Donald Garlit is a co-founder of Attorneys for Animals (AFA) where he is treasurer; and a co-founder of the Animal Law Section of the State Bar of Michigan, where he was Section Council chair, and is now a Section Council member and newsletter co–editor.
Garlit is on the Board of Directors for RedRover, a national organization that helps animals in need, running temporary shelters after disasters such as fires, tornados, and floods and provides humane education.
He works at animal rescue groups including the Ann Arbor-based Leuk’s Landing shelter for feline leukemia cats, and The Bird Center of Washtenaw County, a rehabilitation center for injured wild birds.
He has a degree in economics from Michigan State University, J.D. from The Ohio State University, and MBA from the University of Michigan; and spent more than 25 years in the automotive industry in both commercial and defense segments in finance, program management, sales, and contracts.
Garlit and his wife Bee Friedlander, who also co-founded AFA, live in Canton with three cats, Julia, Stella and Precious.
By Sheila Pursglove
Legal News
Why did you become a lawyer? I saw the movie “Paper Chase” and decided I could get through law school. This was common in the mid-1970s.
What would surprise people about your job? I have been a Michigan attorney since 1977 but have never practiced law. That was unusual years ago although more people are taking different paths with their law degree now.
What advice do you have for someone considering law school? Be sure your heart will be in it. Talk to attorneys before applying. It is painful to go on a lark. Give thought to an area of law that interests you.
What is Attorneys for Animals? Wanda Nash started AFA in 1992 with the goal of forming an animal law section within the State Bar of Michigan. That happened in 1995, it is the first statewide section in the country. AFA was revitalized several years ago when we realized there was a place for a group that included animal activists and attorneys. We are involved with legislative research and advocacy, an animal law referral service, and education, and have a book club that meets quarterly.
Who do you most admire? Jane Goodall, who went to Africa to study chimps and changed the way we think about our “closest living relatives” and all animals.
What’s your favorite law-related movie? “Inherit the Wind,” a fictionalized account of the 1920s Scopes Monkey Trial, about whether the teaching of evolution was legal in Tennessee. The trial testimony and cross-examination is outstanding pitting the Clarence Darrow character (Spencer Tracy) against the William Jennings Bryant character (Frederic March). It is some lawyering to watch.
Who are your law role models? Joyce Tischler of the Animal Legal Defense Fund (who practically invented animal law in the 1970s); and Attorneys for Animals founder, the late Wanda Nash, who went to law school in the early 1980s with the express goal of helping animals. Wanda was the “mother” of Animal Law in Michigan, and a founding member of the Animal Law Section of the State Bar of Michigan. Also the many animal law attorneys and animal advocates I have met and worked with on campaigns, advocacy, analysis, and testimony-selfless people who are part of an important social justice movement.
What is your favorite animal book? I still have my childhood copy of “Black Beauty”. Anna Sewell completed the book in 1877 and it is told through the thoughts of a horse. Sewell was well ahead of her time and a pioneer in getting people to think of animals as sentient beings.
What has been your favorite year? The late 1960s.
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