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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

August 12, 2016 by Admin

Legal Observer Training August 21

lotraining
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

Jerry Boyle featured on WBEZ

Chicago NLG member, Jerry Boyle was interviewed for WBEZ for his participation in the Republican National Convention in Cleveland.

Check out the story here:

https://www.wbez.org/shows/wbez-news/the-chicagoan-who-traveled-to-cleveland-to-watch-the-protests/4e0295ac-edba-4a39-baf5-1da9348d0c60

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

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

October 5, 2015 by Admin

NPAP Annual Fundraising Dinner Draws a Good Crowd

By Max Suchan

On the evening of October 2nd, around 40 lawyers, law students, and http://www.nlg-npap.org/sites/all/themes/vastuu/logo.pnglegal workers attended the fourth annual fundraising dinner of the Chicago chapter of the National Police Accountability Project. NPAP is a project of the NLG and is a non-profit membership organization of plaintiff’s lawyers, law students and legal workers dedicated to ending police abuse of authority through coordinated legal action, public education, and support for grassroots and victims’ organizations combating police misconduct. Chicago boasts a strong NPAP chapter whose members form a supportive network that shares insights and resources to advance broader work against police misconduct.

This year’s dinner was held at Nellies Puerto Rican restaurant in Humboldt Park. Attendees played a trivia game which tested their knowledge of local accomplishments and victories in police misconduct litigation. The fundraiser successfully celebrated a close-knit community that has accomplished so much in the past year at a crucial moment when police departments everywhere are under closer scrutiny in the public eye. To get involved with Chicago NPAP, email Melinda Power at melindapower@comcast.net or Janine Hoft at janinehoft@aol.com.

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

September 11, 2015 by Admin

Keisha Hankerson Wins at Trial

Keisha Hankerson was acquitted last week of misdemeanor battery from the December 13, 2014 demonstration to STOP police murder.

Keisha stood strong because, as she said, “I didn’t do anything wrong. Why should I pay a penalty?” She should NEVER have been charged in the first place. The bench trial lasted over an hour with a CPD sergeant changing her story as she was being cross-examined while Keisha and her witness were unshakable in their testimony.  Despite being offered several deals over the months between her arrest at the December 13th protest and again just before her trial started on Thursday, Keisha held steadfast and refused to plead guilty to anything.

Two others arrested at the December 13th protest face even heavier charges –  David Iggy Rucker and Alfredo Reyes. Each faces up to 7 years in prison, also for doing nothing wrong. No trial date has been set for either of them.

Keisha thanked everyone who came out to support her.  Here she is with her two National Lawyers Guild Attorneys, Theresa Kleinhaus and Jim Fennerty who represented her pro bono on either side of her and with her witness on the right.

image

Also check out the Stop Mass Incarceration Network which organized the solidarity protest.

Filed Under: Blog, Featured Articles, Legal Observers

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