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August 12, 2016 by Admin

Max Suchan wins Weinglass Fellowship

Max Weinglass Photo (2)-250x333

Leonard I. Weinglass (1933-2011) was a criminal defense attorney and constitutional law advocate. Over the course of his career, he represented political activists, government opponents, and criminal defendants— including Angela Davis, the Cuban Five, the Chicago Seven, the Pentagon Papers, and the death row appeals of Mumia Abu-Jamal—in a half century of politically significant cases. He was a longtime Guild member and served as Chair of the NLG International Committee.

Thanks to a generous bequest from the Weinglass estate, the NLG has established a fellowship for recent law graduates. Each year, one fellow will receive a stipend to work for the Guild on a specific civil rights or civil liberties project.

Max Suchan is a Chicago NLG member who will be spending 10 weeks working with the Chicago Community Bond Fund to increase volunteer capacity and help develop organizational strategies to end money bond. Max is a long-time abolitionist activist and first year lawyer. Since the age of 13, Max was involved in organizing against the second Iraq invasion in both grammar school and high school. In 2007, Max attended Birzeit University in the occupied West Bank, where he studied Arabic and politics while supporting Palestinian-led direct action against the occupation. After spending more than a year and a half in Palestine over several trips, Max was also a passenger on the U.S. Boat to Gaza as part of Freedom Flotilla II, which sought to challenge the Israeli naval blockade of Gaza. In Fall 2011 and Spring 2012, Max worked with the Palestine Solidarity Project to co-organize a national U.S. speaking tour to highlight the cases of hundreds of Palestinian minors in Israeli military prisons and jails.

As an undergrad at Beloit College in Wisconsin, Max founded Beloit Books Behind Bars to send books and match student pen-pals with people in state prisons. He decided to go to law school in order to obtain a concrete skill-set to support liberation movements both here and abroad, and more effectively work for an end to mass incarceration. Max attended DePaul University School of Law, where he played a key role in NLG organizing on campus. In August 2014, Max traveled to Ferguson to support the uprising in the wake of the police killing of Michael Brown. There he was arrested as an NLG legal observer and he still faces municipal charges of interfering with a police officer.

Upon returning to Chicago, Max supported the family members of the DeSean Vigil 5, a group of Black residents who were beaten and arrested after Chicago police aggressively disrupted a community vigil following the police killing of 17-year-old DeSean Pittman. Max helped fundraise tens of thousands of dollars to bond everyone out of jail and match all arrestees with attorneys. These relationships and organizing gave birth to the Chicago Community Bond Fund, a nonprofit collective which works to abolish cash bond in Illinois, while simultaneously bonding individuals out of Cook County Jail to mitigate the severe harm of pre-trial detention. Since December 2015, CCBF has posted bond to free 27 people from jail or house arrest.

Max remains heavily involved with the Chicago NLG chapter as the local mass defense coordinator, a co-coordinator of the legal observer program, and a member of the Chicago board.

Filed Under: Blog, DePaul, Featured Articles, Law Schools, Legal Observers, Next Gen

June 22, 2016 by Admin

Jeff Frank: Report on Brazil’s Unfolding Coup Attempt

unnamed (2)On Tuesday May 3, in the Schmitt Academic Center at DePaul, Jeff Frank (of the
National Lawyers Guild, Friends of MST (Brazil’s Landless Workers Movement)), Vicki Cervantes (of the Honduras Solidarity Network), Juan David Lopera (of the Congreso de los Pueblos Colombia), and Jesus Rodriguez Espinosa (Consulate of Venezuela in Chicago) hosted a panel sponsored by DePaul University Department of Peace, Justice, & Conflict Studies, Friends of the MST, Congreso de los Pueblos Colombia, La Voz de los de Abajo, Chicago ALBA Solidarity, and Consulate of Venezuela in Chicago.

Brazil’s right wing opposition voted to begin impeachment against progressive President Dilma Rousseff, even though she is not accused of having committed a crime. The majority who voted to impeach her are themselves under investigation for corruption and other crimes. On March 31, 700,000 marched in support of Rousseff.

