Criminal justice reformBy Julie HamosJanuary 2008Congratulations to you, Judge Eugene Pincham, for receiving the Elmer Gertz Lawyer award for your lifetime of public service fighting for the underserved and marginalized.
From the ChairBy Kenneth DobbsNovember 2008Obscenity, child murderers, assassins, fascists, defamation, disabled people, constitutional democracy, human rights and law school classrooms were Elmer Gertz’s milieu.
From the ChairBy Kenneth DobbsSeptember 2008Under the leadership of Steve Helle, our relatively small section council stands as an example of what committed and hardworking Illinois lawyers achieve when given an opportunity.
From the ChairBy Steven HelleJune 2008It’s been a good run, but it is time for this chair to fade away and welcome the next generation of leadership for the Human Rights Section Council.
From the ChairBy Steven HelleApril 2008A message from Section Chair Steven Helle.
From the ChairBy Steven HelleJanuary 2008A colleague told me recently of how she had been doing research into the Federal Communications Commission and expected her job to be easy because the FCC had always issued numerous reports on the industry and communications policy.
Gertz Award winner guided by voicesBy Sean O’BrienNovember 2008Doug Cassel, winner of the 2008 Elmer Gertz Award, remembers the day in 1964 when he decided to become a lawyer.
Guantánamo in the Supreme Court … AgainBy Marc FalkoffApril 2008Boumediene v. Bush is the latest of the Guantánamo detainee cases to make it to our nation’s highest court, and it will be the third time that the Justices take a metaphorical tour of Guantánamo in order to sort out some fundamental issues concerning our country’s dedication to the rule of law in the age of terror.
John Yoo and the Problem of Constitutional EvilBy Mark GraberJune 2008Having just excerpted the Yoo memo for Gillman, Graber, and Whittington, American Constitutionalism (forthcoming, 2010), let me suggest that the claims are constitutionally plausible or as plausible as most of what I read when I read legal materials.
A Law Day Program on the crisis in DarfurBy Scott W. GertzApril 2008The images have been horrific. The United States government has labeled the atrocities committed by the Sudanese government genocide.
Pre-conviction DNA gatheringBy Thomas A. BrunoJune 2008The FBI has proposed taking tissue samples of all persons arrested by the FBI for submission to the FBI’s DNA database.
Relief is on the horizon for public service attorneys burdened by law school debtBy Colleen MorganNovember 2008With the average law school graduate carrying a staggering amount of student loan debt, and with starting salaries in public interest areas of the law lagging well below those in the private sector, student loan debt relief has become an attractive way for prosecutors, public defenders, and legal aid offices to recruit new attorneys and retain experienced ones.