ABA News

ABA Government and Public Sector Lawyers Division announces 2018 award recipients

The American Bar Association Government and Public Sector Lawyers Division (GPSLD) has chosen the recipients of its 2018 Dorsey, Hodson and Nelson Awards.  The annual awards are for outstanding work in the government and public sector.

The awards will be presented at the General E. E. Anderson Awards Reception on Friday, Aug. 3, from 3:30 - 5 p.m. at the Renaissance Chicago Hotel (Cloud Gate Ballroom 5) during the ABA Annual Meeting in Chicago.

The Dorsey Award honors an outstanding public defender or legal aid lawyer. The Hodson Award recognizes an outstanding government or public sector law office. The Nelson Award recognizes the outstanding contributions to the ABA by an individual government or public sector lawyer.

Janet M. Coulter, GPSLD chair, says of this year’s winners: “These national award winners represent public service at its best. Public lawyers across the country work hard to improve people’s lives and represent the needy. We are so happy to highlight their outstanding achievements.”

The recipients are:

Dorsey Award

Deborah Katz Levi is the director of Special Litigation, Baltimore City Felony Trial Division of the Maryland Office of the Public Defender. Levi has worked to repair confidence in Baltimore City’s criminal justice system after the Freddie Gray incident, the findings that led to the U.S. Department of Justice and Baltimore entering a consent decree and the criminal conviction of eight Baltimore City police officers. Levi seeks transparency in the criminal justice system through the disclosure of discoverable Baltimore Police Officers’ Internal Affairs Department records. Her work with the Baltimore City Police Department to create a streamlined discovery process ensures that criminal defendants’ rights are protected.

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Hodson Award

The Military Commissions Defense Organization (MCDO) provides zealous representation for detainees accused of terrorism and war crimes and advocates for the application of fundamental Constitutional guarantees to the Guantanamo Bay military commissions. MCDO lawyers have experienced extraordinary challenges including: establishing functioning attorney-client relations due to cultural and language barriers; communicating with clients located in another country and who are subject to strict government policies regarding communicating with counsel; and litigating lengthy, complex trials including many capital cases, involving millions of pages of discovery and defense investigations in locations across the world. The work of the MCDO defense team has resulted in a significant number of dismissals and legal victories regarding the Appointments Clause of the Constitution, the Ex Post Facto Clause and the government’s burden of proof in establishing jurisdiction in Guantanamo Bay.

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Nelson Award

Denise R. Avant, a visually impaired lawyer and former Cook County Illinois assistant public defender, began her service to the ABA in 2012 as a member of the ABA Commission on Disability Rights. She currently serves as a liaison to the Commission from the ABA Center for Racial and Ethnic Diversity. In 2017, Avant was appointed to serve in the ABA House of Delegates, the policy making body of the association. Avant has worked her entire career to ensure that disadvantaged people had a voice in our justice system. A highlight of her work includes her involvement in producing the video “Hidden Injustice: Toward a Better Defense.” It advised America’s public defenders and defense attorneys on the impact of implicit bias and the necessary steps to combat it. Avant is currently President of the National Federation of the Blind of Illinois.

The GPSLD’s National Awards are designed to recognize the extraordinary achievements of government lawyers and to inform the public about the outstanding work performed and the positive impact made by our nation’s public lawyers. Winners are selected based on their professional accomplishments and their role in ensuring access to justice.


 

Jobs, education hot topics to be featured  at ABA disability rights conference

 

Experts from the U.S. Departments of Education and Justice, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, and leading disability rights attorneys, advocates, and educators will convene at the American Bar Association’s 5th National Conference: Disability Issues in Employment and Education Law, on Friday, June 22 in Philadelphia to explore questions involving persons with disabilities and their rights arising in employment and education law contexts.

Approximately one in five Americans has a disability, making persons with disabilities the largest minority group in the United States. Despite achievements through advocacy and legislation, people with disabilities continue to face challenges and encounter barriers to obtaining an education and getting a job. The unemployment rates of people with disabilities is almost double that of those without disabilities, and students with disabilities graduate high school and college at significantly lower rates than students without disabilities.

The opening session, “Federal Government Enforcement of Disability Rights,” will be a highlight of the conference. Speakers include Rebecca B. Bond, chief, Disability Rights Section, Civil Rights Division, U.S. Department of Justice; Johnny Collett, assistant secretary, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services, U.S. Department of Education; Debra M. Lawrence, regional attorney, Philadelphia District Office, EEOC; and Frank Lopez, deputy assistant general counsel, Division of Educational Equity, Office of the General Counsel, U.S. Department of Education. The session will be moderated by Marc Maurer, director of legal policy at the National Federation of the Blind. These experts will discuss initiatives, policy and enforcement efforts by federal agencies in employment and education as they relate to persons with disabilities.

Program topics will include:

• Workplace safety and direct threat

• The rise of retaliation claims by workers with disabilities

• Employee leave and the interplay between the ADA and FMLA

• Recent disability employment law decisions

• Working with experts to develop IEP content

• Strategies for presenting expert testimony in due process proceedings

• Representing students facing school discipline and juvenile justice involvement

• Case law developments since U.S. Supreme Court’s Endrew F. and Fry decisions

• Ethical issues that arise when representing clients with developmental, intellectual, and psychiatric disabilities