2014 Pro Bono Community Service Report
Transcription
2014 Pro Bono Community Service Report
INSIDE THIS ISSUE WORLDWIDE IMPACT 1 SIDLEY’S FIRMWIDE PRO BONO INITIATIVES 2 ❯❯ Capital Litigation Project ❯❯ Political Asylum and Immigrants’ Rights Project ❯❯ Veterans Benefits Project ❯❯ Africa & Asia Agricultural Enterprise Program 2 6 10 14 PROTECTING INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS 19 ESTABLISHING INTERNATIONAL LEGAL NORMS 21 SEEKING JUSTICE FOR CRIMINAL DEFENDANTS 23 PROTECTING CIVIL AND CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS 26 SERVING NEIGHBORS IN NEED 29 ❯❯ Helping Children and Families ❯❯ Helping People with Disabilities ❯❯ Protecting the Right to Housing 29 30 30 SUPPORTING NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS 33 CONTRIBUTING TO THE BROADER COMMUNITY 34 PRO BONO HONORS AND EVENTS 42 PRO BONO AWARDS CEREMONIES – HONORING OUR OWN 46 SPONSORSHIP OF PRO BONO GRADUATE FELLOWS, EXTERNS AND LOANED ASSOCIATES 51 PRO BONO AND PUBLIC INTEREST LAW COMMITTEE MEMBERS 56 2015 marks ten years since Sidley launched its first firmwide pro bono initiative, the Capital Litigation Project. The Project was a response to a call from the ABA’s Death Penalty Representation Project to help the scores of unrepresented men on Alabama’s death row in post-conviction proceedings. A year later, already recognizing the benefits of our collaborations, we embarked on another firmwide effort, the Political Asylum and Immigrants’ Rights Project. The third firmwide pro bono effort, the Veterans Benefits Project, began in 2007 and was the offshoot of a nationwide initiative organized by the National Veterans Legal Services Program, veterans’ organizations, law firm leaders, and the Pro Bono Institute. Finally, our latest firmwide pro bono project is the Africa & Asia Agricultural Enterprise Program, which offers the full range of the firm’s services to smaller agricultural enterprises and non-governmental organizations in Africa and Asia. By facilitating access to financing, removing trade barriers and providing related legal services in important markets, we help smallholder farmers expand their operations and compete globally, ultimately increasing their incomes and enhancing their quality of life. We are proud of all of our pro bono endeavors (to which firm lawyers and staff dedicated more than 107,000 hours in 2014), but our firmwide projects are unique because they allow us to build a reservoir of expertise and experience that enhances our ability to make a significant difference in the lives of the projects’ beneficiaries. Our knowledge of Alabama post- Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report WORLDWIDE IMPACT conviction procedures, of conditions in countries in which human rights are routinely denied, of the bureaucracy that denies payments to veterans disabled in the service of their country, and of export/import laws that thwart the efforts of poor women farmers to sell their goods, means that with each new client, we do not need to reinvent the wheel. By drawing upon the experience of all firm lawyers who have worked on project matters, we can increase the number of people we serve, as well as foster a spirit of community among firm lawyers working toward a shared goal. While the impact of our work is not measured by accolades received, we are heartened that others have recognized our efforts. The ABA awarded Sidley its Pro Bono Publico Award in 2007, noting that no other firm has represented as many prisoners on death row at one time as Sidley. The ABA Death Penalty Representation Project also has honored Sidley’s Capital Litigation Project with two awards, most recently with the Exceptional Service Award in 2014. The Veterans Benefits Project received a National Law Journal Pro Bono Award in 2008, and the National Immigrant Justice Center and the Capital Area Immigrants’ Rights (CAIR) Coalition have recognized Sidley’s efforts under the Political Asylum and Immigrants’ Rights Project. The ABA’s Business Law Section honored Sidley’s latest firmwide initiative, the Africa &Asia Agricultural Enterprise Program, with its 2014 National Public Service Award. On this tenth anniversary, we celebrate all the Sidley lawyers and staff who have contributed so much to the success of these projects. We also thank our many legal services partners who have made it possible to do this work, as well as our clients’ in-house lawyers who have partnered with us on cases and clinics. We look forward to the continued success of these projects over the next ten years. Carter G. Phillips Chair, Executive Committee Larry A. Barden Chair, Management Committee 1 SIDLEY’S FIRMWIDE PRO BONO INITIATIVES Capital Litigation Project In December 2004, judges from the Seventh Circuit and Northern District of Illinois invited Sidley and other large Chicago firms to an ABA-sponsored meeting. The director of the ABA Death Penalty Representation Project spoke of the desperate need for legal assistance for defendants on death row, citing Alabama as a state where the need was especially acute. In response, Sidley established its Capital Litigation Project, through which the firm now represents 18 indigent inmates on Alabama’s death row in their post-conviction proceedings. At the end of 2014, Alabama had more than 190 prisoners on death row. Approximately a quarter of the death sentences in Alabama are the result of judicial override of jury recommendations of life in prison by elected judges. John Gallo spearheads the Project, and Kelly Huggins manages the work from our Chicago office. 2 Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 3 Sidley’s Capital Litigation Project is a long-term, resourceintensive undertaking that provides hope to inmates incarcerated on Alabama’s death row. Since the project’s inception, more than 100 Sidley partners, counsel and associates, along with legal assistants and project assistants, have volunteered more than127,000 hours to these cases. In 2014, lawyers and staff donated more than 9,000 hours to the representation of these men on death row. Over the last ten years, Sidley teams of lawyers and legal assistants from across Sidley’s domestic offices have represented 21 prisoners, traveling to Alabama to visit their clients, interview witnesses, and participate in hearings. In addition, one of Sidley’s Capital Litigation teams includes in-house lawyers from one of the firm’s largest clients, Exelon Corporation, who participate fully in all aspects of the representation. Sidley’s partnership with the ABA Death Penalty Representation Project and the Equal Justice Initiative of Alabama (EJI) has been critical to our ability to represent Alabama’s death row inmates effectively. EJI , a non-profit organization based in Montgomery, Alabama, has achieved national prominence from its advocacy on death penalty issues and provides on-going expert guidance to Sidley’s lawyers on Alabama post-conviction practice and procedure. Bryan Stevenson, EJI’s Executive Director, is the best-selling author of Just Mercy, a new book in which he describes his work defending clients on death row. Recognition of Sidley’s Capital Litigation Project On September 11, 2014, Sidley received the ABA Death Penalty Representation Project’s Exceptional Service Award at the Project’s annual Volunteer Recognition & Awards Event in Washington, D.C. One of two firms to be recognized with the award, Sidley was honored for our commitment to providing pro bono legal services to Alabama’s death row inmates and for our work on the successful appeal of the capital murder conviction and death sentence of William Ziegler. In May 2014, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the circuit court decision granting Mr. Ziegler a new trial, finding numerous constitutional violations in connection with the original capital murder trial. The team of Sidley attorneys representing Mr. Ziegler includes partners Ben Nagin, John Lavelle, Nick Lagemann, and Andy Hart, and associates Drew Rolle, Francesca Brody*, Tim Hargadon, Jackie Lu, Michael Mann and Ashley Pfeiffer. New York partner Ben Nagin accepted the award on behalf of the Firm. From left to right, Sidley firm-wide Pro Bono Chair, Jeff Green, D.C. Pro Bono Counsel Becky Troth, John Lavelle (NY), Sidley Partner (and former Firm Managing Partner) Chuck Douglas (CH), Ben Nagin (NY), Capital Litigation Project Manager Kelly Huggins (CH) and Nick Lagemann (NY). 4 HN/NY Our efforts in capital cases often extend beyond Bryant, a death row inmate in Alabama. On March 18, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals issued a decision remanding Mr. Bryant’s case to the circuit court to consider his claim that his counsel was ineffective for failing to impeach a witness with his prior inconsistent statements. The Court of Criminal Appeals concluded that the circuit court erred in determining that the prior statements would have been inadmissible. The Sidley team includes John Gallo (Chicago), Emily Caveness (SF), Jeff Carroll (Chicago) and two lawyers who are now firm alumni: Aaron Brooks and Serena Lee. In-house lawyers from Sidley client Exelon Corporation are also on the team, including Tamra Domeyer, Traci Braun and Nicole Nocera. Emily Caveness presented the oral argument in the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals. Sidley alumnus Glenn Newman worked on the case before his retirement from Exelon. Alabama. At the request of the Texas Psychological Association (TPA), Sidley filed an amicus brief in July in a capital case on appeal from the denial of a habeas petition to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Through Sidley’s brief, the TPA offers a professional scientific opinion on the inadequacy of the protocol historically used by the Texas Department of Corrections for assessing the intellectual disability of inmates who are subject to capital punishment. Although the national parent organization, the American Psychological Association, asked to prepare the brief, the TPA advised the national organization that it preferred to have the lawyers at Sidley handle the matter. In drafting the brief, Sidley worked with a panel of TPA experts. Mark Glasser (Houston) and David Denton (NY), who is slated to argue for the TPA before the Fifth Circuit, drafted the brief. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report CH/SF A Sidley team obtained a victory on behalf of Jerry There is a certain amount of presumptuousness involved in presenting the Project’s Exceptional Service Award for 2014 to the firm of Sidley Austin. It is presumptuous because Sidley has set the gold standard in the representation of Death Row inmates, especially in the very difficult venue that is the State of Alabama. Sidley’s commitment to this cause is deep and extensive. Over the last decade, the firm has represented no fewer than 21 prisoners condemned to death, investing some 110,000 hours in ensuring that these individuals have at least some opportunity to receive quality legal counsel, trying to right the imbalance that so often leads to miscarriages of justice. The Firm was last called to this platform to receive this Award in 2006. And it continues to take on more and more such cases: to the Project’s knowledge, it has handled more cases, and has committed more resources to them, than any other firm in the country. In late 2012, Sidley accomplished the nearly unimaginable in securing a new trial for William Ziegler, who spent over a decade on Death Row, all the while maintaining his innocence. Sidley persuaded the trial judge that Ziegler had received ineffective assistance of counsel, that his prosecutor had concealed evidence, and that members of the jury had been less than honest in their voir dire responses. That decision was upheld on appeal this past May. It was an amazing result, and those of us who continue to labor in the trenches in Alabama are awed by this outcome. Randy Susskind, in his letter of support for Sidley’s nomination, wrote of the firm’s unique commitment to fighting for fairness and due process, demonstrating an unparalleled level of excitement, diligence, and skill. Excerpts from the Remarks of Steven M. Schneebaum Presenting the 2014 Exceptional Service Award to Sidley Austin September 11, 2014 5 Political Asylum and Immigrants’ Rights Project In 2006, Sidley established a firmwide pro bono initiative to help indigent asylum seekers and other indigent immigrants fleeing persecution abroad who are seeking legal protection in the United States. Mel Washburn of our Chicago office and Martin Gold of our New York office spearheaded the initiative. In 2014, Mel Washburn transitioned his responsibilities to Russell Cass in our Chicago office, where Kelly Huggins serves as the Project Manager. Through the Project, Sidley handles a wide variety of immigration matters for persons fleeing persecution in their home country, as well as women and children who have suffered violence or abuse. These matters include asylum cases, Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) cases, U visa cases, adjustments to lawful permanent residence, and representation of immigrant minors in Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) cases. In 2014, our attorneys and paralegals volunteered more than 8,000 hours to this project. Federal law provides that individuals who have suffered or fear persecution in their home country based on their race, religion, nationality, political opinion or social group may apply for asylum in the United States. The VAWA selfpetition is a remedy for immigrant victims married to abusive U.S. citizens and green card holders. Successful VAWA self-petitioners are granted employment authorization and lawful status in the United States on an annual basis until they receive legal permanent residency. The U visa is a remedy for immigrant victims of certain crimes who have helped with the investigation or prosecution of those crimes. Successful U visa petitioners receive employment authorization and lawful status in the U.S. for four years and become eligible to apply for lawful permanent residency. SIJS petitions provide immigration relief to immigrant minors who have been abused or neglected in their native countries. 6 Since 2007, with the assistance of the National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC), Sidley’s Chicago office has hosted quarterly clinics with our client Exelon to help asylees and refugees obtain lawful permanent resident status and bring family members to the United States. Each clinic begins with a training session that NIJC conducts on how to complete the applications, and NIJC staff members are available during the clinic to answer questions. In its first seven years, the clinic has assisted more than 284 clients. In our quarterly clinics in 2014, we helped asylees and refugees from Jamaica, the Ivory Coast, Ethiopia, Colombia, Cameroon, Togo, China, the Republic of Congo, Bulgaria, Guatemala and Syria apply for legal permanent resident status. We also helped asylees and refugees from Ethiopia, Togo, Eritrea, Rwanda and Cameroon petition to have family members join them in the United States. Sidley attorneys Catherine Kim, Rae Bimmerle, Natalie Chan, Michael Gustafson, Teresa Napoli, Kristen Rau, Alexandria Glispie, Alan Bielawski, Laura Sexton, Candice Kline, Nadan Sehic, Audrey Austin, Mel Washburn, Jacqueline Pruitt, Greg Marrs, Eric Schmitt, Sharon Stone, Juris Benitez, Chad Vance, Briordy Meyers, Elizabeth Schubert and Kelly Huggins participated in the clinics. CH Sidley obtained a victory for a Colombian woman and her family in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. In a widelypublicized 32-page decision, the Court concluded in N.L.A. v. Holder that the Immigration Judge and Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) had improperly denied our clients asylum. Our clients sought asylum based on life-threatening political persecution because of their membership in a social group (Colombian landowners) who refused to cooperate with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The decision is particularly significant because it reaffirms the Seventh Circuit’s approach to particular social group claims following two recent Board of Immigration Appeals precedential decisions that arguably introduced additional requirements for such claims. On remand, the Immigration Judge granted asylum to our client and her family in November 2014. Sidley undertook this pro bono representation in December 2004. Jason Adler* argued the appeal last year, working with Kelly Huggins and co-counsel Charles Roth of the National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC ). Claire Korenblit* provided post-decision assistance. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report Adjustment of Status Clinic This year, teams of Sidley lawyers working on a pro bono basis obtained victories for clients from locations as diverse as Syria, Darfur, Colombia, the Palestinian Territories, Tanzania and Haiti. These included victories before appellate courts, in merits hearings before the Executive Office of Immigration Review (EOIR), and in affirmative asylum application interviews. NY A Sidley team represented a teenage girl from El Salvador who applied successfully for Special Immigrant Juvenile Status and subsequently received permanent U.S. residency in January 2014. We represented the client in Nassau County Family Court, before the Immigration Court in New York and before U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). The client is now living with her aunt and uncle on Long Island and doing well in school. Maureen Crough handled the case with assistance from David Beller* and Srikant Cheruvu.