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April 25, 2014 by Admin

NextGen Happy Hour Friday May 2!

The next Happy Hour has been set for First Friday May 2nd!  In honor of the date’s proximity to May Day this month’s Happy Hour is co-sponsered by Chicago NLG’s Labor & Employment Committee!

We are first meeting at The Haymarket Memorial: 175 N. Desplaines St. Chicago, IL 60661 at 5:30 PM.  Many people haven’t seen it and it will be a nice reminder of the rich history of Labor in Chicago!

Then we will be walking over to the nearby Dylan’s Tavern and Grill for the rest of the festivities!  Dylan’s is located at 118 S. Clinton St, Chicago, IL 60661 for anyone who can’t make it to the memorial.

We hope to see you there!

Filed Under: Blog, Events, Featured Articles, Next Gen

March 19, 2014 by Admin

Upcoming CLE: Litigating Workplace Sexual Violence Cases

Save the date for an upcoming CLE co-sponsored by TUPOCC!

Building Your Arsenal: Tools for Successfully Litigating Workplace Sexual Violence Cases

Learn more about successfully representing clients in sexual harassment cases. Filing a discrimination complaint may only be one component of an effective representation strategy. This interactive session will provide tools to better represent clients struggling with post-traumatic stress and encourage participants to use the law creatively to empower survivors.

Where: Kirkland & Ellis, LLP

             300 N. LaSallle, Room 7KLM

When: April 17, 2014

            1:00pm – 5:00pm

4 hour CLE credit will be given!

Discussion will include an analysis of:

  • The Illinois Gender Violence Act
  • Immigration relief for survivors
  • Survivor centered litigation
  • Anti-trafficking laws, and more

Speakers:

Sheerine Alemzadeh, Staff Attorney with Chicago Alliance Against Sexual Exploitation

Karla Altmayer, Equal Justice Works Fellow with LAF

Allison Creekmur, VISTA attorney with LAF

*RSVP to kaltmayer@lafchicago.org with your name and organization name by April 4, 2014

                          

          

Filed Under: Blog, Events, Featured Articles, Law Schools

March 11, 2014 by Admin

Chicago NLG Response to Tribune Editorial on NATO 3

The following was submitted to the editors of the Opinion section of the Chicago Tribune as the official Chicago National Lawyers Guild response to their own piece on the NATO 3 case to further the public discourse. The Tribune has not published our response.

—

On Friday, February 7, 2014, a Cook County jury acquitted the NATO 3 of all terrorism charges, opting instead to convict them of lower level offenses. The acquittal of the terrorism charges is the culmination of the tireless efforts of the defense team, most of whom are members of the National Lawyers Guild. It is also a victory for the Chicago Chapter of the National Lawyer’s Guild, who organized the NATO Legal Support project, providing round-the-clock support for activists leading up to the 2012 NATO summit in Chicago.

On Monday, February 10, 2014, just days after the announcement of the jury’s verdict, the editorial board of the Chicago Tribune published a piece hailing the actions of police and prosecutors and calling for stiff sentences for the three young men. (http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/editorials/ct-nato3-convict-edit-20140210,0,5540770.story) Describing the defense team as “way out of line” for accusing Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez of designing a politically motivated prosecution, the editorial piece paints events leading up the NATO 3 trial in the same sensationalist, politically charged and misinformed manner that the Mayor’s Office, the Chicago Police Department,  and the Cook County State’s Attorney office have done from the beginning by choosing to equate political ideologies and dissent with terrorism.

In an attempt to drum up fear, the Tribune editorial asks readers to “[r]emember the masked agitators, dressed in black, snaking their way to the front of the parade ranks.” However, it fails to mention that two of those masked agitators were undercover Chicago Police Officers, Nadia Chikko and Mehmet Uygun. The editorial piece argues that “[w]hen a 20-year-old calls himself an anarchist in such a setting,” police and prosecutors are justified in treating him like a terrorist. Markedly absent from the piece, is the fact that this “setting” was one manufactured by undercover police officers. Recordings played at the NATO 3 trial revealed that Chikko and Uygun supplied the defendants with alcohol on multiple occasions, suggested the idea of making the Molotov cocktails and even assisted in building them by cutting up their own bandanas to use as wicks.

