NLG CHICAGO

  • About
    • Our History
    • Joining the NLG
    • Media
    • Elections
    • Documents
      • Constitution
      • NLG Chicago Bylaws
    • Foundation
  • Programs
    • Criminal Defense for Activists
    • Legal Observer Program
    • Know Your Rights
    • Mentorship Program
    • Free Referrals
  • Committees
    • Labor & Employment Committee
    • T.U.P.O.C.C.
    • Next Gen
    • National Police Accountability Project
  • News
  • Law School Chapters
    • (Dis)Orientation
    • Chicago-Kent
    • DePaul
    • John Marshall
    • Loyola
    • Northwestern University
    • University of Chicago
  • Donate
  • Contact

January 21, 2015 by Admin

Newsletter for 4th Quarter of 2014

Introducing our Newsletter for the 4th Quarter of 2014. Please enjoy and catch up on all the work the Chicago NLG and its committees have been up to! The newsletter is interactive, so all of the links (email addresses, web sites, Convention pic) actually work if you click on them.

4th Quarter Newsletter

 

Filed Under: Blog, Featured Articles

January 15, 2015 by Admin

Chicago Law Student/Legal Worker/Lawyer Action @ Federal Plaza

indict
The United People Of Color Caucus (TUPOCC) Chicago convened today January 15 at Federal Plaza to #INDICT THE SYSTEM!
The Legal community of Chicago (lawyers, law students, legal workers), joined together in solidarity with #BlackLivesMatter protests around the country to Indict the System for its crimes. The system is not broken, it is doing what it was designed to do.

 
For more info: Follow TUPOCC Chicago’s Twitter Account and the hashtags #IndictTheSystem and #ReclaimMLKchi
B7aPVZiIIAEyjVG
Read the indictment here:

Good afternoon! We are Chicago’s radical legal community of color.  We are lawyers, legal workers, and law students of color.  We know all too well that the legal system is NOT broken – in fact, it is doing exactly what it is designed to do: attempt to control, devalue, and break our communities of color and all other marginalized communities – women, immigrants, the disability community, the queer, trans, intersex  and HIV positive communities, and religious minorities — to name a few.

We know we are complicit in the legal system through our roles as attorneys, law students, and legal workers, and we promise – we VOW to use our privilege to hold the legal system accountable for its crimes against the black community and other marginalized communities.  .  We want the public to know that the radical legal community of color supports the people, and supports blacklivesmatter and reclaimMLKchi.

We therefore proclaim a People’s Indictment on the United States of America, and we charge the United States with committing serious crimes against our communities. We are here to demand reparations!

Specifically, we call for reparations to police torture survivors in Chicago!

We will now read some of the crimes committed by the United States of America and the legal system against our community!

We Indict The System for Offenses against native people

For committing genocide against the indigenous people of this land.

For building systems to legitimate stealing the land of the few indigenous people who survived the genocide.

For the continued occupation of Native American land.

For trying to erase Native American people, their history, and their culture.

We Indict The System for Offenses against black people

For building the nation on the backs of enslaved ancestors.

For always finding ways to legitimate the murder, enslavement, and abuse of people of color at the hands of the white and wealthy.

For the lack of accountability for the murder of black people

For the racist crack/cocaine disparity.

For mandatory minimums.

For the school-to-prison pipeline criminalizing our black youth.

For the unchecked power of the police.

For the prison industrial complex trapping people in jail, not for crimes committed, but due to poverty and the inability to pay bond.

For using the courts to perpetuate class divisions.

For using the courts to maintain the positions of the white and wealthy.

For the system which traps people into pleas for crimes never committed.

For disparities in criminal enforcement of laws depending on the color of one’s skin.

For continuing slavery through the criminal “justice” system.

For the systematic cover-up and torture of black men at the hands of the Chicago Police Department under Jon Burge

For segregating black people and denying them access to quality education, health care, and housing

For the mass incarceration of of black people.

For the militarization of the police and over-policing of our communities.

We Indict The System for Offenses against women

For systematically denying women the right to equality and justice.

For denying women their personhood.