Brazil is the latest example of U.S. backed right-wing neoliberal resurgence in Latin America. The events in Brazil follow the U.S. supported coups against democracy in Honduras (2009) and Paraguay (2012), failed coup attempts in Ecuador (2010, 2015), Bolivia (2009), repeated stealing of elections in Haiti, and the ongoing attempt to overthrow President Maduro of Venezuela. Jeff Frank will report on his recent trip to Brazil, including the killing of peasant leaders; other short reports will address the increase in death squad activity in other countries and the role of the U.S.

Full video here:

 

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

February 3, 2016 by Admin

Prison Abolition: A Discussion for the Legal Community

prison
In support of the recently passed resolution supporting prison abolition, the Chicago NLG hosted a teach-in on prison abolition on January 21, 2016 at DePaul University. In addition to providing information about mass incarceration, the prison industrial complex, and abolition as a concept, the NextGen Committee facilitated a community discussion about what it means for us as legal professionals to support the abolition of prisons.
Panelists included:

  • Pooja Gehi, Executive Director of the National Lawyers Guild (and former member of the Sylvia Rivera Law Project);
  • Lark Mulligan, law student and collective member, Transformative Justice Law Project (*invited); and
  • Erica Meiners, Critical Resistance (*invited).

Please feel free to read the Resolution Supporting the Abolition of Prisons.

If you were unable to attend the event, you can access the presenters’ materials here: https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B_xinf4U3jqXaDR0RkI3cFRQdXc

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

October 2, 2015 by Admin

DePaul NLG Chapter Continues Strong Legacy of Radical Activism

By Holly Sanchez Perry and Abby Means

The DePaul NLG law student chapter continues to organize around progressive issues on campus. With a core group of nine active members, we hope to grow our wider membership this year by heavily promoting disOrientation as well as the national convention later this month in Oakland.

DePaul members are heavily involved in making the law school a more welcoming and inclusive place for trans and gender-nonconforming people. Recently, we circulated a letter explaining the importance of using preferred gender pronouns in the classroom to all of the DePaul Law faculty. We also included a little “Trans 101” to help spread awareness of a community often overlooked, especially within the field of law. In November, we will be putting on a trans-issues panel during lunch for students. We will also being holding a similar event during a faculty meeting.

Additionally, 5-8 DePaul Students will be attending Chicago’s NLG disOrientation this October. We were also approved for funding to send two students to the national convention in October.

Later this semester we are hoping to partner with We Charge Genocide to present a Know Your Rights presentation to a group of high school students in Evanston who specifically requested us. We also plan to host a film screening and lunch for students to learn about the case of Bomani Shakur, currently fighting for his life on death row, and the other four prisoners facing punitive retaliation for their role in fighting unjust prison conditions during the Lucasville Uprising in 1993. We are also in the early stages of organizing a panel with Burge torture survivors as well as attorneys who helped the survivors and convict Burge speak to students about real life stories and experiences of police violence. Lastly, As in previous years, we will host a conversation with Chicago activists working to end police brutality against youth of color.

To contact DePaul NLG, email: nlg.depaul@gmail.com

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

May 3, 2015 by Admin

DePaul, JMLS Guild Chapters Push-Back Against Repressive School Administration and CPD Responses to Police Accountability Panels

Rekia poster copy

By Max Suchan and Brad Thomson

On April 29th, 2015, DePaul NLG hosted “A Legal Teach-in for Rekia Boyd.” The goal of the panel was to explain the legal basis of Judge Porter’s recent decision to grant a motion for directed verdict acquitting Chicago Police officer Dante Servin of killing 22-year-old Black Chicago resident Rekia Boyd near Douglas Park in 2012. The event, which drew nearly 200 participants, was geared towards equipping Rekia’s community and family, as well as activists across the city organizing around the bourgeoning Black Lives Matter Movement, with information about the legal process and present an opportunity for various organizations to come together to strategize next steps in seeking justice for Rekia. Among the co-sponsoring organizations were Chicago’s NLG chapter, TUPOCC, Peoples Law Office, Black Lives Matter Chicago, We Charge Genocide Uptown People’s Law Center, Project NIA, and the Lawndale Christian Legal Center.

