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March 1, 2017 by Admin

Highlights from DisOrientation 2016

Dis-Orientation is an annual city-wide retreat for law students hosted by the National Lawyers Guild of Chicago. This year, Dis-Orientation was hosted by the Northwestern Law School NLG Chapter. The speakers included NLG Chicago activist and law professor Bernardine Dohrn, Juan F Perea of Loyola Law, Destiny Peery of Northwestern Law, and community organizer & recent law grad Quinn Kareem Rallins.

Prof Juan Perea introduced “the Epistemology of Ignorance” to a group of mostly 1st year law studentsat Dis-orientation, teaching them all the ways the constitution is pro-slavery. You can read Prof Perea’s law review article about the pro-slavery constitution here.

 

Bernardine Dohrn spoke about how lawyers & law students can support current social movements. Quinn Kareem Rallins discussed the question of whether change comes from the law or organizing people. He shared the story of using legal services at Boston Legal Aid to support organizing by Project No One Leaves in their fight against foreclosures.

Prof. Destiny Peery reminded us of the dangers of implicit bias in both teaching and the practice of law. The most important step in combating implicit bias is acknowledging it exists. You can take a test and explore your own biases here.

Finally, there was a panel of current law students shares their strategies for surviving & thriving in law school.

For more resources check out the Guerrilla Guides to Law Teaching.

 

Filed Under: Blog, Chicago-Kent, DePaul, Events, Featured Articles, John Marshall, Law Schools, Loyola, Northwestern University, University of Chicago

February 28, 2017 by Admin

Protester Criminal Defense Training (& Free CLE!) Sept 14

The National Lawyers Guild of Chicago’s Mass Defense Committee, National Police Accountability Project-Chicago Chapter, and the Cook County Bar Association put together a special training by movement attorneys Emmanuel Andre (Law Office of Emmanuel Andre), Melinda Power (West Town Law Office), and Janine Hoft (People’s Law Office) on how to represent people

charged with ordinance violations or misdemeanor offenses in Chicago as a result of their political activity. This training was designed for attorneys with little or no criminal defense experience or who would like more discussion and education on representing political people in criminal cases. The training covered bond court, Chicago city ordinance violations, and misdemeanor criminal cases.

Attendees were invited to use their skills as a criminal defense attorney to help political movements and join the NLG Chicago’s Mass Defense Committee (MDC) Attorney Referral List. The MDC Attorney Referral List is a local list attorneys who represent activists arrested at protests on a free or low-cost basis. Referral List attorneys

have represented over 300 protestors free of charge in 2016. Recent MDC clients have included people from the Black Lives Matter Movement, the Mental Health Movement, Jewish Voice for Peace, anti-Illinois budget cut organizers, and many more!

Facebook event here.

Please email chicago@nlg.org with any questions.

The NLG Chicago Mass Defense Committee is a volunteer network of legal workers, law students, and lawyers committed to providing effective legal support for progressive movements.

 

Filed Under: Blog, Events, Featured Articles, Legal Observers

September 6, 2016 by Admin

NLG Chicago Dis-Orientation 2016 Sept 17

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(Dis)Orientation Chicago 2016

Saturday, September 17 Lunch Served @ 12 PM, Event starts @ 1PM Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law
375 E. Chicago Ave, Chicago, IL 60611

RSVP HERE

(Dis)Orientation is an event for students to discuss surviving law school with our values and commitment to social justice intact. Come meet NLG law students, legal workers, and attorneys, while attending panels and trainings on how to become a people’s lawyer.

The NLG is dedicated to the need for basic change in the structure of our political and economic system. We seek to unite lawyers, law students, legal workers, and jailhouse lawyers to function as an effective force in the service of the people, to the end that human rights shall be regarded as more sacred than property interests.

Our aim is to bring together all those who recognize the importance of safeguarding and extending the rights of workers, women, farmers, people with disabilities and people of color, upon whom the welfare of the entire nation depends; who seek actively to eliminate racism; who work to maintain and protect our civil rights and liberties in the face of persistent attacks upon them; and who look upon the law as an instrument for the protection of the people, rather than for their repression.

Free food will be provided, with a happy hour to follow!

diso2016B

Filed Under: Blog, Chicago-Kent, DePaul, Events, Featured Articles, John Marshall, Law Schools, Loyola, Next Gen, Northwestern University, University of Chicago

August 22, 2016 by Admin

Chicago Legal Community Opposes Adding Police to City Hate Crime Law

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Chicago Alderman are currently preparing to vote on increased penalties for people found guilty of talking back to police officers. The National Lawyers Guild of Chicago is appalled to see Chicago City Council members pushing to add police officers and other first responders to a list of protected classes under our city’s hate crimes ordinance. The proposed changes increase possible fines under the ordinance from $500 to $2,500 and violators will continue to face up to six months in jail. We urge Chicago residents, aldermen, and fellow members of the legal community to oppose this unnecessary expansion and reject any increased penalties for civilians interacting with police officers.

The amendment seeks to add police officers, firefighters, and emergency medical crews to the hate crime law’s current list of protected identities based on race, sex, sexual orientation, disability, and active or prior military status. Unlike the usual list of immutable characteristics normally protected by hate crimes legislation, career choices do not create a traditionally identifiable “minority” group with a history of social marginalization. In fact, police officers historically and currently enjoy greater protection and social power than the average community member. This proposed amendment is an offensive misuse of hate crimes legislation, which proponents claim is needed to protect society’s most vulnerable members.