We Indict The System for Offenses against queer/trans communities

for criminalizing trans women for simply walking while trans

for enforcing a gender binary that harms queer, trans, and intersex communities

for policing gender

for, in many places, mandating curriculum that explicitly devalues and demonizes queer, trans, and intersex identities

We Indict The System for Offenses against Religious minorities

For using fear to control the people.

For surveying, infiltrating, discrediting, and disrupting people’s movements.

For the racist special registration program post-9/11.

For the imprisonment of innocent men for 13 years at Guantanamo Bay.

For hypocritical human rights war mongering.

For the invented terrorist plots that entrap troubled youth touted as crime stopping victories.

For institutionalized islamophobia.

We Indict The System for Offenses against the poor

For allowing the government, courts, politicians to be bought by the highest bidder.

For denying the people their voice in favor of corporate personhood.

For governing for corporations and not people.

For criminalizing economic refugees.

For protecting those who own over those who work.

For choosing war to further the wealth of the wealthy while pillaging and murdering the poor.

For always serving the dominant economic interests over the people’s interests.

We Indict The System for Offenses against all people of color, at home and abroad

For furthering racism to support the economic system.

For stealing nearly half of Mexico.

For choosing war to avoid people’s rebellion.

For stealing the Philippines, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and Guam + others

For going to war for money.

For criminalizing dissent.

For unjustly interning people of Japanese descent.

For manipulating how history is remembered.

For countless atrocities against innocent people in too many wars.

For lying and covering up the truth about atrocities committed by Americans in war.

For jailing and murdering the people’s leaders.

For sacrificing the working class in unjust wars.

For overthrowing or attempting to overthrow innumerable foreign governments around the world

For conducting covert operations throughout the world that lead to the disappearance, incarceration, and murder of people of color

For legalizing indentured servitude through the bracero program and temporary worker programs.

For creating economic sanctions that led to millions of deaths.

For supporting Israel’s occupation of Palestine.

For occupying too many lands and people, trying to make all in the likeness and in the service of the U.S.A.

For property seizures which enrich the rich.

For racist immigration policies.

For the murder of our brothers and sisters.

For the wars fought in our name sold to the people with lies.

For the mass surveillance of our people.

For unending colonialism and imperialism

For decades of red-lining, gentrification, other racist housing policies that ensured Chicago would remain one of the most segregated cities in this country

For systematically devaluing people of color.

We Indict The System for Offenses against the disability community

for criminalizing HIV positive folks for simply living their lives

for failing to provide adequate mental health services for all, but especially the poor

for failing to protect disabled youth

Judge

As the people’s judge, Judge Torres, I find the United States guilty of all accused crimes!

We demand reparations against communities of color, against all marginalized communities!

Filed Under: Blog, Events, Featured Articles

January 15, 2015 by Admin

Reparations Ordinance for Chicago Police Torture Survivors

callrahm

On October 16, 2013, a Reparations Ordinance for Chicago Police Torture Survivors was introduced in Chicago’s City Council. It has already garnered the support of 27 alderpeople.

Despite ongoing requests from Chicagoans, the Finance Committee of Chicago’s City Council, headed by Alderman Ed Burke, has not yet scheduled a hearing for the ordinance.

Today, At the next Finance Committee meeting on January 15, there was a sign-in for Reparations at City Hall, 2nd floor. 


 ABOUT THE REPARATIONS ORDINANCE:

 Among other demands, the ordinance would require the city to administer financial reparations to all Burge torture survivors who are unable to sue for monetary damages because the statute of limitations for their claims has expired. The proposed ordinance would also provide all torture survivors and their families with tuition-free education at City Colleges; create a center on the South Side of Chicago that would provide psychological counseling, health care services and vocational training to those affected by law enforcement torture and abuse; require Chicago Public Schools to teach about these cases and sponsor the construction of public torture memorials. And it asks the city’s leaders to issue a formal apology to those who were tortured and their communities.