* Kids in Need of Defense (KIND) referred the case to Sidley. In 2014, lawyers and paralegals volunteered more than 8,000 hours to cases in the Political Asylum and Immigrants' Rights Project. D.C. Sidley won an emergency stay of removal in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit on behalf of a Haitian immigrant who has been in the United States since 1984, was in a lawful immigration status and is married to a U.S. citizen. In 2013, Immigration authorities alleged that he had been convicted of an aggravated felony in 1996, took him into custody and placed him in expedited removal proceedings. Less than a week after Sidley was retained, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) announced that it would imminently remove our client to Haiti. The Sidley team filed an emergency motion for a stay of removal, which the Fourth Circuit granted one day before our client’s scheduled * Indicates former Sidley lawyer or staff member 7 CH In December 2013, Sidley associate Emily Underwood helped an asylee from Togo who was a client at our pro bono immigration clinic with NIJC and Exelon. With Emily’s help, our client was able to petition to bring his wife and son, from whom he had been separated for eight years, to the United States. The petition was successful and the client emailed Emily on December 22, 2014, to let her know that his wife and son finally had arrived. Our client reunited with his wife and son. removal, directing DHS to stay proceedings until the court has decided our appeal. That appeal will challenge the underlying aggravated felony determination, which is founded on a nearly 20-year-old conviction for a state-law misdemeanor. The team consists of Quin Sorenson, Kwaku Akowuah, Fran Faircloth and Chris Eiswerth. The matter was referred to Sidley by the Capital Area Immigrants’ Rights (CAIR) Coalition. CH Sidley obtained asylum on behalf of a Syrian artist and professor on the basis of the Syrian government’s persecution of her because of her political opinions and membership in a particular social group (“artists that have used their art as a vehicle to convey social commentary publicly”). As a result of her outspoken critiques of the Syrian government, our client was placed under surveillance and interrogated by Syrian intelligence agents and had experienced an escalating pattern of threats against her life. The Sidley team included Dave Gordon, Kelly Huggins, Jason James,* Kelly Albinak Kribs and Jina Yun. LA An Immigration Judge in Los Angeles granted asylum to our client, a Palestinian man who was forced to flee the West Bank after Hamas operatives tried to recruit him as a suicide bomber. Tom Hanrahan supervised the case, which lasted nearly eight years. A number of Sidley lawyers laid the groundwork for the recent victory in the early years, but the case took a decisive turn two years ago when Lillian Park* stepped in, shortly after the case was remanded from the Board of Immigration Appeals, which had reversed an Immigration Judge’s decision to grant asylum. Lillian not only crafted and developed new evidence and arguments for the case on remand, but ultimately persuaded the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to withdraw its opposition to the application for asylum and waive its right to appeal an order granting asylum. 8 D.C./CH Sidley lawyers secured permanent U.S. residence status for a Tanzanian woman who was the victim of severe abuse by her former husband. Sidley has worked on the matter since 2009 and obtained U visa approval for the woman in 2010, which formed the basis of her application for lawful permanent residence. Lawyers working on the case successfully addressed the complex matters of criminal law at issue and also overcame the initial reluctance by law enforcement to issue a re-certification, without which the woman’s ability to adjust status would have been severely impeded. Andy Shoyer (D.C.) and Katie Durick (formerly in D.C., now in Chicago) handled the case, which Catholic Charities referred to the firm. NY Sidley lawyers obtained a grant of asylum for a client from the Darfur region of Sudan, where, over ten years ago, he was subjected to imprisonment, interrogations, and physical and psychological torture due to his ethnicity and political beliefs. The client fled to the United States in 2005, seeking asylum. His asylum application remained open-ended and pending for years, until the firm became involved in early 2010, when we helped the client re-start his asylum application, and provided representation through several rounds of briefing, a full merits hearing with a comprehensive submission of primary and corroborative evidence, and a year of additional hearings on subsidiary issues. On June 24, 2014—nearly nine years after the client arrived in the United States—an Immigration Judge granted the application for asylum, in a thoughtful, 40-minute oral opinion. The grant of asylum became final on July 7, 2014, when the U.S. Department of Homeland Security informed the client that it did not intend to appeal. The Sidley team consisted of associates Adam McClay, Ritu Ghai, Pouneh Aravand and Sean Powers.* CH Sidley successfully represented two brothers who fled their Immigration Review (EOIR), Sidley successfully represented our client, who had been a lawful permanent resident of the U.S. for more than 20 years, who was facing removal because of a 15-year-old felony. After several years of litigation, including a successful appeal before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit on an issue of first impression, and four years in Department of Homeland Security (DHS) detention, our client will be permitted to remain in the U.S. as a lawful permanent resident. Mel Washburn led the team, assisted by Laura Sexton, Michelle Ramirez, paralegal Danuta Lucenko and project assistant Mónica Rivera. Christina Coleman,* Laura Jakubowski* and Susan Spies Roth* also worked on the case. native Honduras to escape forced recruitment by local criminal gangs and entered the United States as unaccompanied children. Because of their ages, we were able to file affirmative asylum applications on their behalf with U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services (USCIS). Although the older brother was in removal proceedings, the Immigration Court granted a continuance to permit USCIS to consider his asylum application. In August 2014, the Sidley team filed written submissions in support of the asylum applications, and USCIS then conducted interviews with the children. On December 23, 2014, USCIS granted asylum to both brothers. The Sidley team included Barbara Barreno, David Weller, Gregory Oguss and paralegal Arturo Rodriguez, with supervision from Russ Cass. Staff members Daniel Ruiz Bucio, Juan Vaca and Andie Silva provided support. NY In September, Sidley obtained a green card for a client from Haiti, after successfully representing the client in prior asylum proceedings in federal immigration court. The client had fled Haiti after suffering persecution based upon his family’s affiliation with the country’s former president. Jon Muenz and Christine LiCalzi* secured the client’s green card, while Mr. Muenz and Stephen Rutenberg* represented the client in his multiple asylum hearings. D.C. Sidley successfully represented a husband and wife in a December merits hearing in immigration court in Alexandria. The team won withholding of removal for the husband under the Convention Against Torture (“CAT”) and asylum protection for the wife. This hearing followed a series of proceedings held since the case’s inception in December 2007. The husband was admitted to the United States as an asylee in 2002 after he was imprisoned and tortured for political reasons in his native Yemen. The wife, who was similarly pursued by the Yemeni government, followed in 2005 under derivative asylee status. In 2007, the husband was convicted of immigration fraud (he had not disclosed that he had secretly returned to Yemen to see his mother) and both clients’ asylee status was revoked. In 2010, the Immigration Judge granted CAT relief to the husband and asylum to the wife. The Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) remanded that decision, directing the Immigration Judge to make further findings of fact with regard to the husband and reversing the asylum grant for the wife. Sidley successfully appealed the BIA’s decision with regard to the wife to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, which remanded her case back to the BIA. In its second opinion, the BIA remanded her case to the Immigration Judge to make further findings of fact. The Sidley team submitted additional evidence and proposed findings related to the Yemeni government’s pursuit of the husband and wife and their continued fear of capture and torture. The Immigration Judge adopted and incorporated those proposed findings in his most recent decision, again granting CAT relief to the husband and asylum to the wife. Many Sidley attorneys have worked on the case since 2007. Ray Mangum and Fran Faircloth comprised the most recent Sidley team, which previously included Sidley alumni Aaron Wredberg, Kimberly Leaman, Katie Carner, Elisa Jillson, Noah Clements and Matthew Wright. Andy Shoyer supervised the case initially and Robert Keeling has supervised since 2008. In all, Sidley lawyers devoted more than 3,900 hours to this matter. The Capital Area Immigrants’ Rights (CAIR) Coalition referred the case to Sidley. LA Sidley lawyers represented a mother from Guatemala who Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report CH In a merits hearing before the Executive Office of became a victim of domestic violence in the United States. After our client assisted in the investigation of that crime, she was eligible for a U visa, which the team successfully obtained for her. The U visa also allows her to bring three of her children, who had remained in Guatemala, to the United States. Our client is now eligible to work in the United States and, in three years time, may be able to adjust her status to that of a lawful permanent resident. Jodi Lopez, Aerin Snow, Shelley Azizi and Claudia Espinoza handled the matter. CH Sidley has a longstanding relationship with Heartland Alliance’s National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC), a leading human and immigrants’ rights organization with offices in Chicago and Washington. In June, the NIJC awarded Sidley lawyer Kate Falahee Newman a Rising Star Award at the NIJC’s 15th Annual Human Rights Awards luncheon. Kate has been actively involved in pro bono matters with the NIJC for many years, including a recent victory for an asylum seeker from Cameroon and frequently volunteering at Sidley’s pro bono immigration clinics with the NIJC and Exelon Corporation. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Jose Antonio Vargas, the keynote speaker at the NIJC’s event, also was recognized for his commitment to immigrant and human rights. 9 VETERANS BENEFITS PROJECT In 2007, then national pro bono Chair and alumnus Ronald Flagg led Sidley’s effort to establish the Veterans Benefits Project. Sidley is a leader in providing pro bono assistance to veterans, military service members and military families, and has represented them in more than 150 matters. Sidley receives many of its cases from the National Veterans Legal Services Program’s (NVLSP) nationwide referral network of “Lawyers Serving Warriors.” NVLSP is a longstanding partner of the firm. Over the past decade, Sidley’s LA office has worked with the NVLSP on a class action in California representing Vietnam veterans exposed to Agent Orange. The case has produced more than $3.6 billion in veterans benefits for class members. The Project also helps veterans referred by the following groups: Veterans Legal Support Center & Clinic at The John Marshall Law School, the Veterans Consortium Pro Bono Program, Swords to Plowshares, the Veterans Assistance Project of the New York City Bar Justice Center, the American Bar Association’s Veterans’ Claims Assistance Network and Metroplex Veterans Legal Services. Sidley is proud to work on behalf of the servicemen and servicewomen who have given so much to our country, to ensure that they receive the benefits to which they are entitled to provide for themselves and their families. In 2014, Sidley lawyers and staff devoted more than 4,600 hours to matters under the Veterans Benefits Project. Emily Wexler manages the Project out of the Chicago office. 10 Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report This initiative focuses primarily on two types of clients: #1 Veterans seeking “service-connected” disability benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Attorneys represent veterans in both administrative agency and appellate court proceedings. In 2014, Sidley took 17 new VA benefit cases. #2 Veterans seeking Combat-Related Special Compensation (CRSC) from the military. Clients meeting certain prerequisites whose disabling conditions are “combat-related” are eligible for additional disability compensation. Sidley prepares these applications on behalf of the veterans and in 2014, took 18 new CRSC cases. 11 LA The firm obtained an increase in VA service-connected DA The Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims remanded disability benefits for a U.S. Marine Corps veteran who, after serving in Iraq, suffered from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and major physical injuries. Sidley argued that a 2009 rating of 50 percent for PTSD was too low, and that the veteran also qualified for Total Disability based on Individual Unemployability (TDIU). Our client was ultimately granted both TDIU and a 100 percent rating for PTSD, retroactive to January 2009. His disability benefits increased by approximately $2,000 per month going forward, and he also received more than $70,000 in retroactive payments. Jen Ratner and Johari Townes* handled the matter. the claim of our client, a widow of an Army veteran who, we contended, committed suicide due to uncontrollable back pain he had suffered since his time in the military. The court held that the VA had erred by relying on overruled case law and by failing to provide the widow a medical opinion regarding whether her husband’s back pain could have led to his depression and suicide. The VA must now reexamine the widow’s claim. Demarron Berkley* and Michael Hatcher handled the matter. NY Sidley obtained an increase in VA service-connected disability benefits for a U.S. Air Force veteran discharged in 1959. The VA denied his original claim from 2005 because the agency could not find his military medical records. The veteran’s files were subsequently located, and he was awarded disability benefits at a 10 percent rate. Sidley appealed, arguing that the disability rate was too low and that the effective date should be 2005 because the VA had the probative files all along. Sidley prevailed on both arguments. Our client’s disability benefits were increased to 30 percent, retroactive to December 2005, entitling him to approximately $25,000 in retroactive benefits, and a monthly increase in benefits of approximately $270 per month. Marianne Bellucci and Jim Arden handled the matter. CH Sidley successfully represented an Army veteran who served in Vietnam and suffers from PTSD. The veteran had managed to function for decades following his service, but the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan made it impossible for him to ignore his memories from Vietnam, and he eventually had to quit his job because of his PTSD. The VA had denied his claim previously, but Sidley submitted additional medical and “stressor” evidence proving his claim. The veteran was assigned a 70 percent disability rating and will receive benefits going forward worth more than $1,400 every month. He also received a retroactive award worth approximately $75,000. Retired partner Robert Watson handled the matter. 12 DA/CH Sidley filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims alleging that the VA’s failure to rule on certain claims that had been pending for more than a decade constituted an arbitrary refusal to act. After the writ was filed, the VA quickly began to act in the case. While the court ruled that a writ was unnecessary (given the recent activity), the petition's purposes were achieved. Aryn Sothbarr, David Dummer and Vance Beagles handled the matter. D.C./Boston Sidley obtained a remand from the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims for a Vietnam-era veteran who suffers from frequent migraine headaches and tendonitis in both feet. In setting aside the VA’s decision denying benefits, the court rejected the VA’s reasoning that the record before the agency contained conflicting or inadequate evidence. The remand means that the veteran has another opportunity to persuade the VA that he should receive benefits. Corey Winer, Scott Border and Joseph Micallef handled the matter. D.C. The firm obtained a remand from the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims for a peacetime Navy veteran who seeks an earlier effective date for his acknowledged disabilities. The veteran sought benefits pro se in 1992 but was denied. In 1997 he tried again and was awarded benefits going forward but not back to 1992. He argued, with our help, that the decision in 1992 was a “clear and unmistakable error” and that he is entitled to the benefits he would have earned between 1992 and 1997. The court vacated the agency decision because it failed clearly to articulate its determinations, making it impossible for the court to review. Jeffrey Beelaert* and Richard Klingler handled the matter. of Appeals for Veterans Claims in which we represented a Vietnam veteran who challenged his ratings for PTSD. The court held that the VA failed to comply with a prior remand order requiring it to review the evidence and provide adequate reasons and bases for the PTSD disability ratings assigned pre-2012. The court also found that it was error for a VA physician to consider the veteran’s “current financial status” when assessing his disability because financial status is “wholly outside the rating criteria.” Kenneth Coffin* and Yvette Ostolaza handled the matter. DA/D.C. The firm settled a claim with the VA favorably after briefing began in the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims. Sidley filed its opening brief arguing that the VA had erred in denying the veteran disability benefits for a right knee injury. The VA then agreed to settle the case, conceding serviceconnection. Art Dykhuis,* Andrew Langford, Michael Franzinger and Paul Zegger handled the matter. SF Sidley was able to obtain a 70 percent disability rating for a Navy veteran who suffers from PTSD after helping him with his claim at a VA Regional Office. The veteran’s award means he will receive benefits worth more than $1,400 every month, and he also received a retroactive award worth approximately $17,000. Jennifer Gaspar and Teague Donahey handled the matter. CH/DA/D.C./HN/LA/NY Sidley teams in multiple offices obtained Combat-Related Special Compensation (CRSC) awards in 2014 for 19 veterans who served in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan. CRSC is a supplemental disability payment available to eligible military retirees who can show that their disabilities are “combat-related.” Erik Carlson and Theodore Chandler (both LA) obtained CRSC benefits for an Army veteran who suffers from Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and a hand injury. The veteran received $37,000 in a retroactive award and will receive more than $600/month in additional disability compensation going forward. In another case, Steve Carlson (Chicago) and Ariele Lessing (NY) obtained CRSC benefits for an Army veteran suffering from PTSD after proving that his disability was a direct result of armed conflict. Their client received a retroactive award of approximately $20,000 and will receive ongoing benefits of approximately $400/ month. Other attorneys who handled successful CRSC matters for their clients in 2014 are: Kathyrn Sirolly, James Mizgala, Jessica Rothenberg, Jessica Fitzpatrick, Brian MacAleenan, Emily Underwood, Brett Myrick, John Levi, Nadan Sehic, Jessalyn Pe, Andrew Stern, Thomas Devlin,* Lawrence Walders, Geoffrey King, Bindu Donovan, Sarah Pruett, Melissa McGrane, Jonah Roth, Neil Wyland,* Madeleine Dowling, Sara Goldstein, Kate Falahee Newman, Robert Olian, David Weller, Tracy Nicastro, Nathan Huey,* Kara McCall, Michael McGarry, John Lavelle, Francesca Mead,* Benjamin Kelly* and Michael Hatcher. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report DA Sidley was successful in another case before the Court HN/NY The firm secured a remand from the Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims for our client, the widow of a Korean Warera Navy veteran who alleges that her husband’s death was caused by medical negligence at a VA hospital. Sidley argued, and the court held, that the VA failed to fulfill its “duty to assist” when it did not give the widow notice of and access to certain medical records when assembling her claims. The court rejected the VA’s position that it satisfied this duty by having a VA physician render an opinion on the matter. On remand, the VA must reevaluate the widow’s claim. David Denton and Tracy LeRoy handled the matter. 13 Africa & Asia Agricultural Enterprise Program In 2012, Sidley launched its fourth firmwide pro bono initiative and its first firmwide international pro bono initiative, offering pro bono assistance to clients in Africa and Asia. The Program harnesses the experience of Sidley’s team of lawyers around the world by using their strategic and technical know-how for the benefit of the poorest people in rural communities in sub-Saharan Africa and less-developed countries in Asia. The Program aims to empower farmers and businesses to expand their operations to improve the livelihoods of the world’s poorest farmers and their communities. In 2014, Sidley lawyers and staff devoted more than 5,400 hours to projects under the Program. 14 Trade Advice. Helping exporters understand and navigate international trade agreements and rules can help remove barriers to markets as well as increase the potential value of the product. Market access through advice on compliance with regulatory measures. Complex and restrictive regulatory requirements can shrink global market opportunities and present an onerous barrier to trade, especially for producers in developing countries who are neither aware of nor able to cope easily with such regulations. Being able to navigate such regulations will empower producers to reach larger markets and potentially generate significantly greater earnings. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report The major components of the Program are: Intellectual property/Trademarks/Plant Variety Protection. Registering a unique characteristic of a product or commodity—whether it be a technological improvement, a specific process, or a geographic provenance—can differentiate the product in regional or world markets and improve prices. It also can be important to license a protected technology or seed variety to improve yields and quality. Investment & Finance advice. The Program helps entities seeking financing to meet donor/fund eligibility requirements and also helps clients structure equity or loan deals of various sizes. Sidley lawyers also provide best practice advice on governance for microfinance and other financial entities working in the agricultural sector, as well as advice on innovative forms of collateral to secure financing. Franchising and Dealer Networks. Franchising offers huge opportunities to rural communities in the developing world. Extending distribution networks to the village level creates entrepreneurial opportunities for individuals. Bringing agroinputs and processing such as seed, fertilizer, herbicides, and drying/storage facilities closer to the farmers facilitates access to markets and methods of higher productivity. In developing the Program, Sidley engages with a range of entities working toward agricultural and economic growth in Africa and Asia. These include producer and trade associations, cooperatives, not-for-profit organizations, foundations, funds, banks, microfinance and insurance providers, private sector advisory services, intergovernmental organizations, universities, and individuals. Sidley also partners with a range of NGOs, government and private sector entities, including the World Bank, Food and Agricultural Organization, TrustLaw, Advocates for International Development, Gatsby Charitable Foundation, New Markets Lab. This cross-border Program is led by Scott Andersen and Ronalee Biasca in Sidley’s Geneva office. 15 Projects Under the Program Have Included: The Kenya Forest Growers Association (KEFGA) represents and promotes private forestry and commercial tree growing interests in Kenya. It is a member-based, non-partisan, nonprofit making association that is committed to the welfare of private commercial forest growers. At the beginning of 2014, a Sidley team reviewed documents and reports on issues pertinent to smallholder commercial tree growers, and assisted in drafting recommendations for the Kenya Forest Act in line with international forestry best practices and international forestry agreements. One of the Sidley lawyers participated in legislative negotiations in February 2014. The Sidley team consisted of Maurits Lugard, Anna Pavlou and Sarah Panis (all in Brussels) and Judah Ariel (D.C.). Sidai Africa Ltd. is a social enterprise operating in the livestock sector in Kenya. The enterprise's aim is to revolutionize the way that livestock and veterinary services are offered in Kenya, creating a more sustainable model of livestock service delivery. In May 2014, Sidley helped negotiate a contract for the manufacture of Sidai-branded pharmaceuticals and feed supplements with a manufacturer in Kenya. This contract was significant for Sidai in the sense that local counsel did not have this specific expertise and was not able to assist the company. The Sidley team worked together with local counsel to make sure the contract was completed and that Sidai could expand its operations. James Stansel, Sean Dickson and Lisa Taylor* (all in D.C.) worked on the matter. STC Indonesia is an environmental consulting and technology company specializing in ecosystem mapping, forest conservation, chain of custody, remote sensing and GIS mapping. The company’s goal is to produce a framework that benefits up to 12,000 smallholder palm oil producers and local communities through alternative income generation from waste-streams, while encouraging and monitoring forest conservation. Sidley provided legal support to STC Indonesia in negotiations with a larger company concerning a joint venture with STC. The Sidley team consisted of Timothy Spangler (LA), Paul Michael Jindra (NY), Courtney Hikawa (D.C.), Josephine Law (Singapore), Joy Lam (HK) and Lauren Grau (DA). Trees grown by smallholder commercial tree growers from the Kenya Forest Growers Association (KEFGA). 16 MicroEnergy Credits is a company dedicated to empowering people in developing countries (India, Mongolia, Bangladesh, Uganda and Kenya) to make healthy, clean and affordable energy choices. The company helps microfinance the purchase by low income households of clean energy products, thereby reducing the cost of energy to such households, improving health and ultimately enabling education. Over a period of 5-6 months in 2014, Sidley advised on the private placement of securities to a new investor in Micro Energy Credits, the proceeds of such placement providing substantial funds for the company to continue operations. Sidley lawyers working on this matter were Benjamin Rosemergy (CH), Christian Pilhofer (CH), Harry Layman,* summer associate Benjamin Schoener (NY), Michael Yanowitch (NY) Tennie Tam (NY), Thomas Tarnay (DA) and Rob Hardy (NY). AgFlow Ventures manages Mekelle Farms and AgFlow Farms. Mekelle Farms is a poultry farm that supplies improved breeds, inputs and management methods to a network of entrepreneurial farmers, which they develop into successful, profitable links to rural farmers throughout the country. AgFlow Farms’ mission is to build a modern mechanized commercial farm, catalyze the development of a vibrant soybean industry, and supply the animal feed market of the region. Sidley reviewed investment agreements between AgFlow Ventures and its funders. The Sidley team that worked on this matter included Ram Burshtine (NY), Octavio Hernandez (NY), Pamela Martinson (PA), Christopher Masterson (PA), Tanya Landon (Geneva) and Harry Layman*(NY). Grain Coast’s farms in Liberia use methods and techniques of organic agriculture, such as terracing, composting and mulching, to minimize the environmental damage from farming while maximizing the positive economic impact on local communities. Sidley helped draft a contract for the sale of organic vegetables to a European buyer. The Sidley team consisted of Scott Andersen (Geneva), Chad Vance (CH), and Paul Michael Jindra and Mioko Okubo (both in NY). STC Indonesia providing training for the creation of nurseries for tree seedlings. A Grain Coast farm in Liberia. 60 Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report PROGRAM STATISTICS NUMBER OF PROJECTS SINCE THE PROGRAM’S INCEPTION IN 2012 270 COUNTRIES WITH PROJECTS UNDER THE PROGRAM N U MBER O F S I D L EY 18 IN AFRICA 6 LAWYERS B eni n B ur un d i D em o c r a t i c R ep u b l i c o f t he C o n g o E t hi op i a G ha n a L i ber i a Kenya Malawi Mali M oz a m b i q u e N i ger i a R wa n d a Si er r a L e o n e Soma l i a Sout h S u d a n Ta nz a n i a Uga n d a Za m b i a PARTICIPATING I N THE PR OGR A M IN ASIA B a ngl a d e s h Ca mb o d i a Indi a Indon e s i a M ong o l i a N epa l FROM 16 SIDLEY OFFICES WORLDWIDE 17 In April, the Business Law Section of the American Bar Association honored Sidley with its 2014 National Public Service Award. Initiated in 1995, this award highlights those individuals, law firms and corporate legal departments that have demonstrated exceptional commitment to providing pro bono services to the poor or under-served in a business context. This year, nine nominations were submitted for the award. A selection Committee comprising leaders from the ABA Business Law Section’s Pro Bono Committee reviewed all entries to determine the strongest nominees. In selecting Sidley, Pro Bono Committee Chair William Woodward said that the firm stood out for its “innovative and timely” Africa-Asia Agricultural Enterprise Pro Bono Program. “The unique structure and the international scope of this project, in addition to the variety of other pro bono projects in which the firm participates, are an outstanding model that the Section is excited to recognize.” Agriculture is the sector that employs many of the poorest people in Africa and Asia. As part of the Africa-Asia Enterprise Pro Bono Program, Sidley lawyers across the U.S., Europe and Asia are providing legal services to agricultural enterprises that cannot afford international legal advice, including women-owned cooperatives. 18 Sidley’s work with the Idera Olori Women Co-operative & Credit Society and Beniseed Apex was supported by the Standards and Trade Development Facility (STDF) and the International Trade Centre (ITC), which both helped to set up eight processing sites for shea butter and sesame seeds in various Nigerian regions. External investors were sought to take over the sites. The Idera Olori Women Co-ooperative & Credit Society and Beniseed Apex are two cooperatives that are employed on the sites. Sidley drafted a Memorandum of Understanding between the external investors and the cooperatives to ensure that the cooperatives benefit from the agreement with the investors. Scott Andersen (Geneva) and Neil Horner and Cory Nelson (both in NY) staffed this matter. Akilah Institute’s students during class. The Akilah Institute for Women is the only women’s college in Rwanda and Burundi. Akilah offers a unique model of market-relevant education empowering graduates for success in careers and leadership roles. Students can choose to major in entrepreneurship, information systems, or hospitality management. Ninety-seven percent of Akilah students are the first in their family to attend an institution of higher learning. The Institute aims to build future generations of women leaders and professionals in Africa through the development of a network of campuses. Akilah will graduate 1,200 students by the year 2020 and holds a 95 percent job placement rate for the first two graduating classes. Sidley, together with local counsel, advised Akilah Institute on establishing a loan fund to finance projects for students and graduates. The Sidley team consisted of Richard Weiner (D.C.), Jan Yves Remy (Geneva) and Laure-Helene Laissue (Geneva). Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report PROTECTING INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS D.C. The United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) passed a resolution in March authorizing the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to undertake an investigation into war crimes and crimes against humanity that allegedly took place during Sri Lanka’s civil war (and its aftermath), when tens of thousands of Tamils were brutally slaughtered by the Sri Lankan military and government forces. The UNHRC resolution represents a significant victory for several entities that we have been helping in the past year to secure human rights and justice in Sri Lanka. These entities have included a Sidley client, the UNROW Human Rights Impact Litigation Clinic, a student litigation and advocacy project at American University’s Washington College of Law, as well as the State Department and others in the U.S. government and international community. The Sidley team included Jeff Green, Tasha Manoranjan, who advocated in Geneva on behalf of the UNHRC resolution, Giancarlo Pellegrini and project assistant Meg Huntington. 19 20 Geneva/D.C./London Through a pro bono engagement with the USAID/Mongolia Business Plus Initiative, Sidley is collaborating with the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) Working Group and local partner MDS & KhanLex LLP to support the development of a new state-of-the-art arbitration law for Mongolia. The MoJ Working Group has approved the Concept Paper and is currently reviewing the draft Arbitration Law. Sidley also has supported the MoJ by participating in a public-private dialogue (PPD) forum in October 2014, which was organized by the USAID-funded Business Plus Initiative to ensure public and private sector consensus on the new statutory framework. Based on international best practice, the new law is expected significantly to improve the legal environment for both domestic and international arbitration in Mongolia. Sidley’s technical assistance is part of USAID-funded Business Plus Initiative project’s broader collaboration with the MOJ Working Group in developing the new Arbitration Law, as well as facilitating education, public awareness and local capacity building for the promotion of arbitration as an effective and efficient dispute resolution mechanism in Mongolia. David Roney (Geneva), Ayaz Shaikh (D.C.) and Andrew Fox (London) are handling the matter. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report ESTABLISHING INTERNATIONAL LEGAL NORMS From left to right, the photo features: Maizorig Janchivdorj (MDS & KhanLex LLP), Andrew Fox (Sidley), Dugerjav Dash-Onolt (MDS & KhanLex LLP), David Roney (Sidley), and Cameron Sadeghi (Sidley). The photo is taken in front of the “Nine White Banners,” the peacetime symbol of the Mongolian state, located in the State Ceremonial Hall of Mongolia’s State Palace. 21 22 NY After a three-week trial in the Southern District of New York, a jury acquitted Sidley’s client of federal murder charges as well as related weapons and narcotics conspiracy charges for which he would have received a mandatory minimum 45-year prison sentence if convicted on all counts. Our client was convicted on lesser weapons/drug conspiracy charges for which he faces a mandatory minimum sentence of seven years. The case was assigned to Tim Treanor and Dave Rody through their membership in the SDNY’s Criminal Justice Act Panel, a program in which the court appoints private attorneys to represent federal criminal defendants unable to afford counsel. The Sidley trial team (primarily in NY) was led by Dave Rody and Mike Mann, and also consisted of Drew Rolle, Pouneh Aravand, Dave Denton, Ken Meyer, Mark Taticchi, Nick McLean, Tian Wang, Helena Haywoode, Cliff Laney and paralegals Jena Goettisheim, Christine LiCalzi,* John Shaw and Sam Schneider*. Summer associates Cynthia Chen, Alexander Cohen, Melanie Berdecia, Leah Milbauer, Michael Roberts and Amy Wang provided assistance. D.C. Sidley lawyers successfully represented an 83-year-old woman, a victim of domestic violence, who had served over 27 years in prison allegedly for aiding and abetting the murder of her abusive husband. Although the governor had commuted her sentence and ordered the parole board to consider her application for parole without regard to the crime of which she had been convicted, the parole board denied her application based on the seriousness of the crime. After the Supreme Court of Missouri granted her subsequent habeas petition, the parole board released her on supervised parole. Following a mandatory five-year parole period, the Board refused to release her from supervision. Sidley was asked to represent her at this stage and we advocated for her release from parole supervision, pointing to the overwhelming evidence that supervision was unnecessary. Following more than a year of advocacy before the Board, and as we prepared to file a mandamus petition in the Missouri Supreme Court asking it to order the Board to release her from supervision, the Board finally granted her request. Hanna Chouest and Lisa Jones* handled the matter. Sidley’s Supreme Court Clinic at Northwestern University Law School Since 2006, Sidley has sponsored the United States Supreme Court Clinic with the Northwestern University School of Law. Students who participate help brief (primarily criminal) cases on the merits and identify court of appeals and state supreme court decisions as potential candidates for petitions for a writ of certiorari, all in partnership with the firm’s pro bono program. In 2014, the Clinic filed nine petitions for a writ of certiorari and three reply briefs. The Clinic also wrote five briefs on the merits, as well as several briefs as amicus curiae at both the petition and merits stages. In February, Judge Gary Feinerman of the U.S. District Court of the Northern District of Illinois (and former Sidley partner) spoke to the students about Supreme Court advocacy. When the students visited Washington in March and attended arguments at the Supreme Court, Justice Scalia took time from his schedule to offer his insights into Supreme Court practice. While in Washington, the students also met with White House Counsel Kathy Ruemmler. After returning to Chicago, the students heard Judge Brett Kavanaugh of the D.C. Circuit speak on the topic of “Judicial Wisdom.” In one of the last classes of the Spring term, Jeffrey Minear, Counselor to the Chief Justice of the United States, explained the procedures in cases falling under the Court’s original jurisdiction. In the Fall semester, Donald Verrilli, Solicitor General of the United States, explained the role of the Solicitor General at the Supreme Court, while Judge Roy McLeese of the D.C. Court of Appeals described his experiences as an appellate advocate and appellate judge. Carter Phillips, Executive Committee Chair, and Jeff Green, firmwide chair of the Pro Bono and Public Interest Law Committee, direct the Clinic. Additional members of Sidley’s Supreme Court and Appellate group who taught in 2014 include Tacy Flint, Paul Zidlicky and Constantine Trela. Washington Pro Bono Counsel Becky Troth and legal assistants Kristyn Kenn,* Meg Huntington and Amanda Blau supported the program’s activities. