In law, accountability is often mistaken for velocity. We praise swift filings, rapid resolutions, and quick convictions as markers of effectiveness. But any lawyer who has lived through a full trial cycle knows better. Accountability has never been about how fast something gets done. It has always been about whether it was done right.
I once heard a senior litigator say that the most dangerous phase of any case is the moment public attention peaks. Phones ring. Timelines are demanded. Everyone wants an answer — now. Speed, at that moment, feels like responsibility. Delay feels like failure. Yet those of us trained in the process know that this is precisely when judgment matters most.
Public pressure is not the enemy of accountability. In fact, it is often its catalyst. Public scrutiny forces institutions to act, prevents issues from being buried, and reminds lawyers that their work has real consequences beyond the courtroom.
Without public attention, many cases would never move at all. But pressure, however legitimate, cannot be allowed to drive an investigation. The moment it does, the outcome becomes predetermined — and justice quietly exits the room.
Speed has its virtues. Justice delayed can be justice denied. Evidence can go cold, witnesses disappear, and confidence erodes. No lawyer would argue for paralysis disguised as prudence. But speed pursued for its own sake carries familiar risks: incomplete fact-finding, procedural shortcuts, and decisions shaped more by narrative than proof. The result may look decisive, but it is often fragile.
Lawyers understand the cost of fragility. A case rushed to meet public expectations may survive the news cycle but fail in court. Worse, it may fail on appeal, leaving behind not accountability, but immunity — an acquittal fortified by institutional error. In those moments, haste does not merely weaken a case; it strengthens the defense forever.
Doing things well is slower, and it is rarely glamorous. It means resisting noise, testing the evidence twice, and allowing the facts to lead even when they point away from popular conclusions. It invites accusations of delay and timidity. But its rewards are lasting. Decisions grounded in law and evidence endure. Institutions that choose rigor over reaction earn credibility that outlives any single controversy.
True accountability is not performative. It is not measured by how quickly a charge is filed, but by whether that charge can stand years later under the cold light of judicial review. It is the quiet confidence of knowing that when the pressure fades, the work still holds.
The recommendation is simple, if not easy. Let public pressure sharpen focus — but never dictate conclusions. Build cases deliberately, decide carefully, and accept that real accountability is slower than outrage, but far stronger than applause. In the end, accountability is not about being first to act. It is about being right, and being able to stand by it when the noise is gone.