For the full text of the Reparations Ordinance see: http://chicagotorture.org/#reparations

This event is organized by Project NIA, Amnesty International, and Chicago Torture Justice Memorials.

torture

Filed Under: Blog, Events, Featured Articles

December 23, 2014 by Admin

Court rules Chicago’s park curfew ordinance is constitutional

Illinois Appellate Court Reverses Circuit Court Finding of Unconstitutionality in the Occupy Chicago Cases

As protests against police misconduct and racial injustice sweep the nation, a panel of the Illinois Appellate Court Tuesday, December 23, 2014 upheld one of the largest mass arrests in the city’s history.
Occupy Chicago protesters, represented by pro bono attorneys with the National Lawyers Guild of Chicago (NLG), People’s Law Office (PLO), and Durkin & Roberts had won an earlier lower court decision dismissing their 2011 arrests as an unconstitutional violation of their First Amendment rights.  The case, City of Chicago v. Tieg Alexander, et al., 1-12-2858, dates back to October of 2011, when approximately 300 activists associated with Occupy Chicago were arrested on two consecutive Saturdays in Grant Park.
Ninety-two of the arrestees challenged their arrests and were victorious in the Circuit Court, which struck down the ordinance used to arrest them.  Today a panel of the Illinois Appellate Court overturned that decision, in a rollback of First Amendment rights.
“The policing in these cases illustrates Rahm Emanuel’s shameful corporate agenda, designed to elevate corporate interests and erode the rights of everyday people,” said Sarah Gelsomino, attorney with the People’s Law Office and National Lawyers Guild.  “It’s outrageous that the City continues to waste our money on prosecuting activists for a petty curfew violation.”
NLG attorney Molly Armour stated:  “Today’s decision strikes a blow to protest movements at the very moment we see how essential they are to the national dialogue and to affecting fundamental social justice.  As lower court recognized — public spaces should be reserved for the People and the moments in our history where dissent is essential.”
“The National Lawyers Guild will continue to demand protections for those who challenge injustice,” Gelsomino says.  “The fight to protect freedoms of speech and assembly is vital, especially now as protests against racist and oppressive policing sweep the country.”
The NLG continues to support people’s movements in the streets with its Legal Observer™ Program and in the courts defending those arrested.  While disappointed in the ruling, the NLG remains steadfast in its commitment to the fights for social, economic, and racial justice.
The National Lawyers Guild was founded in 1937 and is the oldest and largest public interest/human rights bar organization in the United States. Its headquarters are in New York and it has chapters in every state.

 

*** Appellate Court Opinion ***
        Illinois Appellate Decision – December 23, 2014
       http://peopleslawoffice.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Occupy-Chicago-Appellate-Opinion.pdf
*** Documents from Occupy Chicago Appeal ***
        City of Chicago’s Appeal Brief – May 8, 2013
        http://peopleslawoffice.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/City-brief.pdf
        Occupy Chicago Response Brief – September 30, 2013
        http://peopleslawoffice.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Filed-Appellate-Occupy-Brief_201310021144.pdf
        City of Chicago’s Reply Brief – December 12, 2013
        http://peopleslawoffice.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Occupy-Reply-Brief-12.12.13.pdf
*** Documents from Trial Level Court ***
        Decision Ruling in Favor of Occupy Chicago – September 27, 2012
        http://peopleslawoffice.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Decision-Ruling-in-Favor-of-Occupy-Chicago1.pdf
        Occupy Chicago Reply to City – February 10, 2012
        http://peopleslawoffice.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Occupy-Chicago-Reply-to-City.pdf
        Original Occupy Chicago Motion to Dismiss – November 4, 2011
        http://peopleslawoffice.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/09/Occupy-Chicago-Motion-to-Dismiss.pdf

Filed Under: Blog, Featured Articles, Legal Observers

December 1, 2014 by Admin

NLG Stands with People of Ferguson

NLG Stands with People of Ferguson, Condemns Systematic Police Violence in Communities of Color
nlg.org/news/releases/nlg-stands-people-ferguson-condemns-systematic-police-violence-communities-color
 
FERGUSON, Mo. — The NLG joins the people of Ferguson in expressing disheartenment at the grand jury decision to not indict police officer Darren Wilson for the killing of unarmed black teenager, Michael Brown. The rampant impunity with which police murder innocent people of color, as well as the heavily militarized response to protests in Ferguson, are symptoms of a larger system of racial injustice that has criminalized and oppressed people of color since the country’s founding. In just the last week, police have shot and killed two other unarmed African-Americans – Akai Gurley, 28, “accidentally” gunned down in his Brooklyn stairwell; and Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old boy holding a BB gun near a Cleveland playground. As Ferguson and the rest of the nation rallies to demand an end to this state sanctioned violence, the NLG will be working to support and uphold the First Amendment rights of protesters.