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report SEEKING JUSTICE FOR CRIMINAL DEFENDANTS 23 NY The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York appointed Sidley attorneys to represent a North Carolina man charged with procuring and selling firearms to a New York resident. The Sidley team negotiated a plea agreement with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and at sentencing, persuaded the court to issue a below guidelines sentence of just one month. Our client has since served his sentence and has returned to his job and family. The case was assigned to Tim Treanor and Dave Rody through their membership in the SDNY’s Criminal Justice Act Panel. The Sidley team also included Mike Mann and Luke Frankson. Left to right: Joshua Hill (San Francisco Chair of Sidley’s Pro Bono Committee), Eliza Hersh (Director & Supervising Attorney, Clean Slate Practice East Bay Community Law Center), Our Client, and Emily Caveness. Photo by Jan Stürmann SF A Sidley team prevailed in an ongoing effort against the California Department of Motor Vehicles, which had denied Sidley’s client an ambulance driver’s license based on prior contact with law enforcement. The DMV’s denial of the license application had prevented the client from pursuing a career in emergency services, despite his successful graduation from an Emergency Medical Technician program. Following administrative proceedings, Sidley filed an action in Alameda County Superior Court seeking a judgment requiring the DMV to overturn its denial of the ambulance driver’s license and to issue the license. Despite staunch opposition from the DMV, Sidley obtained judgment for our client. Emily Caveness, Greg Sherman, Ryan Fant, and summer associate Cecily Harris worked on the matter under Sam Miller’s supervision. 24 D.C. Sidley obtained a final dismissal of four felony murder charges against client David Housler, Jr., bringing to a successful conclusion Sidley’s seven-year representation of a man who was wrongly convicted of participating in four 1994 murders based on his false confession. Sidley took Housler’s case on post-conviction review and obtained a vacation of the four murder convictions in 2010, leading to Housler’s release after serving nearly 15 years in prison for crimes he did not commit. Sidley successfully defended the vacation of the convictions on appeal in 2011 and 2012. In late 2013, the State of Tennessee re-indicted Housler for an entirely separate, lesser crime that allegedly occurred in 1994, and in 2014 it sought to try Housler for that 20-year-old crime and to re-try him on the murder charges. Sidley negotiated a plea deal whereby Mr. Housler pled guilty to that unrelated charge, nunc pro tunc to 1997, but served no additional prison time and the State dismissed the murder charges with prejudice. Mr. Housler is now free with no threat of further prosecution, gainfully employed, listed on the national registry of exonerated persons (one of few who was exonerated without new DNA evidence), and newly married. The Sidley team was headed by Paul Hemmersbaugh, and included Mick Flanagan, Brian Fox, Kevin Garvey, Karen Smith, Bryson Bachman,* James Owens* and Jason Vendel.* SF Sidley lawyers secured a victory as part of our ongoing pro bono relationship with the East Bay Community Law Center’s Clean Slate Clinic (EBCLC). Our client was a California resident who went to college to study criminal justice with the goal of eventually working with at-risk youth despite growing up orphaned, abused and impoverished. He had a spotless criminal record except for an arrest in 2003 for a crime he didn’t commit in a case of mistaken identity. The statute sets a very high bar for such cases (e.g., there’s a three-year statute of limitations in place, and even if the judge is convinced to waive the time bar, the petitioner then bears the burden of proving his own factual innocence). Despite these obstacles, and after multiple court appearances and the submission of excellent briefs, Cynthia Chi and Van Swearingen*convinced an Alameda Superior Court judge to grant our client’s petition to seal and destroy his arrest record, which enables our client to pursue greater employment opportunities. Josh Hill supervised the matter. in Chicago’s IMPACT Second Chance Project, which helps individuals overcome past encounters with the criminal justice system. The State of Illinois and Cook County have progressive laws providing relief from criminal records, but the process can be complicated without a lawyer. Cabrini Green Legal Aid (CGLA) has been providing this service since 2005, advising more than 4,000 people a year on their options for moving past their criminal backgrounds. Chicago attorneys Marjorie Baltazar and Nikeisha Gentles* working with their client at the IMPACT Second Chance Clinic in March. Attorneys Marjorie Baltazar and Nikeisha Gentles* participated in the IMPACT Second Chances Project Clinic in March. They filed a petition for a Certificate of Good Conduct for their client who, because of a 1989 conviction for manufacture and delivery of a controlled substance, had been subject to a statutory bar that prevented certain types of employment. A Certificate of Good Conduct, which is a court-ordered finding of rehabilitation, will increase the client’s employment opportunities. A certificate also provides employers immunity for claims of negligent hiring of the petitioner. The client has been unable to find full-time employment after being terminated from a job he held for over 11 years and needs to work to support his children and to pay his medical bills following his diagnosis of diabetes. Chicago attorneys Ryan Cloud, Eugene Schoon and Rachel Goldberg at the November IMPACT Second Chance Clinic. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report CH For a second year in a row, Sidley attorneys participated Sidley attorneys Eugene Schoon, Ryan Cloud and Rachel Goldberg participated in the November clinic. Ryan and Rachel are petitioning the court for a Certificate of Good Conduct for their client who has been prevented from obtaining full-time employment as a result of two convictions for non-violent conduct that occurred over a decade ago. The client recently obtained a Class A commercial driver’s license in efforts to provide increased financial support for his two teenage daughters. A Certificate of Good Conduct will remove statutory bars to employment with local metropolitan railroads and provide evidence of rehabilitation for private employers. Eugene Schoon is petitioning the court for a Certificate of Good Conduct for his client who pled guilty to possession of a controlled substance more than 20 years ago, a crime for which he received a sentence of probation. Although he has devoted his life to coaching and mentoring at-risk youth on the South Side of Chicago, as well as raising his children and foster child as a single parent, his dream is to work for the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) in its Youth Advocate Program. A Certificate of Good Conduct will allow the CPS to hire him for this program. Without it, he is barred from employment by CPS in any capacity. 25 Sidley Austin and Chicago litigation partner Richard O'Brien chalked up two major victories last year in their long-running fight against a punitive eavesdropping law in Illinois. Particularly relevant in light of recent protests nationwide over police conduct toward minorities, the 1961 state law criminalized—by up to 15 years in prison—the act of recording of public officials, including police officers in the line of duty, without their consent. O’Brien led a team that wrote two influential briefs for the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois, as amicus in Illinois Supreme Court cases that challenged the law. Two years earlier, the firm had successfully represented the ACLU as a party in a federal case challenging the same law. Following a consolidated hearing on the state cases, the state Supreme Court issued two March 20 rulings in People v. Clark and People v. Melongo striking down the law as ‘overly broad under the First Amendment. — National Law Journal, January 5, 2015 26 CH On March 20, the Illinois Supreme Court struck down Illinois’ Eavesdropping Statute as unconstitutional, affirming dismissal of criminal charges against two defendants charged with illegally recording their own conversations regarding matters of significant public concern. The Illinois statute was one of the most draconian eavesdropping or wiretapping laws in the United States, purportedly prohibiting the recording of all conversations—even public conversations—unless all parties to the conversation provided their consent. The decision represents a major victory for our client, the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois. The ACLU filed amicus briefs that Dick O’Brien and Sean Siekkinen* drafted in support of the defendants in both cases: People v. Melongo and People v. Clark. In holding that the Eavesdropping Statute facially violated the First Amendment, the Illinois Supreme Court quoted extensively from a recent decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit in an earlier case that Dick O’Brien had argued successfully on behalf of the ACLU. In recognition of Dick’s successful efforts challenging the statute and defending the First Amendment, The National Law Journal named Sidley’s work on the matter to its 2014 Pro Bono Hot List. D.C. Sidley filed an amicus brief on behalf of a bipartisan group of 38 members of the U.S. House Representatives in the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court defending the voluntary public recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance in Massachusetts public schools. Plaintiffs, who were atheist and humanist parents and children, contended that reciting the pledge violated the Commonwealth’s equal protection clause by stigmatizing the plaintiffs, who did not believe the country is “one Nation, under God.” In May, the court unanimously held that the voluntary recitation of the pledge in public schools did not violate the Commonwealth’s equal protection clause and that the plaintiffs did not establish any cognizable injury under state law. The Sidley team consisted of David Petron, Judy Gallagher, Chris Mills, Maureen Soles and Andrew Blake. LA/SF Sidley and co-counsel Lambda Legal represented two HIV-positive men who were married in Iowa and now live in Nevada. The team filed a petition with the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services (“NHHS”) challenging regulations precluding persons with HIV from being granted a foster care license in Nevada. In response to the petition, NHHS amended the regulations, eliminating this illegal form of discrimination and providing foster children with access to a greater number of safe and loving homes. The amendments also were subsequently approved by the Nevada Legislature. The Sidley team included Frank Broccolo (LA), Josh Hill (SF), David R. Carpenter (LA), Francis Lam (LA), Collin Wedel (LA) and Ryan Fant (SF). LA In a case that generated significant media coverage, Sidley and the City Attorney’s Office of Glendale, California, acting as co-counsel, successfully defended the city against a federal lawsuit that sought removal of a statue that the city had erected in a public park in memory of the estimated 200,000 Asian and Dutch women who were forced into sexual slavery by the Japanese army during World War II. The plaintiffs were a nonprofit organization and two individuals who alleged that the monument injected the city into an international debate, thus usurping the U.S. Government’s foreign affairs power. The U.S. District Court for the Central District of California granted the city’s motion to dismiss and entered judgment in favor of the city. The plaintiffs have appealed the judgment, and Sidley will represent the city on appeal. The Sidley team included Brad Ellis, Frank Broccolo, Mark Haddad, Chris Munsey, Laura Richardson and staff members Katherine O’Connell, Laurie Cameron, Jeff Kim and Rebecca Allemand. The engagement came to the firm through Senior Counsel Peter Ostroff. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report PROTECTING CIVIL AND CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS D.C. As appointed amicus curiae on behalf of a pro se appellant, Sidley obtained a victory in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. Plaintiff-appellant had alleged that he had been terminated in January 2004 (when he was 71 years old) from his employment as a security guard at the Armed Forces Retirement Home-Washington on account of his age in violation of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act. On June 3, 2014, the court of appeals reversed the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants, holding that a jury could reasonably find that statements made by the decision maker reflected discriminatory age-based stereotypes. The pro bono appeal was handled by Jeff Green, Eric McArthur (who argued), Paul Ray, Jeremy Bylund* and Jeff Beelaert.* 27 28 LA Sidley lawyers Mark Haddad, Francis Lam and Miles Fuller, working with the Los Angeles Center for Law and Justice, secured a decision confirming that a trial court does not have discretion to deny fee waiver requests when a litigant has demonstrated that he or she receives public benefits. During the course of custody proceedings, the trial court had ruled that it had the “inherent discretion” to deny several of Sidley’s client’s fee waiver requests on the grounds of “undisclosed income,” even though the client had shown she was receiving public benefits which, under the fee waiver statutes, entitled her to a fee waiver. In addition to interfering with the client’s ability to seek custody of her child, the trial court’s ruling also threatened the ability of legal aid organizations to predict at the outset of litigation whether they will be able to provide free legal services to indigent clients without having to pay filing fees as well. In reversing the trial court’s denial of the fee waivers, the California Court of Appeal reaffirmed the long-standing principle that “the right of indigent civil litigants to proceed in forma pauperis is grounded in common law right of access to the courts and constitutional principles of due process.” It then held that nothing in the statutes granted “trial courts discretion to deny the fee waiver application of an applicant who is receiving public benefits and can document that fact.” This decision ensures the uniform and consistent application of fee waiver statutes, and will strengthen the rights of Californians to access the justice system regardless of their financial circumstances. The Daily Journal, on December 31, 2014, highlighted the victory in an article entitled “Little-noticed opinion a big boon for indigent litigants.” The article notes that several who practice in this area believe that the appeal, which Francis Lam argued, “sets a small but important landmark for indigent litigants and the legal aid groups that represent them.” CH Sidley continues to sponsor a monthly legal clinic through CVLS (Chicago Volunteer Legal Services)— Chicago's oldest provider of free and reduced cost civil legal aid. The first Thursday of each month volunteers for the CVLS/Sidley Clinic conduct intake for potential clients who have been referred by the Salvation Army and/or CVLS. Volunteers meet with the potential clients faceto-face, record their information and discuss their (civil-only) legal needs, primarily family law, landlord/tenant, tort cases, and social security benefits matters. Assuming the case is one a CVLS volunteer can handle, clinic volunteers have "first dibs" on the case, and decide whether they would like to handle it personally. If not, volunteers refer the client's case information along to CVLS’s central office, which places the case with another staff or volunteer attorney. Sidley took on several additional clinic visitors as clients in 2014. Attorney volunteers included: Kevin Fee (Clinic chair), Justin From, Daniel Spira, Alexis Rollins Dunton, Annie Wallis, Kelly Kribs, Jennifer Foster, Samantha Spiro, Benjamin Brunner, Patrick Croke, Kevin Meil, Sarah Bermingham, Tara Amin, Kristen Rau and Andrew Chinsky. Helping Children and Families LA A Sidley team prevailed in a case for a woman who faced consistent and severe physical, verbal and mental abuse by her husband over the course of their relationship, including repeated rapes during a four-day period last August, which resulted in significant injuries. After a two-day bench trial, we obtained a permanent restraining order against the husband. The judge not only granted the restraining order, but ordered the husband to attend a batterers’ program for 52 weeks, granted our client sole physical and legal custody of the couple’s two children (ages 12 and 8) and ordered the husband to pay a significant amount of child support. Miles Fuller conducted the direct examinations of our client and a key witness, gave the opening statement and closing argument, and tactfully handled a disruptive opposing counsel. The Los Angeles Center for Law and Justice referred this case to us. Allen Kim and Lauren McCray assisted. Andy Dunbar supervised and participated with witness preparation and in the trial. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report SERVING NEIGHBORS IN NEED D.C. Sidley successfully obtained special-education services for a student of a D.C. charter elementary school. Our client, the student’s mother, was concerned that her son was falling behind academically after repeating fifth grade. She repeatedly asked the school to conduct special-education evaluations of her son, but the school failed to follow through with evaluations or provide adequate assistance. We retained an independent psychologist, who conducted neuropsychological and emotional evaluations of the student and recommended him for special-education services. Based on the evaluations, we worked with the school to develop an appropriate Individualized Education Program, or “IEP,” for the student. After implementation of the IEP this school year, the student has shown improvement and appears to be progressing well in his new placement. Jim Huizinga and Kyle Deighan handled the pro bono matter, which the Children’s Law Center referred to Sidley. CH Sidley’s client was the mother of a 15-year-old girl who had a three-month-old son of her own. One night, while the family was living in a hotel, the daughter took the baby and left to meet two older males at a restaurant. A fight broke out between the boys and the police became involved. The girl was charged with breaking curfew, underage consumption of alcohol, and child endangerment. As a result of her daughter’s behavior, the Department of Children and Family Services found that our client had inadequately supervised her daughter. After we represented our client at her Administrative Hearing and the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ) heard her testimony, the ALJ granted her request to expunge her record of the inadequate supervision finding. Teresa Reuter and Erinn Rigney handled the case under Jonathan Lotsoff’s supervision. The Family Defense Center referred the matter to Sidley. 29 D.C. After pursuing separate child support actions in Family Court against two fathers, Sidley obtained a total of $900 per month in child support payments for our client, a nonEnglish speaker with four children. During the proceedings, we established paternity and the fathers’ incomes, and then secured child support orders in the amounts of $200 and $700 per month. When one of the fathers quit his job and stopped paying the ordered amount, we located his new employer and had the father’s wages garnished. Andrew Blandford, who communicated with the client in Spanish, and Lisa Jones* handled the matter. D.C. In another Family Court proceeding involving two separate fathers, Sidley helped a woman obtain permanent legal and physical custody over her three grandchildren after the shooting death of the children’s mother. Jeffrey Young, Matthew Warren and legal assistant Jennifer Gordon handled the matter. D.C. Sidley obtained disability benefits for our client, a D.C. resident suffering from bipolar and schizophrenia disorders. We represented her on appeal at a hearing before an Administrative Law Judge in August 2013. At the hearing, the ALJ requested additional evidence documenting our client’s disability and earnings history. Sidley gathered and submitted the requested evidence, including the results of a complete evaluation by an independent psychologist, whom Sidley retained. The assigned ALJ retired without issuing a ruling. At the request of the new ALJ, Sidley submitted updated medical records and a second letter brief. On April 23, 2014, the ALJ granted a fully favorable decision, including a finding that our client has been disabled since January 1, 2010. Sidley then worked with the local SSA office to ensure that it properly calculated and disbursed a significant award for back benefits. The Sidley team included Rick Young, Nicole Brown and Elizabeth McEachron*, and legal assistants Monica Kulkarni, Heath Ingram* and Kristyn Kenn.* Helping People with Disabilities Protecting the Right to Housing CH Sidley’s client, a clinical psychologist who provides therapy for patients with spinal-cord injuries, had been notified by the Social Security Administration (SSA) that she needed to pay back almost two years’ worth of disability benefits. After representing herself in an unsuccessful request for reconsideration, the client, who is a quadriplegic herself, came to Sidley through the firm-sponsored Chicago Volunteer Legal Services’ Salvation Army Legal Clinic. In an administrative appeal, we argued that, although the client’s salary would typically preclude her from receiving disability benefits, the client qualified for a number of significant deductions from her salary for the purposes of determining her eligibility for disability benefits. The Administrative Law Judge who heard the case agreed and granted our client a “fully favorable” decision in September 2013, allowing her to keep her past benefits and have her benefits retroactively reinstated. After we addressed administrative delays arising from the SSA’s misinterpretation of the ALJ’s decision, our client started receiving benefits in June 2014, and has received more than $140,000 to date. Justin From handled the case under the supervision of Kevin Fee and Priscilla Ryan.* D.C. A Sidley team secured disability benefits for a 57-year-old woman who suffered from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and major depressive disorder. The ALJ found that our client, who had not worked for many years and was unable to perform her prior jobs as an information clerk and street cleaner, was disabled and entitled to benefits, which she began receiving in September. Christian Murphy* handled the case under Paul Moates’ supervision. The D.C. Bar Advocacy & Justice Clinic referred the case to the firm. 30 D.C. Sidley obtained a favorable settlement for a tenant of a homeless shelter. The landlord had accused our client of violating the shelter’s drug and alcohol policy, but brought eviction proceedings based solely on a boilerplate form that it required all tenants to sign upon gaining residence. The form purported to waive certain rights under D.C. housing law, which grants broad procedural rights prior to eviction. Whether that waiver was valid would have been an issue presented at the scheduled bench trial. Upon Sidley’s representation of the tenant, however, and in exchange for his agreement to follow the shelter’s rules, the landlord agreed to drop the eviction proceedings. Robert Stander,* Eric McArthur and Paul Zidlicky, with support from project assistant Meg Huntington, handled the matter. D.C. Through our Loaned Associate program with the Legal Aid Society of the District of Columbia, Sidley helped secure a victory for an elderly disabled property owner in D.C. in his pro se appeal. At issue in Mazanderan v. District of Columbia Department of Public Works was whether the District’s Department of Public Works could use an antidumping statute under the District’s Litter Control Act to penalize the property owner for overgrown weeds. The D.C. Court of Appeals asked the Legal Aid Society to appear as an amicus in support of the pro se petitioner in the case, and our Loaned Associate at the time, Bill Doolittle,* filed the amicus brief on behalf of Legal Aid in support of the petitioner. On July 10, the Court of Appeals issued a decision in favor of the petitioner, adopting Legal Aid’s position that the anti-dumping statute did not give the department the authority it claimed. This victory not only brought relief to the elderly property owner, but further established Legal Aid as an authoritative resource on poverty law issues for the Court of Appeals. D.C. A Sidley team obtained a favorable settlement for another tenant in a suit for possession in D.C. Superior Court. The landlord claimed our client, a recipient of subsidized housing, violated the federal housing “one-strike” regulation by allowing an individual who was subsequently found to possess a controlled substance onto the property. The matter was scheduled for jury trial, but our client ultimately decided to settle after she was arrested on unrelated charges that put her at risk of summary eviction. Sidley negotiated a settlement agreement on her behalf on more favorable terms than the landlord offered her initially. Keith A. Matthews, Adam Susser, and Andrew Arnold handled this matter, which was referred to us by the D.C. Bar Advocacy & Justice Clinic. D.C. In 2009, Sidley lawyers began staffing the Landlord Tenant Resource Center (LTRC) of the D.C. Superior Court on a monthly basis. Each year, landlords file over 40,000 cases in the Landlord Tenant Branch of the D.C. Superior Court, seeking summary evictions of tenants. Over 99 percent of tenants and nearly 14 percent of landlords represent themselves in the court. Unrepresented tenants face a high risk of having judgments entered against them, while inexperienced pro se landlords risk having their cases dismissed, often because of procedural missteps. The D.C. Bar launched the LTRC in 2004 to improve due process and access to justice in Landlord and Tenant Court. After training from the D.C. Bar Pro Bono Program, three Sidley lawyers and one legal assistant staff the LTRC for five hours once a month. Lawyers Rina Mady, Marinn Carlson, Kyle Fiet, Kurt Jacobs,* Becky Troth, Ryan Kaat, Keith Matthews, Brendan Smith, Adam Susser,* Paul Perkins, Hanna Chouest, Andrew Blandford, Larry Walders, John Lupton, and Lisa Taylor* and legal assistants Meg Huntington, Jake Thorn and Kristyn Kenn* all staffed the LTRC in 2014. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report D.C. A Sidley team received a favorable settlement on behalf of a low-income tenant. The landlord brought suit based on our client’s failure to pay rent, but had been cited for numerous D.C. housing code violations. Upon Sidley’s representation, the tenant counterclaimed for previously paid rent and other monetary relief under D.C. housing law, which grants tenants the right to withhold rent because of serious defects, as well as injunctive relief requiring the landlord to fix the premises. Sidley negotiated a settlement in which the landlord agreed to drop his claims, pay the tenant an amount equal to several months’ rent, and give her family a rent-free period in which they found a new apartment. Sidley’s team included Sam Boxerman, Adam Hallowell and Lisa Jones,* with help from project assistant Kristyn Kenn.* 31 32 Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report SUPPORTING NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS CH In October, a team of Sidley attorneys represented long-time firm pro bono client, People’s Resource Center (PRC) , in its acquisition of a commercial condominium in Westmont, Illinois, for use for a wide range of supportive services to low-income residents of DuPage County. PRC’s mission is to respond to basic human needs, promote dignity and justice and create a future of hope and opportunity for the residents of DuPage County through discovering and sharing personal and community resources. PRC will use the Westmont property to operate a food pantry, a homelessness prevention assistance program, a clothing donation and distribution program, adult learning and literacy services, computer training/access, job mentoring, art empowerment programs and connections to local services. In addition to the real estate work, Sidley’s work included the conversion of the PRC building into a commercial condominium (the first such conversion to take place in Westmont), obtaining a zoning (parking) variance required to accommodate PRC’s use of the property, and helping PRC secure private and public financing for the acquisition and development of the property. The Sidley team included real estate group lawyers David Siegel, Molly Novy, Anna Mommsen and Scott Saef and Bill Dickett in the environmental group. 33 In June 2014, the Chicago office participated in the Annual Walk to Cure Diabetes. Sidley personnel raised $58,761 for the event. Greg Oguss and Mike Prapuolenis chaired this program. 34 CH For more than 20 years, the Chicago office has held an annual collection drive for the United Way. Sidley associates and staff donate approximately $20,000 and the Sidley Foundation contributes the balance, for an annual donation of $150,000. In 2014, Sidley associates and staff contributed $21,832. Jonathan Lotsoff chairs this program. CH The office held a clothing drive for College Bound Opportunities (CBO), which helps CBO graduates prepare to seek employment—teaching them to dress appropriately for job interviews through their "Suited for the Job” program. In May 2014, Sidley lawyers and staff donated two racks of clothing and several boxes of shoes, sweaters, and shirts to the program. CH Since 1995, the office has participated in the annual CH Sidley-Chicago Sidley lawyers participate in the Lawyers Chicago Cares event. This event involves staff and lawyers spending a day at a local Chicago school cleaning, painting and decorating the school and playground. On June 7, 2014, 21 Sidley personnel (including family and friends) volunteered at James N. Thorp Elementary School. Sidley also presented a $3,000 donation to Chicago Cares. Richard Astle is the chair of this program. in the Classroom program at Kanoon and Woodlawn Schools where they meet with students from January to May to conduct Constitutional Rights Foundation Chicago (CRFC) training. In 2014, Scott Berliant and Teresa Reuter headed this program. CH In December, Sidley donated $5,000 to the Chicago Children’s Museum. This donation supports programming for the museum. CH Since 2000, the Chicago office has participated in the Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report CONTRIBUTING TO THE BROADER COMMUNITY annual Heart Walk to benefit the American Heart Association. Sidley staff raised $9,705 for the event in 2014 and 40 Sidley participants walked in the Heart Walk. CH The Chicago office participates in an annual clothing drive for the Cara Program, a non-profit organization that provides training and job placement services to individuals who are homeless. The office donated 30 boxes of clothing in 2014. CH Since 2001, the Chicago office has collected used/ outdated cell phones and accessories for victims of domestic violence. Mark Kaufmann spearheads this program, which collected about 100 phones/chargers in 2014. CH Thirty years ago, at the urging of Newt Minow, Sidley adopted the Gerald Delgado Kanoon Magnet School, a public elementary school, as part of a private-public initiative. Since then, Sidley contributions of time, funding and resources have helped the school in numerous ways and improved the educational experience of its students. Under the leadership of John Levi and Michele Ilene Ruiz, Sidley lawyers and staff became involved in mentoring activities at Kanoon as well as book, winter-clothing, school-supply and food drives. During our annual back-to-school drive for Kanoon in 2014, 107 Sidley lawyers and staff contributed almost $10,000. Sidley also donated various items to the school, including used computers, furniture and office supplies. Sidley sponsors Baile Follkoric and Suzuki Violin lessons for Kanoon students, and holds two Jeans Days per year, with proceeds benefitting the school’s literacy efforts. In 2014, we collected $8,387 for Kanoon from the Jeans Days. In November, the office held its annual Thanksgiving Food Drive for Kanoon. The food drive typically generates enough revenue to feed 250 families and in 2014, we raised $9,285 from 110 Sidley lawyers and staff. In December 2014, Sidley lawyers and staff also donated $1,475 to the Kanoon endof-year Campaign. Chicago staff and lawyers also participated in the 2014 Book Chat with the Kanoon 5th graders. Forty-five lawyers and staff read Becoming Naomi Leon by Pam Munoz Ryan (a book selected by the school) and exchanged questions and answers with the students by e-mail. This event culminated with the Sidley participants visiting the students at the school to discuss the book. 35 CH The mission of the Public Interest Law Initiative (PILI) is to cultivate a lifelong commitment to public interest law and pro bono service within the Illinois legal community and to expand legal services to people in need. PILI’s Law Student Internship and Graduate Fellowship Programs (in which Sidley participates) place law students and recent law school graduates at public interest law organizations, with PILI providing supplemental educational, networking and mentoring opportunities. This year, Dick O’Malley, Chicago chair of the firm’s Pro Bono and Public Interest Law Committee, became PILI’s president. Excerpt from PILI Board Member Spotlight, October 30, 2014 The new president of PILI’s Board of Directors is Sidley partner Dick O’Malley. His practice at Sidley focuses on intellectual property and complex commercial litigation, and he is the firm’s Chicago chair of its Pro Bono and Public Interest Law Committee. Dick has been a Director on PILI’s Board since 1999, when his former partner Tom Morsch, whom Dick calls “one of the stalwarts of the Chicago pro bono community,” encouraged him to join. “I asked him for his advice as to what board I should become associated with to make the most impact,” Dick recounts, “and his first choice was PILI as having the broadest impact.” It may have been Tom Morsch who first convinced Dick to join PILI’s Board, but Dick soon found his own reasons to stay and become more and more involved in leadership roles. “I’ve seen the summer Interns grow into committed pro bono lawyers throughout their career. I’ve seen our own Graduate Fellows at Sidley become involved in pro bono. And I’ve seen the investment that I make in PILI come back multiple times in helping Illinois’ neediest with their legal services,” he says. Dick has been actively involved in pro bono since the beginning of his career, and was recently recognized for his pro bono work on behalf of the residents of the Cabrini Green housing project, a case that was in litigation for six years. Dick and a team of attorneys from LAF (Legal Aid Foundation) were able to help avoid the threatened immediate eviction of residents by the Chicago Housing Authority, and finally reached a resolution that allowed the residents to leave Cabrini Green and start new lives on better terms. Dick received LAF’s Champion of Justice Award as well as the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois and the Federal Bar Association’s Award for Excellence In Pro Bono Service for his work on this case. Prior to being appointed President, Dick previously served as Vice President of PILI’s Board, and has been heavily involved in PILI’s strategic planning and fund development initiatives. “It is a privilege to continue my work with PILI's talented and dedicated board and staff as President of PILI’s Board of Directors,” says Dick. 36 Sidley partner Alan Raul, Lawyers Have Heart has raised more than $7.5 million to benefit the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association, whose mission is to build healthier lives, free of cardiovascular disease and stroke. This year, Team Sidley finished second in the “Large Law Firm” division in the Lawyers Have Heart 10K road race. Ryan Kaat, Giancarlo Pellegrini, summer associate Julie Dickerson, and Sidley economist Simon Schropp led us to this vaulted position in the standings among all law firms in the D.C. Metropolitan area. In the last 12 years, the team has never finished higher then 10th place, as Jeff Bosh, who organizes the event for Sidley, noted. Justice Samuel Alito joined Lawyers Have Heart to celebrate its 25th anniversary. Justice Samuel Alito joined Alan Raul to celebrate the 25th anniversary of Lawyers Have Heart. D.C. In September, Justice Samuel Alito spoke at the first-ever Lawyers Have Heart celebratory dinner, where he joined LHH co-founder and Sidley partner Alan Raul. Justice Alito devoted his remarks to the accomplishments of athletic justices, from John Marshall to himself, noting that he had completed a marathon “in less time than it takes to fly from here to Tokyo.” Eloise Repeczky donates blood during the D.C. office’s Service Week. D.C. Sidley personnel in D.C. serve as reading partners and mentors to public school students at Ross Elementary through the Power Lunch program run by Everybody Wins! D.C.. The Power Lunch program pairs one adult with one student for the school year. The adult partner visits the school one day a week during lunch to share books and the love of reading with the student. Currently Andy Shoyer, Larry Walders, Keith Matthews, Ellen Crisham, Amy DeLine, Patricia Richter, Sherrice Flowers and Dick Belanger read in the Power Lunch program. Dick Belanger also has been on the Board of Everybody Wins! D.C. for a number of years, serving at different times as its chairperson and general counsel. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report D.C. Since its founding in 1991 by Richard Frank and D.C. Paul Hemmersbaugh serves as the appointed General Counsel to the District of Columbia Bar, the second largest Bar in the United States, with nearly 100,000 members. Working with a number of other Sidley lawyers, Paul provides volunteer legal advice and services to the D.C. Bar and its Board of Governors, the D.C. Bar Pro Bono Program, the Office of Bar Counsel and the Board on Professional Responsibility, and the many divisions and programs run by the Bar. At the request of the Bar Board of Governors and its CEO, a Sidley partner has served as General Counsel of the Bar for more than ten years. D.C. The D.C. office held its Eighth Annual Service Week in July. During the week, we donated blood to the Red Cross, stuffed backpacks for the Children’s Law Center, viewed the documentary, “The Central Park Five,” donated dozens of clothing items to Dress for Success and Career Gear, and raised over $2,500 in cash for Miriam’s Kitchen (in addition to donating hundreds of toiletry items). Kathy Lee, Keisha Brown, Adam Hallowell and Dave Wharwood stuff backpacks for Children’s Law Center during the D.C. office’s eighth annual Service Week. 37 A Shared Commitment to Volunteer Service Sidley is a Corporate Sponsor of New York Cares, New York City’s premier non-profit organization for bringing volunteer support services to non-profit agencies, public schools and other organizations. Our ongoing volunteer work with New York Cares is part of the firm’s Corporate Responsibility Program in New York, and in 2014, our New York office participated in several events with New York Cares. Sidley’s Corporate Responsibility Director is Stacy Rotner. Janet Zagorin, as the firm’s Client Services Officer, provides support to the program. NY On June 18, our New York office hosted its annual Sidley Service Day, a day-long volunteer event that brings lawyers and summer associates together to perform community service in a New York City neighborhood. Sidley Service Day is presented in conjunction with New York Cares. This year, more than 60 Sidley lawyers and summer associates traveled to the Elijah Stroud Academy Middle School in Brooklyn to revitalize the school and make it more navigable and accessible to its students and faculty. The day’s projects included repainting murals outside the school, constructing and arranging new furniture, and reorganizing the school’s textbook storage facilities. NY On the evening of July 15 in our New York office, as part of our Corporate Responsibility Program, Sidley hosted a volunteer event to benefit members of Grameen PrimaCare, a non-profit providing low-income women with innovative healthcare solutions. The event was co-sponsored with the Legal and Compliance Division of longtime firm client Morgan Stanley, with whom we have partnered for this event for several years, and presented in association with New York Cares. The attendees included over 100 lawyers, compliance professionals and summer associates, who assembled over 750 care kits. The volunteers were welcomed by Nate Saint-Victor and Jennifer Zimmerman, both lawyers and Morgan Stanley executive directors. Nate Saint-Victor is chair of the Morgan Stanley Legal and Compliance Division’s Diversity and Inclusion Committee. Jennifer Zimmerman is co-chair of the Women’s Committee of the Morgan Stanley Legal and Compliance Division’s Diversity and Inclusion Committee. In their brief opening remarks, both praised Sidley’s and Morgan Stanley’s shared commitment to the goals of inclusion, community involvement and philanthropy. Sidley and Morgan Stanley are two of New York Cares’ largest corporate sponsors. NY On July 29, in another event with New York Cares, a group of Sidley summer associates volunteered during lunch at the New York Common Pantry, New York City’s largest food pantry. Sidley’s team stocked shelves, organized donations and assembled food packages. The New York office’s annual Sidley Service Day at the Elijah Stroud Academy Middle School. 38 NY In the premier event commemorating its first 100 years in Sidley hosted a volunteer event to benefit New York City public schools. The event was co-sponsored with the Forensic Practice of long-standing firm client KPMG LLP, and was presented in association with New York Cares. The attendees included both Sidley and KPMG consultants, auditors, accountants and lawyers. The attendees assembled teacher appreciation kits, which will be used by teachers in two different New York City elementary schools. The volunteers were welcomed by KPMG Principal Amanda Rigby, who praised Sidley and KPMG’s shared commitment to giving back to the community. This event, part of Sidley’s Corporate Responsibility Program, was coordinated with help from Gary Bendinger, Greg Ballard and Kevin Burke. New York on June 25, Sidley donated $1 million to New York Cares and United Way of New York City, two of New York City’s most important not-for-profit organizations. Each organization received $500,000 to fund volunteer programs that provide support and services to individuals in need within the New York community. “Sidley Austin’s presence is deeply woven into the fabric of New York City, and we are extremely grateful for this incredible gift,” said Sheena Wright, President and CEO, United Way of New York City. Paul J. Taubman, President, Board of Directors of New York Cares, added, “New York Cares is so grateful to Sidley for this incredibly generous gift. Their support and hands-on commitment to our programs for the less fortunate have been, and continue to be, overwhelming.” In November and December 2014, Sidley’s New York office participated in the annual New York Cares Coat Drive. Sidley collected and donated several boxes of warm winter coats, as well as gloves, hats and scarves. NY On Nov. 11, Sidley hosted a Veterans Day Volunteer Now an annual tradition, Sidley’s New York office participated in the New York Cares Winter Wishes “Secret Santa” program. The firm’s lawyers and staff donated gifts to 125 underserved elementary school children in lower Manhattan this year. From books to clothing, Sidley participants were extremely generous in making the holiday season brighter for these children. Morgan Stanley July 15 Diversity/Corporate Responsibility event. Benson Cohen (Sidley), Jennifer Zimmerman (Morgan Stanley, Executive Director) and Nate Saint-Victor (Morgan Stanley, Executive Director). Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report NY On the evening of September 9 in our New York office, Project event to benefit members of the U.S. Armed Forces serving abroad. More than 120 Sidley lawyers, staff and guests attended the event. The attendees assembled 1,500 care kits, wrote over 300 thank you cards and shipped 83 boxes to U.S. troops serving overseas. The event was part of the New York office’s Corporate Responsibility Program and was held in conjunction New York Cares as part of the firm’s New York Office Centennial Celebration. The New York office's June 25 Centennial Celebration at the New York Historical Society. Michael Schmidtberger (New York), Sheena Wright (President and CEO, United Way of New York City), Carter Phillips (D.C.), Paul Taubman (Board President, New York Cares) and Larry Barden (Chicago). 39 NY Lawyers from our New York office joined with volunteers from firm client Credit Suisse on November 21 to participate in the City Harvest Repackathon, an annual event where, over the course of 24 hours, hundreds of volunteers come together to repack bulk food donations into family-sized packages. City Harvest is a non-profit organization that seeks to end hunger in communities throughout New York City through food rescue and distribution, education and other practical, innovative solutions. During this year’s event, volunteers repacked 231,337 pounds of food, enough to feed 2,400 families during the holiday season. The packages will be distributed to more than 500 community food programs. Susan Merrill and Patti Wu (both in New York) at the City Harvest Repackathon in New York City on November 21. NY On the evening of February 28, more than 20 lawyers from the New York office participated in Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center’s annual Cycle for Survival fundraising event. All funds raised by this event go directly toward cancer research. This event was spearheaded by Alex Rovira, in conjunction with the firm’s Corporate Responsibility Program led by Stacy Rotner. Several individuals from firm client The Blackstone Group also participated on the Sidley team. The Sidley team raised over $35,000, with many contributions coming from Sidley lawyers and the Sidley Austin Foundation. Becky Troth is appointed to the D.C. Access to Justice Commission. D.C. The District of Columbia Court of Appeals has appointed Sidley-D.C. Pro Bono Counsel Becky Troth to the D.C. Access to Justice Commission. The court formed the commission in 2005 to increase resources for civil legal services, reduce barriers that prevent equal access to justice for low- and moderate-income D.C. residents, advocate for increased pro bono work by local attorneys and improve planning 40 and coordination of legal services delivery. Becky will serve a three-year term on the 18-member commission, which includes judges, past presidents of the D.C. Bar, executive directors of leading legal services providers, and other legal and community leaders. Georgetown University Law Professor Peter Edelman chairs the commission. D.C. In October, during Pro Bono Week, the D.C. office participated in the D.C. Bar Foundation’s Go Casual for Justice fundraiser to support loan repayment assistance for legal services lawyers. Sidley lawyers and staff contributed $5 to wear jeans and another $5 Firmwide Pro Bono and Public Interest to wear sneakers Committee Chair Jeff Green, Sylvester, on Go Casual for and Ben Mundel as Tweety Bird. Justice Friday. Each office floor competed to raise the most money. The 10th floor, which repeated its 2013 win, won the right to wear jeans and sneakers every first Friday of the month for a year. The 10th floor win was due in part to Ben Mundel’s agreement to accept Gordon Todd’s challenge to dress up as Tweety Bird if the 10th floor raised the most money. The firm overall raised over $10,000 for the Foundation, more than any other firm in D.C., and celebrated the victory at a pastry and coffee event, at which Sylvester made a surprise guest appearance. LA Sidley is a longtime supporter of Skid Row Housing Trust, Marc Hayutin at the 25th Anniversary Celebration of Skid Row Housing Trust. D.C. For the fifth year in a row, Sidley participated in the Salvation Army’s Angel Tree Program, which provides gifts of new clothing, shoes and toys for children 12 and under from needy families. At the Angel Tree Adoption Party, Sidley employees selected angel tags that included the child’s name, age, gender, and their present wish list. As a result of Sidley employees’ generosity and volunteer efforts, more than 200 “Angels” received gifts during the holiday season. The gifts were organized for pick up and distribution by the Salvation Army, and given a festive sendoff. Members of the Angel Tree Committee and volunteers includes Paula Friedman, Dana Bullitt, Annette Brown, Sherrice Flowers, Kelli Pryor, Beth Masterson, Eloise Repeczky, Maritza Rachal, Robin Cornish, Heather Irwin, Bill Mitchell, Ilene Hillman, Latasha Senior, Anna Weinberg, Pat Stevenson, Maureen Dayton, Pat Richter and Zeno Lantos. a non-profit whose mission is to provide permanent supportive housing for several underserved populations in Los Angeles. On Nov. 13, 2014, the Sidley Austin Foundation along with Marc and Stephanie Hayutin, acted as a “roof sponsor” for the organization’s 25th anniversary celebration, which was attended by more than 300 paid guests and a number of dignitaries. The gala, held at the historic Vibiana event space, netted approximately $200,000 for the organization. The occasion also marked the conclusion of Marc’s 10 years of service as chairman of the organization’s board of directors. Marc followed in the footsteps of former chairman Ted Miller, who first got Marc involved in serving on the board in 2002. Patrick Spillane of IDS Realty Group will succeed Marc, who will remain on the board’s executive committee. Jeremy Rosenthal has also begun working with the organization and has become an active supporter of the trust both financially and through his committee work. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report D.C. Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe appointed former Democratic Congressman and Sidley partner Rick Boucher and former Republican Virginia Lt. Gov. Bill Bolling to co-chair a 10-member bi-partisan commission tasked with recommending reforms to Virginia’s ethics laws and other governance measures in the wake of recent high-profile scandals involving Virginia public officials. Prior to serving for 28 years in the U.S. House of Representatives, Rick served for seven years as a member of the Virginia State Senate. An editorial in The Washington Post praised the formation of the commission and the roles that Rick and his co-chair will play. Geneva In May, Sidley participated in the final round of the European Law Students Association (ELSA) Moot Court Competition at the Graduate Institute of International Studies (HEI) and the World Trade Organization (WTO). Sidley is a sponsor of the competition, a simulated WTO dispute settlement panel process in which law students gain practical skills in written and oral presentation on substantive WTO law issues. Between March and April, five separate regional rounds were held: two in Europe, the first-ever in Africa, and one each in the Americas and the Asia-Pacific region. More than 150 individuals attended the final-round event in Geneva, including WTO staff and WTO delegations. Jan Yves Remy, Todd Friedbacher, Nicolas Lockhart and Scott Andersen were involved in presentations and judging and hosting students during the competition. 41 PRO BONO HONORS AND EVENTS Sidley frequently is recognized for its unwavering commitment to pro bono service and the work we do. CH Gwen Hochman Stewart received the Award for Excellence in Pro Bono Service from the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, which was presented in association with the Chicago Chapter of the Federal Bar Association. Gwen received the award for her work bringing the copyright-infringement action, Suarez v. Glassner, on behalf of a local artist who alleged that his painting was copied by a picture framer and resold. Despite several contested issues of fact, the case resulted in a settlement involving the payment of substantial funds to the artist. The award was presented to Gwen at a major pro bono and public interest awards ceremony in the Dirksen Federal Building in Chicago on May 8. Jack Bierig (Chicago) supervised Gwen’s work and nominated her for this award, as well as Sidley’s Thomas H. Morsch Award (see below, Pro Bono Award Ceremonies – Honoring Our Own). D.C. The Chief Judges of the District of Columbia federal courts honored Sidley’s D.C. office at the “40 at 50” Judicial Pro Bono Recognition Breakfast. Established by the D.C. Circuit Judicial Conference Standing Committee on Pro Bono Legal Services, the “40 at 50” breakfast recognizes law firms reporting that at least 40 percent of their lawyers devoted 50 or more hours to pro bono work in the previous year. Jeff Green, Betsy Howe* and Becky Troth represented Sidley at the April 23 event, which was hosted by Chief Judge Merrick Garland of the U.S. Court of Appeals and Chief Judge Richard Roberts of the U.S. District Court. D.C. The Chief Judges of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals and the Superior Court of the District of Columbia sponsored, for the third year, the Capital Pro Bono Honor Roll, which recognizes the D.C. Bar members and attorneys practicing under D.C. Court of Appeals Rule 49 who provide desperately-needed free legal services to those living in poverty and/or to small disadvantaged businesses and nonprofits that are critical to the economic well-being of our community. Lawyers are eligible for the Honor Roll, based on their contribution of 50 or more hours during 2013, or for the High Honor Roll, by virtue of contributing 100 or more pro bono hours. 134 lawyers in Sidley’s D.C. office were listed on the Honor Roll, and 87 of those 134 made the High Honor Roll for devoting 100 or more hours to pro bono service in 2013. D.C. At the D.C. Bar’s annual dinner on June 17, former Justin Benson and Jim Bendernagel accept their award from Meghan Whyte of the Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs. D.C. The Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs honored Sidley with an Outstanding Achievement Award at the Committee's annual Wiley Branton Luncheon on June 18. The Committee recognized Justin Benson and Jim Bendernagel for their work in a housing voucher discrimination case. Our client, a civil rights organization, sued a realty company for refusing to rent to housing testers based on their perceived source of income, which is illegal under District law. The Sidley lawyers achieved a settlement that obligated the realty company to implement a new anti-discrimination policy, advertise that it is housing-choice-voucher friendly and train its staff to prevent discrimination. A Sidley alumnus, Ron Flagg, former firmwide pro bono chair who is now the General Counsel of the U.S. Legal Services Corporation, was also recognized for his long service on the Committee’s board. The luncheon is named in honor of the late Sidley partner and prominent civil rights lawyer Wiley Branton. 