The problem is not, as the Tribune suggests, that these young men may have identified as anarchists. The problem is that accepting the position of the Tribune’s editorial board means condoning a reversion to the days of widespread illegal spying through the resurrection of operations like the Chicago Police Red Squad, which targeted political activists in the 1960’s and 1970’s. Unfortunately, this seems to have already begun; Even before becoming involved with the NATO 3, and lacking any training in undercover work, Chikko and Uygun spied on activists in cafes, at concerts, and at peaceful protests.

Rather than respecting the decision of the jury to acquit these young men of terrorism charges, the editorial board of the Tribune published a reprehensibly misinformed piece that is a continuation of the political prosecution beget by the City and the State’s Attorney. By comparing the heavy-handed suppression of political dissidence to the Boston Marathon bombing attacks, Alvarez and the Tribune are trivializing terrorism, something that, fortunately, the jury in the NATO 3 case refused to do.

Filed Under: Blog, Featured Articles, Media

February 25, 2014 by Admin

Chicago Torture Survivors Reparations Ordinance

Please Support the Chicago Torture Survivors Reparations Ordinance!

This past fall, on October 16, 2013, Aldermen Howard Brookins and Proco Joe Moreno introduced an Ordinance seeking Reparations for the Chicago Police Torture Survivors drafted by the Chicago Torture Justice Memorials Project (CTJM) and the People’s Law Office. The ordinance has since been sent to the finance committee of Chicago’s City Council.

Please sign the  on line petition at:

http://www.change.org/petitions/pass-the-ordinance-seeking-reparations-for-the-chicago-police-torture-survivors

On (HEARING POSTPONED, TBD) Tuesday, March 4, 2014, from 10 a.m. – 12 p.m., the Finance Committee will be having a hearing on the reparations ordinance. Join us at the hearing in the City Council chambers on the 2nd floor of City Hall. A large turnout of supporters at the hearing will have a profound impact on how the Alderpeople hear our appeal and consider their support.

The Ordinance calls for a formal apology to the survivors; creates a Commission to administer financial compensation to the survivors; creates a medical, psychological and vocational center on the south side for the survivors and their family members; provides free enrollment in City Colleges for the survivors and family members; requires Chicago Public schools to teach a history lesson about the cases; requires the City to fund public memorials about the cases; and sets aside $20 million to finance this redress, the same amount of money the City has spent to defend Burge, other detectives and former Mayor Richard M. Daley in the Chicago Police torture cases.

The torture survivors continue to suffer from the psychological effects of the torture they endured; many without any compensation or assistance or legal recourse for any redress. The City of Chicago is responsible for these undeniable human rights violations and it must make amends to the torture survivors, family members and communities of color affected by these racist, police practices. The Ordinance is an important and lasting way for it to do so.

You can read the entire ordinance at www.chicagotorture.org or www.peopleslawoffice.com

 

Filed Under: Blog, Events, Featured Articles

January 28, 2014 by Admin

Newsletter for 1st Quarter of 2014

Introducing our Newsletter for the 1st Quarter of 2014. Please enjoy and catch up on all the work the Chicago NLG and its committees have been up to!

1st Quarter Newsletter

 

Filed Under: Blog, Featured Articles, Media

January 16, 2014 by Admin

Fred Korematsu Day

korematsu
Fred Korematsu Day
Thursday, January 30th, 11:45am-1pm
DePaul College of Law, 25 E. Jackson Blvd, Room 903
Fred Korematsu is the Japanese-American man who would not consent to being interned after President Roosevelt ordered that all Japanese-Americans be interned as World War II began. He is also the individual responsible for the landmark Korematsu v. United States case.
Join us for a screening of the brief film “Of Civil Rights and Wrongs” about Korematsu’s life and a discussion about the racial profiling he endured then and the racial profiling too often experienced by people of color today.
Reflections by:
Kiyo Yoshimura 
Former internee in Japanese-American internment camps
 
Rabya Khan
Staff attorney with the Council on American-Islamic Relations

Sponsors: CAIR-Chicago, National Lawyers Guild-Chicago TUPOCC, Japanese American Citizens League, Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Chicago, South Asian American Policy & Research Institute, Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law, The Chicago International Social Change Film Festival, National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum-Chicago 

 

Student Group Sponsors: DePaul NLG, DePaul APALSA, Northwestern University South Asian Law Student Association, and Northwestern University APALSA, Chicago-Kent APALSA 

Filed Under: Blog, DePaul, Events, Featured Articles, Law Schools

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