The NLG helped establish the Ferguson Legal Defense Committee (FLDC). The FLDC is coordinating legal support for arrestees with support from Guild members from New York, Chicago, Detroit, and elsewhere. NLG Legal Observers will be monitoring police activity in Ferguson and solidarity demonstrations nationwide to ensure that the rights of protesters are respected.

These extrajudicial killings are bolstered by the rhetoric from mainstream media that criminalizes peaceful protesters, especially people of color, while repeatedly failing to challenge the motives and actions of police officers and other officials in positions of power. Guild Legal Worker Vice President Kris Hermes, who has been working on the ground in Ferguson, explains that the media’s profitable sensationalism “serves as a cover to use violent repression against protesters,” while the “grand jury system was manipulated to exonerate Wilson.” Given Gov. Jay Nixon’s preemptive “state of emergency,” deployment of the National Guard, and FAA “no-fly zone” declarations, the government’s intent to squash dissent in Ferguson is clear.

As Ferguson protesters emphasized in an open letter, their struggle speaks to a much larger tradition of racial oppression, of which police brutality is just one part:

“This fight for the dignity of our people, for the importance of our lives, for the protection of our children, is one that did not begin Michael’s murder and will not end with this announcement. The ‘system’ you have told us to rely on has kept us on the margins of society […] This system you have admonished us to believe in has consistently, unfailingly, and unabashedly let us down and kicked us out, time and time again.”

The NLG calls on lawyers, law students, and legal workers of conscience to contribute their legal knowledge to defending the people of Ferguson. Volunteers who are ready, willing, and able to contribute to these efforts in Ferguson may sign up here.

The NLG is accepting donations for its efforts in Ferguson and elsewhere.

Filed Under: Blog, Featured Articles, Legal Observers

December 1, 2014 by Admin

New NLG Palestine Delegation Report on Political Prisoners in Israel

New report by National Lawyers Guild Palestine delegation shines a light on political prisoners in Israeli jails

“Prisoners of Injustice,” released today, is a new report that summarizes the findings and experiences of the May 2014 National Lawyers Guild delegation to Palestine examining the conditions and situation of Palestinian political prisoners in Israeli jails.

The report reviews the experiences and findings of the delegation, who observed Israeli military trials and met with human rights organizations, families of Palestinian prisoners, and former prisoners, among others.

The report also details the delegation’s observations on the construction of the oppressive “separation Wall,” the expansion of Jewish-only settlements in the West Bank, and Palestinian popular protest.

Over 500 Palestinian prisoners are currently held in administrative detention, without charge or trial; the report looks at the role of administrative detention in suppressing Palestinian dissent. In addition, the report examines the targeting of children and youth for arrest and imprisonment.

The delegation also observes the connections and similarities between “war on terror” prosecutions, mass incarceration, and militarized, racialized policing in the United States, and the situation of Palestinians under occupation.

The delegation worked closely with Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association, as well as with Defence for Children International Palestine Section, throughout its time in the West Bank.

The delegation urges the widest possible distribution of the report to decision-makers, lawyers, legal workers, law students, organizations and activists.

The National Lawyers Guild was formed in 1937 as the nation’s first racially integrated bar association to advocate for the protection of constitutional, human and civil rights.

To read the report, please click here to download:
http://www.nlginternational.org/report/PrisonersOfInjustice-Report.pdf

To download or view the report on Scribd, please see:https://www.scribd.com/doc/248780890/Prisoners-of-Injustice-Report-of-the-National-Lawyers-Guild-Delegation-to-Palestine

 

Filed Under: Blog, Featured Articles

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 17
  • 18
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • …
  • 26
  • Next Page »

Support the Movement

Help support the crucial work of the National Lawyers Guild Chicago by joining or contributing today.



Contact

637 S. Dearborn St., 3rd Floor
Chicago, IL 60605

(773) 492-1405
chicago[@]nlg.org

© Copyright 2014 National Lawyers Guild Chicago · All Rights Reserved · Admin Login