DePaul university security became aware of the event by monitoring social media, and alerted the Chicago Police Department. DePaul NLG organizers were repeatedly contacted by security and law school administrators with ridiculous concerns that the event would turn into a protest that might “incite Baltimore-like violence,” despite the explicit legal teach-in nature of the event. The building the event was hosted in was surrounded by dozens of Chicago police, who also brought OEMC cameras and a Stringray vehicle with data mining and monitoring capabilities. DePaul brought on an additional four security officers for the event, and posted security on the floor of the event itself despite the explicit desire of organizers that there be no security presence.

Additionally, DePaul administrators sent out a panicked email to all law school faculty and staff suggesting that the building would close early due to the event and allowing professors discretion to cancel their classes, office hours, and review sessions on the eve of final exams. Administrators also intentionally removed any mention of Rekia’s name from posters they imposed on the student organizers in order to attempt to avoid any “controversy or anger” surrounding the event. Organizers responded by writing Rekia’s names to all posters to ensure that her life and memory would remain a central focus of the teach-in itself.

Police outside copy

The shameful response on the part of CPD and DePaul law school administration and security was undoubtedly due to the police accountability content of the panel, as well as the fact that the majority of the attendees were non-DePaul community members of color.

Despite this repression, the event successfully drew a large and diverse audience and strengthened the community of activists seeking justice for Rekia and all who bare the brunt of racist police terror.

The JMLS NLG chapter also faced push-back from school security and administrators when they organized a March 24th evening CLE panel on police brutality as part of a series of events on police misconduct, including teach-ins on Chicago police torture. The panel featured anti-racist and abolitionist community organizers, as well as civil rights attorneys describing the available legal remedies to address rampant police misconduct. The school responded by arbitrarily and selectively enforced security policies unenforced for other events by requiring a list of all attendees 24 hours before the event. Once organizers submitted a list of potential names based on RSVPs and the Facebook attendee list, the number of potential attendees was so large that the school claimed it would be a fire code violation. While ultimately all attorneys were allowed in, community members who were not on the list and could not produce photo identification were turned away. Chicago police were outside both entrances to the law school building during the panel, which created a chilling atmosphere to the free sharing of ideas.

DePaul and JMLS staff, students, and alum are encouraged to contact both school administrations to voice their support that NLG events, especially those with large community participation, do not encounter such repressive methods in the future.

Both student NLG chapters remain committed to organizing similar programming in the future and are continuing to publically push-back against measures to undermine public discussions of police violence at each campus. DePaul NLG’s faculty advisor initiated a public statement, signed by several additional professors and staff, condemning the school’s response to the teach-in for Rekia Boyd:

“To the Organizers of the April 29th Teach-in for Rekia Boyd and the Parents of Rekia Boyd:

 As members of the DePaul law school community, we wholeheartedly support your efforts to hold police accountable for killing our youth with impunity, to educate the public about the structural forces behind this national phenomenon, and to build a movement to end these oppressive practices and structures. We were saddened to learn that at the recent teach-in event last Wednesday to honor and seek justice for Rekia Boyd at our law school, participants were greeted by a large police presence by Chicago Police Department and DePaul Public Safety. We commit to working at the law school to ensure that we do better next time to provide a safe and welcoming environment for all to explore these important issues of criminal and social justice, highly relevant to any law school community.”

Filed Under: Blog, DePaul, Featured Articles, John Marshall, Law Schools

September 18, 2014 by Admin

(dis)Orientation 2014 — It’s Not You, It’s Law School!

diso2014

 

 

The National Lawyers Guild Chicago Chapter is proud to announce our 2014 city wide DisOrientation!!!
 
Saturday, October 4th @1:00 p.m.
Loyola University, Corboy Law Center, 25 E. Pearson

DisOrientation 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 various panels and trainings on how to become a peoples lawyer.

The NLG is dedicated to the need for basic change in the structure of our political and economic system. We seek to unite the 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.

Schedule:
1-1:30 Lunch
1:30-2:15 Welcome
2:30-3:30 Student Panel
3:45-4:45 Attorney Panel
5-6 Legal Observer & Know Your Rights Trainings

Happy Hour to follow!
Clark Street Ale House
742 N Clark St, Chicago, IL 60654
6:30 p.m.

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

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