like court report associations, court in­ terpreters, expert w itness asso­ ciatio n s, h o listic nurses and doctors. O ur p articu lar focus this year is to liaison w ith the law schools and, ju st like Patch A dam s, show the students that conventional law p ractice w ill not be their only option. We are asking our m em bership to adopt a stu d e n t, o n e -o n -o n e , as a m entoring program for holistic law. The annual convention in 1999 w ill be held in South Florida. M aurice A ttie is available for consulting, lectures and w ork­ shops. He can be reached at 10610 K innard A venue, Los A ngeles, C A 90024 or e-m ail at M M JA @ JU N O .CO M . A Profile Of The Hunter And The Hunted By Ronald Turco, M.D. The development o f a psycho­ logical profile is a team endeavor encompassing the integration o f the crime scene, autopsy findings, witness interviews and reports, sì a ? .• photographs and forensic mate­ rials. Profiling involves the prepa­ ration o f a biographical sketch gathered from this information and from known psychodynamic material. The personal habits and relationships o f the victim are considered. Sought as a primary objective is fusion ofthe profiler with the perpetrator and the emer­ gence o f a vision ofthe perpetra­ tor as interpreted by the profiler. The profile has the purpose of a psychological assessment o f the crime scene. Working back­ ward from the crime scene, one attempts to develop a short biog­ raphy o f the outstanding charac­ teristics o f the suspect to illumi­ nate and better direct the inves­ tigation. The profile is used in conjunction with the physical evidence, recognizing that the homicide scene is a sign o f the “acting out” o f the perpetrator. Crime profiling must start with something logical and sensible, because simplistic “cookbook” interpretations reduce the effi­ cacy ofbehavioral scientific pro­ filing and can lead an investiga­ tion astray. I look to the unique­ ness o f a crime scene and then utilize my own unconscious, plus psychoanalysis, for a hypotheti­ cal construct regarding the per­ petrator. While working with a task force, I review data bases avail­ able. The FBI system o f orga­ nized and disorganized murders is helpful. Organized murders are me­ thodical and cunning; they are more likely to live with a partner, to have their own transportation, to be involved in skilled or semi­ skilled work, to be socially compe­ tent and middle class. Frequently they are only children or among the oldest o f their siblings. An organized crime scene is one on which the victim has spe­ cifically targeted, in which the killer has used restraints and to which weapon has been carried and then taken away. Organized killers are also excited by cruelty and public­ ity; they often torture their victims before killing them; and they fol­ low police investigations through the media and by frequenting po­ lice haunts to follow the progress o f a case - maybe their case. They may also revisit the crime scene partly to ensure that the body has been discovered, but also to bring back a body part or to “talk” to the victim if his body is still present. Law enforcement officers have learned to “wire" some o f the graves ofvictims o f serial killers in the event o f the killer’s visit to the grave site. Disorganized murderers are generally m entally disturbed, single, low to middle class, have below-average intelligence, don’t have cars, have a history o f mental disorder and are employed in me­ nial or unskilled work. Disorga­ nized crime scenes reveal evidence o f spontaneity or frenzy, the use o f weapons o f convenience to beat orstrangle, rather than to shoot), an absence o f apparent A - Cont’d on next page. ‘ • • ’*'*'» ¿’A- V