There is furthermore no documented problem of past or current discrimination or violence directed at police officers. The proposed expansion is a solution to a problem than does not exist. Despite attempts by the law enforcement community and its allies to portray the Black Lives Matter movement as an attack on police that has endangered officers, no such “Ferguson Effect” has been found. According to the Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2015 tied with 2008 for the second lowest death rate for police on national record. According to data from the National Law Enforcement Memorial Fund, over the last three years the leading cause of police officer deaths in the line of duty is car accidents.

The proposed ordinance will serve primarily as another arsenal in the police department’s cache of discretionary charges that can be used against protesters. In addition to vandalism and trespass, the ordinance’s most likely use is to enhance the penalties for misdemeanor assault–a state charge that can be brought following “conduct which places another in reasonable apprehension of receiving a battery,” including language perceived to be threatening.

Such increased penalties are clearly directed at deterring protest, which recently in Chicago has focused on police violence and lack of accountability. Now, in the midst of a Department of Justice investigation for unaccountable and racist use of force by the Chicago Police Department (“CPD”), City Council members seek to further protect and cocoon police from community critique. Over the last two years, grassroots organizers in Chicago have forced the ouster of CPD Superintendent Garry McCarthy, defeated State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez, and become the first city in the United States to award reparations to survivors of police torture.

Much momentum for these campaigns was built through marches, rallies, and other actions that placed demonstrators in close proximity to police. Police already have an array of discretionary charges that are regularly used against protesters, and several people have been charged with felony aggravated battery for accidentally coming in contact with police officers during actions or arrests. The proposed hate crimes expansion is merely another charge police will levy against protesters, and thus another tool for repressing dissent during this time of heightened scrutiny.

The proposed ordinance must be recognized for what it is—nothing more than an attempt to portray police as victims of the movements calling for their increased accountability and transparency. As a protective measure, it is both disingenuous and unnecessary. It serves only to further insulate the Chicago Police Department at a time it is already under federal investigation and subject to national attention for the nearly complete immunity with which it operates. Quite simply, the proposed hate crimes expansion is a step back for police accountability in Chicago, and as such, it must be rejected.

National Lawyers Guild of Chicago

Co-signed by:

Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression

Chicago Coalition for the Homeless Law Project

Law Offices of Standish E. Willis

National Conference of Black Lawyers

People’s Law Office

Uptown People’s Law Center

First Defense Legal Aid

Cabrini Green Legal Aid

Community Activism Law Alliance

Filed Under: Blog, Events, Featured Articles

August 12, 2016 by Admin

Legal Observer Training August 21

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You are invited to attend NLG Chicago‘s next Legal Observer training on Sunday, August 21, 2016. Please share this invitation with your networks. More information and a link to required registration is below.
Legal Observers are volunteers who attend progressive political protests and actions in order to monitor, document, and hopefully deter police and government misconduct. In Chicago, Legal Observers (“LOs”) have supported the #BlackLivesMatter demonstrations, movements against public school and mental health clinic closures, environmental movements, and many, many more. More information on the national program can be found here. If you are interested in becoming an LO and lending your eyes and ears to the support of Chicago’s activists, please register to attend and join us.

Sunday, August 21, 2016
1:00pm-3:00pm
West Side Justice Center
601 S. California Ave
Chicago, IL
 
All attendees must register here before 4:30pm on Friday, August 19.
This interactive LO training is Chicago specific and includes information on Illinois and Chicago laws and law enforcement strategies. We will discuss strategies for effective legal observing, including as preparation for subsequent criminal and civil cases. All LOs who volunteer in Chicago must receive this training.
PLEASE NOTE: We are now training LOs who are not already involved in legal work. All LOs work under the supervision of a National Lawyers Guild affiliated attorney, and all notes or other information from events is privileged and confidential. Many more details about the role of Legal Observers can be found in the NLG Legal Observer Handbook.
You can contact us at this email address (chicago.lo.program@gmail.com) with any questions. If you cannot attend this weekend but would like to be informed of future trainings, please let us know that.
Facebook event here!
Please share this invitation with others who may be interested!
Best,
Sharlyn and Max
(A couple of your Chicago Legal Observer Program Co-Coordinators)

Filed Under: Blog, Events, Featured Articles, Legal Observers

August 12, 2016 by Admin

Congratulations to Michael Deutsch on Winning the Ernie Goodman Award

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and all of the other honorees for their work in advancing liberation struggles here and abroad. From defending the Attica Brothers all the way to Rasmea Odeh, your decades of hard work for justice both in and out of the courts are an inspiration!

Ernie Goodman Award: Michael Deutsch

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Michael Deutsch has been a lawyer with the People’s Law Office and a Guild member since 1970. From 1991-1996 he was the Legal Director of the Center for Constitutional Rights. Michael’s legal career has been devoted to the representation of political activists and political prisoners. He has represented the rebelling Attica Prisoners, Black Panthers, Black prisoners facing the death penalty, and Puerto Rican Independentistas charged in U.S. courts. He was part of the legal team that challenged the first use of high security “control units” at the Marion federal prison for men and Lexington prison for women. More recently, he has represented Palestinian community leaders in Chicago targeted by the FBI including Muhammad Salah and Rasmea Odeh. Michael Deutsch has written and lectured extensively on prisons, international human rights, and political repression.

Filed Under: Blog, Events, Featured Articles

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