ABA names three recipients of the 2022 Stonewall Award

Three longstanding LGBT legal activists will be honored by the American Bar Association Commission on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity with its 10th annual Stonewall Award on February 12 at the ABA Midyear Meeting in Seattle.
 
Named after the New York City Stonewall Inn police raid and riot of June 28, 1969, the award recognizes lawyers who have considerably advanced lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals in the legal profession and successfully championed LGBT legal causes.

Jordan Blisk is assistant director of chapters at the American Constitutional Society,  and executive director and board chair of the Colorado Name Change Project (CNCP) where he leads programs that provide transgender Coloradans with legal and financial assistance.

Blisk was the first openly transgender graduate of the University of Colorado Law School, where he organized the first CU Law Name Change Clinic.

He also interned at Lambda Legal, working primarily on state and federal impact litigation cases and utilizing resources  to fight against discriminatory practices in blood donation by LGBTQ persons and to fight for inclusion of trans athletes in youth sports.

Shannon Minter, legal director of the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), was lead counsel for same-sex couples in the landmark California marriage equality case which held that same-sex couples have the fundamental right to marry and that laws that discriminate based on sexual orientation are discriminatory and subject to the highest level of constitutional scrutiny.

Minter was NCLR’s lead attorney in Christian Legal Society v. Martinez, a U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding student group policies prohibiting discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity and rejecting the argument that such policies violated a student group’s rights to freedom of speech, religion and association.

Judge G. Helen Whitener was appointed to the Washington State Supreme Court in April 2020 and elected to retain her position in November 2020. Prior to that, Whitener served as a judge on the Pierce County Superior Court and the Washington State Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals and as a pro-tem judge in Pierce County District Court and the City of Tacoma Municipal Court.

Whitener previously  litigated civil and criminal cases as first a prosecutor and defense attorney and later as a managing partner at Whitener Rainey Writt PS in Tacoma. She serves on the board of the International Association of LGBT Judges as well as on the Washington State Office of Civil Legal Aid Oversight Committee.

Whitener is the first Black woman to serve on the Washington Supreme Court, the fourth immigrant-born justice and the first Black LGBT judge in the State of Washington.