42 counsel Kurt Jacobs was honored as the D.C. Bar’s 2014 Laura N. Rinaldi Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year. The Rinaldi Award recognizes an attorney who exemplifies excellence, achievement, and commitment to providing legal services to the poor and disadvantaged in the District of Columbia. The Bar honored Kurt for his extensive efforts on behalf of lowincome clients of the D.C. Bar Landlord Tenant Resource Center and Bread for the City. Tim Webster, a D.C. partner, also was recognized as the D.C. Bar’s President-Elect at the dinner. Paul Caron of Microsoft (Chief of Staff - Government Affairs) presented the 2014 Pro Bono Counsel Award to Becky Troth (D.C.). Photo credit: Ben Zweig D.C. In September, Sidley was honored by the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty (NLCHP) with the 2014 Pro Bono Counsel Award at its annual McKinney-Vento Awards Dinner. The NLCHP event combined football and homelessness in honoring Steve Smith Sr. of the Baltimore Ravens in an event co-sponsored by Sidley, the National Football League, the NFL Players Association, the Ravens and the Washington football team. The NLCHP functions as the legal arm of the movement to end homelessness. It speaks for homeless people in the U.S. Supreme Court, on Capitol Hill, to the Administration and in support of many direct service providers. Sidley has filed several U.S. Supreme Court amicus briefs, handled impact litigation and written many legal memoranda on behalf of the organization for more than a decade. Sidley also won the 2004 Pro Bono Counsel Award. Ed McNicholas (D.C.) is chair of the NLCHP’s board of directors and D.C. Pro Bono Counsel Becky Troth accepted the award on the firm’s behalf. LA Sidley’s pro bono partner Asian Americans Advancing Justice – Asian Law Caucus has announced that it will name Sidley its “Pro Bono Law Firm of the Year” at its annual gala in April 2015. The award honors the work of Heidi Larson Howell, who argued and won a Ninth Circuit appeal in Din v. Kerry, which strengthened the rights of American citizens to marry the person of their choice and obtain visas for spouses who are not citizens. Sidley represented a United States citizen who filed a visa petition on behalf of her husband, a citizen and resident of Afghanistan. The government denied the petition but, rather than provide a reason for the denial, simply cited extensive portions of the Immigration and Nationality Act regarding "terrorist activities." The client sued, alleging that the denial of the visa implicated her constitutional right to freedom of personal choice in matters of marriage and family life and that citation to the very broad "terrorist activities" statute, without more, was not facially legitimate and bona fide. The district court granted the government's motion to dismiss the Complaint. Sidley handled the appeal and, in a published decision, the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded, holding that the Government's citation to a statute, absent any allegations of proscribed conduct, was not a facially legitimate reason to deny the visa. Geoff DeBoskey supervised the matter and Mark Haddad helped Heidi prepare for the argument. The Supreme Court granted review in the case and set argument for February 2015. David Carpenter, Kathleen Mueller and Amanda Farfel assisted with the Supreme Court briefing and oral argument preparation. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report LA Sean Commons was honored in February by California Lawyer magazine with a 2014 California Lawyer “Attorneys of the Year” (CLAY) Award for distinguished pro bono work in the immigration law category. The CLAY Awards are presented to California lawyers whose achievements had a significant impact in 2013. Sean was recognized for leading the Sidley team that worked with the American Civil Liberties Union and the Stanford Law School Immigrants’ Rights Clinic in a highprofile case, Rodriguez v. Hayes, which established the right of thousands of immigrants subject to prolonged detention in California to a bond hearing after six months. Aleah Green, winner of the Personal Achievement Award, with Sidley partner (and NLCHP chair) Ed McNicholas Photo credit: Ben Zweig 43 LA/NY Sidley was recognized several times during the September 10 Public Counsel Pro Bono Awards ceremony in Los Angeles. On behalf of the L.A. Office, Sidley was awarded the Karen Paull Justice Cup for the third year in a row for raising the most money for Public Counsel’s Run for Justice. Heidi Larson Howell of the LA office came in third place in her division for marathon time. On behalf of the New York office, Marianne Bellucci received Public Counsel’s Center for Veterans’ Advancement Pro Bono Award for her work with Janet Zagorin, Lawrence C. Tondel and Marshall D. Feiring helping a veteran incorporate the Bronx Veteran Mentors, Inc., a not-for-profit organization created to help veterans facing legal challenges. Public Counsel also recognized Marianne for her work with the Public Counsel Center for Veterans’ Advancement intake clinic. D.C. At its 2014 awards ceremony in early December, the Washington Council of Lawyers presented the Law Firm Award to Sidley for its participation in pro bono activities over many years, citing Sidley “as a top notch firm with a strong commitment to promoting legal services for those in need.” The Council, which is the public interest bar association of Washington, D.C., also recognized the many contributions of Sidley partner and D.C. pro bono chair Betsy Howe, who has served as both the treasurer and president of the Council. Firm-wide pro bono chair Jeff Green accepted the award on Sidley’s behalf. NY The Legal Aid Society awarded Partner John Lavelle and associates Alex Shear, Ken Meyer and Adam McClay its 2014 Pro Bono Publico Award in recognition of their work on behalf of a six-year-old kindergarten student with mild autism and his mother. The child attends the Cooke Center Grammar School, a private elementary school specializing in individualized teaching, training, and other services for special needs children. On July 7, the firm filed a Due Process Complaint with the New York City Department of Education, asking the Department to fund the child’s tuition at the Cooke Center, and objecting to the Department’s recommended placement in a public school, arguing that such a placement would not provide the child with the free, appropriate public education to which he is entitled under the Individuals with Disabilities in Education Act. On July 31, the Department informed the firm that it had recommended a settlement that would provide nearly full tuition for his placement at the Cooke Center. 44 Marianne Bellucci receives the Public Counsel's Center for Veterans' Advancement Pro Bono Award. “(From L to R) Patrick Kennell, Helena Tseregounis, Patrick Liu and Heidi Larson Howell receive the Karen Paull Justice Cup from Public Counsel on behalf of Sidley. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 45 PRO BONO AWARDS CEREMONIES – HONORING OUR OWN CH—Thomas H. Morsch Awards Each year, Sidley’s Chicago Pro Bono Committee hosts its Pro Bono Reception to recognize Sidley lawyers who have worked on pro bono matters during the past year. The Thomas H. Morsch Award is presented to Chicago associates who exemplify the spirit and principles of pro bono service that Tom Morsch demonstrated by his own work and leadership for many years. The award includes a $1,000 firm contribution that the recipients can designate to a Chicago non-profit organization of their choice. Chicago held its Pro Bono Reception honoring pro bono work performed in 2013 on February 26, 2014. John Levi, Sidley partner and Chair of the Legal Services Corporation, was the keynote speaker. Attendees included our partners from local legal service agencies and non-profit organizations with whom the firm has a strong relationship. The event allows us to introduce our lawyers to the representatives of the legal services agencies and possible new pro bono opportunities. For their pro bono work in 2013, the firm honored six Chicago attorneys. Nathan Davis was honored for his work on the sale of I-Go, a non-profit car sharing service, to Enterprise Rent-a-Car. Jon Sabl nominated Nathan based on the hundreds of hours he spent representing a client unused to working on a deal, helping him understand the process, negotiate the terms, draft the documents and prepare the schedules. Although Nathan was a first year associate, he assumed a great deal of responsibility and brought great insight, management ability, drafting skills, client counseling techniques and energy to the transaction. 46 Kristen Seeger nominated James Fortosis and John Skakun III for their representation of two young El Salvadoran girls who were left with relatives and acquaintances in Honduras while their parents came to the U.S. to find work. The girls were subjected to terrible conditions after their parents left and made their way to the U.S., finally reuniting with their parents in Indianapolis. The National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC) referred their case to the firm when, at ages 12 and 9, the girls faced removal proceedings that would send them back to either El Salvador or Honduras without their parents. John took on the case in 2012 and began to learn about the girls, their histories, and the abuses they suffered in Honduras. The girls were traumatized by their experiences and talking about them proved difficult. John traveled to Indianapolis to meet with them and gave up many Saturdays as the hearing grew closer. James Fortosis joined the team at that point and found experts from El Salvador and Honduras, worked with them on their testimony, and wrote substantial portions of the merits brief. James also was integral to the hearing preparation, working with John, the girls, and their parents to prepare. At the merits hearing in November 2013, in light of the equities of the case, the government agreed to exercise prosecutorial discretion and cease efforts to remove the girls from the U.S. The family could not have been happier or more grateful. (from left to right) Nathaniel Love, Robert Hochman, Nathan Davis, Laura Leonard, Richard O’Malley, Jr., Thomas H. Morsch, Marah Stith McLeod, Daniel Neppl, John Levi (guest speaker as Chair of Legal Services Corp.), Kristen Seeger, John Skakun III and James Fortosis (THM). Gwen Stewart and Richard O’Malley, Jr. at the Thomas H. Morsch Ceremony in Chicago. Jack Bierig nominated Gwen Hochman Stewart for bringing a copyright action on behalf of an artist whose painting was copied by a framer and resold. Despite several contested issues of fact, the case resulted in important injunctive relief, and a settlement resulted in the payment of substantial money to her client. As noted above, Gwen also received the Award for Excellence in Pro Bono Service from the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois for her work on the matter. Marah Stith McLeod* was honored for her work on a federal habeas case involving ineffective assistance of counsel. Despite unfavorable facts and, ultimately, an unfavorable ruling, Marah exemplified the spirit and principles of the firm’s commitment to pro bono service by devoting countless hours and her keen intellect to challenging the client’s thirty-year sentence for child pornography. Marah treated this pro bono case as she would any other Sidley case, giving our client the best possible representation. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report Robert Hochman commended Nathaniel Love for his tenacity, diligence and successful representation on appeal of a habeas petitioner who challenged his 32-year-old murder conviction in Hooper v. Ryan. The principal issue Nathaniel developed was a Batson challenge. Nathaniel combed the trial record and built an impressive case that a Batson violation occurred when the prosecutor struck all five eligible African-Americans from the jury venire, thereby producing an all-white-jury. The Illinois Appellate Courts already had rejected the claim, as had the federal district court. But Nathaniel persevered and persuaded the Seventh Circuit that something had gone wrong in the selection of jurors. The Court of Appeals vacated the district court’s denial of the defendant’s habeas petition, and held that the Illinois Supreme Court had unreasonably applied Batson in finding no prima facie case of race discrimination, and that the defendant was entitled to an evidentiary hearing in which the state must articulate non-discriminatory reasons for the prosecutor’s peremptory challenges of African-Americans in the original trial. The state declined the evidentiary hearing and the district court entered final judgment granting the writ. Matt McLeod, Marah Stith McLeod* and Daniel Neppl. 47 Recipients of the 2013 Vincent F. Prada Award. D.C.—Vincent F. Prada Pro Bono Awards On July 21, the Washington, D.C., office held its eighth annual Vincent F. Prada Pro Bono Awards Ceremony, commemorating Sidley’s late partner Vince Prada, who devoted 14 years of his life to representing an inmate on death row in Georgia. We were honored to have as our keynote speaker Stephen Bright, President and Senior Counsel of the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta, Georgia, and the Harvey Karp Visiting Lecturer in Law and Supervising Attorney at Yale Law School. Throughout his career, Mr. Bright has fought for the rights of poor people and people of color in the criminal justice system, and was a major force behind the creation of Georgia’s public defender system. Mr. Bright’s address, highlighting the many ways in which the legal system utterly fails those without resources or power, was an inspiring call to action and a fitting tribute to the work and memory of Vince Prada, whose widow, Jana Singer, also spoke at the event. 48 At the ceremony, 104 lawyers and 16 legal assistants and staff received awards for at least 60 hours of pro bono service in 2013; three non-timekeeping staff received awards for their significant work on pro bono matters. Attorneys in the D.C. office devoted 32,193 hours to pro bono matters in 2013, with an average of 118 hours per lawyer. Recipients of the Vincent F. Prada Pro Bono Awards are allowed to designate a legal services organization to which the firm contributes $100 in the recipient’s name. Many representatives of those legal services organizations also attended the event, which provided an opportunity to explain their work to our lawyers and summer associates. Erica Kaufman (Children’s Law Center), Nancy Drane (Children’s Law Center), Lise Adams (D.C. Bar Pro Bono Program), Carter Phillips (Sidley), Becky Troth (Sidley), Jodi Feldman (Legal Aid Society of D.C.), Clayton Northouse (Sidley) and Raphaelle Monty (Sidley). Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report Keynote speaker Stephen Bright (Southern Center for Human Rights), Betsy Howe* and Becky Troth (Sidley). Betsy Howe*, Jana Singer, Becky Troth, Paul Moates, Carter Phillips and Stephen Bright at the Vincent F. Prada Pro Bono Awards. 49 Los Angeles Pro Bono Awards The Los Angeles office held its annual pro bono awards on July 17, 2014, to honor the numerous accomplishments of its attorneys over the last year. This year’s keynote speaker was Paul Tepper, the Executive Director of the Western Center on Law and Poverty, who thanked Sidley and Amy Lally, Alex Doherty* and Lauren McCray for their involvement in a lawsuit against the Upland Housing Authority (UHA), which resulted in critical changes to UHA’s review process for Section 8 applicants to ensure that it comports with due process requirements. The firm also celebrated, among other things, finishing first place in fundraising in Public Counsel’s Run for Justice for the third consecutive year. Others recognized with awards for dedicating a significant amount of time to pro bono matters this last year include Leah E. Abeles, Joshua E. Anderson, Blaire Baily,* Emily Z. Culbertson, Andrew J. Dunbar, Stuart C. Edmiston, Melissa O. Evidente, T. John Fitzgibbons, Richard J. Grad, Thomas P. Hanrahan, Marc I. Hayutin, Robert A. Holland,* Eva M. Huber, Lauren M. Kulpa, Patrick L. Liu, Jodi E. Lopez, Lauren A. McCray, Aerin A. Miller, Wesley R. Montalvo, Karen A. Nelms, Brent L. Nichols, Christopher D. Penhall,* Nitin Reddy, Clarence A. Rowland, Anand Singh, Helena G. Tseregounis, Catherine M. Valerio Barrad and Collin P. Wedel. 50 Sidley’s Fellowship/Externship program allows associates to work at non-profit organizations in the community either before they begin working at the firm or after they have been with the firm for some time. Through the program, Sidley provides a fellowship stipend or pays the salary of the Fellows or Externs to allow them to work for a non-profit organization for about 10 weeks. In Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and Chicago, they can choose among a variety of non-profit organizations, including those that provide direct services to indigent people, as well as those that engage in impact litigation and policy work. In New York, associates work for three to four months at Her Justice (formerly inMotion, Inc.), an organization that provides free legal services to indigent and low-income women and children in domestic crisis. Fellowships and Externships with the non-profit organizations allow associates to learn about the organizations, their staffs and their work. The Fellows develop relationships that they can continue and expand when they come to Sidley. These relationships often are an important source of pro bono matters for the firm and the Fellows throughout their careers. The firm benefits because the Fellows acquire experience in a short period of time and develop skills dealing with clients, negotiating with other lawyers and advocating in court or in other settings in which they need to persuade a decision-maker. Chicago Office Sponsored Fifteen PILI Fellows Sidley’s Chicago office sponsors graduate fellows in partnership with the Public Interest Law Initiative (PILI). Since its inception, PILI has created educational and meaningful public interest law experiences for law students and lawyers at non-profit organizations that provide legal services to low-income people. The PILI Fellowship Program offers opportunities to those new associates who have accepted employment with a Chicago firm that participates in PILI’s Fellowship Program. Tara Amin served as a Graduate PILI Fellow with the MacArthur Justice Center at Northwestern Law School's Bluhm Legal Clinic. The MacArthur Justice Center is dedicated to pursuing civil rights cases involving police misconduct and wrongful convictions, among other social justice issues. During her fellowship, Tara conducted legal research on a variety of constitutional and state law claims to respond to a motion to dismiss, drafted discovery motions, prepared deposition outlines and attended client interviews. Raechel Bimmerle served as a PILI Fellow with Chicago Volunteer Legal Services (CVLS). CVLS relies upon more than 3,000 volunteer attorneys to provide free legal services to thousands of low income clients in Chicago. CVLS connects with clients through its neighborhood clinics, referral panels, its guardian ad litem program, and its Chancery Court Access to Justice program. During her fellowship, Rae conducted numerous intake interviews with potential clients referred to CVLS through its Access to Justice program. She also drafted a variety of affidavits, motions and orders in connection with her representation of clients in divorce proceedings. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report SPONSORSHIP OF PRO BONO GRADUATE FELLOWS, EXTERNS AND LOANED ASSOCIATES Abigail Bunce served as a PILI Fellow with Lawyers for the Creative Arts (LCA), a nonprofit organization that serves financially eligible clients in all areas of the arts from Chicago and the surrounding region. During her Fellowship, Abby conducted client intake interviews to help place clients with an attorney from LCA’s wide volunteer network and prepared materials regarding current issues in music, copyright and trademark law for LCA’s Music Law seminar. Heba Elayan served as a PILI Fellow with Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance Foundation, a non-profit that provides free civil legal services to low-income persons and senior citizens. She worked primarily on community development issues, focusing on the promotion of land use practices to encourage food justice and economic development. John Grothaus served as a PILI Fellow with Catholic Charities Legal Assistance (CCLA), a department of The Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Chicago. CCLA provides legal services to low income individuals who are not represented by a lawyer through phone consultations and direct representation. John provided consultations to Spanish-speaking clients in a variety of family, immigration, probate, and criminal law matters, and assisted staff attorneys in seeking Special Immigrant Juvenile Status for minors who were victims of abuse, abandonment, or neglect in their countries of origin. 51 John Leahy served as a PILI Fellow with the Law Office of the Cook County Public Defender, an organization that provides legal representation to indigent criminal defendants in the Circuit Court of Cook County. During his fellowship, John represented clients at various stages of the criminal process. He advocated for clients in bond court, researched and drafted critical pre-trial and post-trial motions, and served as a member of multiple trial teams. Kunal Malhotra was a PILI Fellow with The Law Project, a project of the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. While at The Law Project, Kunal supported the organization’s mission to provide high-quality legal services to community-based non-profits, small businesses and first-time homebuyers. Kunal helped numerous small businesses navigate varied legal issues and advised nonprofits regarding best practices for corporate governance. Kevin Meil was a fellow at the Chicago Legal Clinic, working in the area of expungement of criminal records and family law. He represented clients seeking to expunge and seal their criminal records in weekly hearings at the Cook County Criminal Courthouse. He also drafted a variety of documents related to family law cases, including parenting agreements, orders of protection and petitions for dissolution of marriage. Ashleigh Ricardo served as a PILI Fellow at the Business Law Clinic at Loyola University Chicago School of Law, a transactional law clinic that represents entrepreneurs and small business owners, as well as individuals who are seeking legal assistance with not-forprofit organizations. During her Fellowship, Ashleigh helped a variety of for-profit and not-for-profit organizations with entity selection and formation of their organizations and also drafted organizational documents. Stephanie Schiffman was a PILI Fellow with the Law Offices at Chicago-Kent College of Law. She worked with the Criminal Defense Litigation Clinic, providing legal representation for clients charged with felonies and misdemeanors, as well as the Health and Disability Law Clinic, assisting clients with health and disability-related issues. During her Fellowship, she prepared evidence to be used for an upcoming mitigation hearing, drafted briefs to be filed in Cook County, and provided legal assistance for diabetics facing discrimination in Illinois. 52 Christina Sindoni served as a PILI Fellow with the Notre Dame Clinical Law Center, a non-profit organization that serves low-income clients in a variety of legal matters. During her Fellowship, Christina worked with clients one-on-one as part of the Community Development, Economic Justice and Mediation Clinics. Her clients included small, nonprofit businesses, individuals in landlord/tenant disputes and small claims matters, and families dealing with divorce and child custody issues. John E. Thornton completed a PILI Fellowship with the Center for Conflict Resolution (CCR), which provides free mediation services at its center and in the Daley Center. As a mediator, John provided mediation services at the Daley Center three to four times a week. The substance of the conflicts he mediated included landlord/ tenant, small business and family matters. As a mediation supervisor, John briefed, coordinated and debriefed mediators in the Daley Center. Brian Tobin served as a PILI Fellow with the Law Office of the Cook County Public Defender. Brian supported Assistant Public Defenders in the felony trial unit, where he assisted in the representation of indigent criminal defendants. As part of his work, Brian researched and drafted motions on pre-trial matters such as admissibility of evidence and second chaired a felony jury trial that resulted in a verdict of not guilty. Robert White served as a PILI Fellow in the Low Income Tax Clinic of Prairie State Legal Services, an organization that provides free legal services to low income persons and individuals over 60 years of age in northern Illinois. During his Fellowship, Robert helped negotiate and settle significant federal tax debts and IRS penalties. Robert also researched a number of procedural tax issues for staff attorneys and drafted educational materials for practitioners regarding low-income tax disputes. Marisa Young served as a PILI Fellow with Land of Lincoln Legal Assistance Foundation, a non-profit organization that serves low-income clients in a variety of civil legal matters. During her Fellowship, Marisa assisted victims of domestic violence on a variety of family law matters, such as divorce proceedings, orders of protection and child custody hearings. Jay Dailey served as a Pro Bono Fellow at Asian Americans Advancing Justice – Los Angeles, the nation’s largest Asian American legal and civil rights organization. Jay worked with the impact litigation team on a number of matters, but his primary focus was on foreign worker labor rights, specifically with regard to employer visa violations and the mistreatment of Filipino workers. Lauren De Lilly served as a Fellow at Public Counsel in its Opportunity Under Law group, which practices impact litigation in the areas of economic and civil liberties. During her fellowship, Lauren provided research assistance on recurring legal and policy issues encountered by OUL. She researched and prepared a legal memorandum on unfunded state mandates under California state and federal law to help OUL attorneys obtain reimbursements for local entities like school districts that provide expensive and invaluable services to children in California public schools. Lauren also prepared a comprehensive policy report on California and federal think tanks to identify emerging policy trends in the economic and civil liberties context. Lauren Goldman was a Fellow at Bet Tzedek Legal Services, a non-profit organization that provides comprehensive legal services to low-income individuals and families in Los Angeles. During her fellowship, Lauren worked with the Impact Litigation Unit where she helped Bet Tzedek attorneys prepare for trial in a case involving uninhabitable living conditions. Trial preparation included visiting the property, interviewing clients, drafting declarations, and analyzing and summarizing the clients’ medical records to corroborate facts and assess the extent of the clients’ damages. Additionally, in connection with a disability discrimination case, Lauren drafted a memorandum on the legal theory of disparate impact, which ultimately provided key legal analysis used in a mediation brief on the issue. Geoffrey Kehlmann served as a Pro Bono Fellow at Public Counsel, where he assisted the Consumer Law Project in its representation of indigent victims of consumer fraud and abuse. Geoff conducted client intake interviews and prepared case memoranda. He also researched and analyzed various consumer laws and drafted a demand letter on behalf of a client. Adam Micale served as a pro bono fellow for the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California. While there, he helped analyze the legal merits of potential lawsuits arising from police misconduct. He also worked on appeals aimed at expanding the right to counsel beyond the criminal arena. Stan Molever also served as a Fellow with Public Counsel, the nation’s largest pro bono law firm. Stan supported the Community Development Project, aiding its efforts to build strong foundations for healthy, vibrant, and economically stable communities through legal and capacity building services for non-profits, small businesses, and low-income entrepreneurs. As part of his service, Stan researched legal issues ranging from tax requirements for 501(c)(3)-designated organizations to zoning restrictions on child care businesses. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report Los Angeles Sponsored Eight Pro Bono Graduate Fellows Rachael Rezabek served as a fellow at the Los Angeles Center for Law and Justice (LACLJ), a non-profit organization that provides a full range of legal and social services to victims of domestic violence and their families (among other programs). During her fellowship, Rachael interviewed clients and assisted them in drafting declarations and other necessary court filings. In January, Rachael will be representing one of her LACLJ clients in court. Andrew Talai served as a Pro Bono Fellow at the ACLU of Southern California. During his fellowship, he provided legal assistance on a variety of litigation and policy matters. Andrew worked with ACLU attorneys on a Ninth Circuit brief in Rodriguez v. Robbins (a case in which Sidley attorneys co-counseled with the ACLU) and helped develop a trial strategy for a potential 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim. He also researched issues of constitutional standing and administrative issue waiver for an ACLU motion in J.E.F.M. v. Holder, a collateral class action seeking a Fifth Amendment Due Process Right to Counsel for pro se children facing removal proceedings. On the policy side, Andrew prepared a report on current issues in domestic drone surveillance. He also prepared a comprehensive report on potential Fifth and Sixth Amendment violations stemming from prolonged pre-indictment detention of U.S. citizens by domestic law enforcement officials. 53 New York Office Sponsored Two Her Justice Externs in 2014 Sidley has a long-standing relationship with Her Justice (f/k/a/ inMotion, Inc.), a leading provider of free legal services to indigent and low-income women and children in domestic crisis who need assistance in obtaining divorces, orders of protection, and/or assistance with other family law matters, including spousal/ child support, custody and visitation. Over the years, the firm has worked on hundreds of Her Justice matters as part of its pro bono commitment and also has provided generous financial support through its role as one of Her Justice’s corporate partners. In 2003, the firm established the Sidley Externship Program pursuant to which associates in the New York office work at Her Justice on three- or four-month rotations, and many times handle the most difficult cases. Her Justice provides extensive training for its attorneys and volunteers, as well as for its Externs. Externs can expect to have significant court appearances before New York’s Supreme and Family Courts. Sidley had two externs in 2014. Luke Frankson served as an extern with Her Justice from February to July 2014, where he engaged in one-on-one client interactions and frequent negotiations with opposing counsel, and appeared in court on a regular basis. During his time at Her Justice, he appeared on behalf of clients in both family and supreme court on matters ranging from child support to litigated divorce. Luke drafted memoranda of law in opposition to two motions for pendente lite relief and argued against the motions in court, obtaining positive outcomes for the client in both instances. He also concluded a litigated divorce matter, and negotiated and drafted a settlement agreement in a child custody case, which provided favorable terms to his client. 54 Pouneh Aravand served as an extern with Her Justice from July 2014 to January 2015. Throughout her time at Her Justice, Pouneh represented and worked closely with women clients on their litigated divorce, child support, custody and paternity cases. She appeared in court over twenty times, advocating on behalf of clients and arguing various motions. While at Her Justice, Pouneh negotiated and obtained five favorable settlement agreements for her clients in litigated divorce, custody and child support matters. She also prepped for and ran a successful trial to obtain an upward modification of a child support order on behalf of a client. In addition, she defeated an opposing party’s attempt to modify a child support order, won a motion to preclude, preventing the opposing party from introducing evidence in a child support case, was allowed to appeal an order of support because of various procedural and substantive errors at trial, successfully opposed an opposing party’s appeal of an order dismissing a motion to vacate his acknowledgement of paternity, and successfully moved to vacate a default judgment in a child support matter. Sidley’s Washington office helped found the D.C. Bar Pro Bono Graduate Fellowship Program, which offers recent law school graduates an opportunity to spend the summer immediately following law school graduation or the period immediately following judicial clerkships doing legal work for local public interest agencies. Since 2002, 67 incoming Sidley associates have served as Graduate Fellows at 36 different non-profit organizations in D.C. Brian Corman was a Fellow at the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, a national non-profit headquartered in D.C. dedicated to securing equal justice through the rule of law, and targeting in particular the inequities confronting African Americans and other racial and ethnic minorities. Brian assisted in cases at the trial and appellate level in the areas of education, voting rights, and fair housing. Brian continues to work with the Lawyers’ Committee on a pro bono basis. Adam Farra served as a Fellow at the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, Inc., one of the premier civil rights litigation organizations in the country. Adam’s work at LDF primarily involved litigating alongside LDF lawyers a complex Title VII disparate impact claim against a government employer. He also worked extensively with a team of lawyers and community organizers dedicated to improving police relations with communities of color, and helped prepare policy proposals for increasing federal accountability of state and local police forces. Adam also assisted with filing an amicus brief in the same-sex marriage litigation in the Fifth Circuit. Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report Washington, D.C. Office Sponsored Four D.C. Bar Pro Bono Graduate Fellows Katie Rumbaugh and Matt Letten were D.C. Bar Pro Bono Graduate Fellows between law school and their clerkships. Matt served at the National Veterans Legal Services Program and Katie was a fellow at the Public Defender Service in D.C. Legal Aid Society Loaned Associate Program In April 2012, the D.C. office inaugurated a loaned associate program with the District of Columbia Legal Aid Society. Under the program, an associate spends approxima Appeals either while at the Legal Aid Society or after returning to the firm. Kyle Fiet was the inaugural Loaned Associate and had his first argument in the D.C. Court of Appeals on November 21, 2012. Since the program started, seven Sidley associates have completed a rotation with the Legal Aid Society. In addition to Kyle, these associates include Stephen Blank, Elisa Jillson,* Christian Huebner,* William Doolittle,* Christopher Bates* and Karen Smith. 55 PRO BONO AND PUBLIC INTEREST LAW COMMITTEE MEMBERS FIRMWIDE CHAIR Jeff Green (Washington, D.C.) HONG KONG +1.202.736.8291 BRUSSELS Ken Daly +852.2509.7818 HOUSTON +32.2.504.6439 CHICAGO Mark Glasser, Houston Chair +1.713.495.4502 LONDON Richard O’Malley, Chicago Chair +1.312.853.7112 Struan W. Oliver +44.20.7360.2063 Susan Bart +1.312.853.2075 John Woodhall +44.20.7360.3722 Russell Cass +1.312.853.2202 Linton Childs +1.312.853.2211 LOS ANGELES Michael Clark +1.312.853.2173 Frank Broccolo, Los Angeles Chair +1.213.896.6087 Maja Eaton +1.312.853.7123 Bradley Ellis +1.213.896.6632 Kevin Fee +1.312.853.7919 John Gallo +1.312.853.7494 David Gordon +1.312.853.7159 Scott Lassar +1.312.853.7668 Courtney Rosen +1.312.853.7669 Melville Washburn +1.312.853.2070 David Zampa +1.312.853.4573 Kelly Huggins, Capital Litigation Project and Political Asylum and Immigrants’ Rights Project Manager +1.312.853.3206 Emily Wexler, Veterans Benefits Project Manager +1.312.853.7074 Angelyn Chester, Pro Bono Coordinator +1.312.853.7871 NEW YORK James Arden, New York Chair +1.212.839.5889 Maureen Crough +1.212.839.7323 Martin Gold +1.212.839.5481 John Lavelle +1.212.839.5396 Henry Minnerop +1.212.839.5555 Benjamin Nagin +1.212.839.5911 James O’Connor +1.212.839.8613 Stephen Rutenberg +1.212.839.5608 Michael Sackheim +1.212.839.5503 Edna Basquill, Pro Bono Coordinator +1.212.839.5529 SAN FRANCISCO & PALO ALTO Joshua Hill, San Francisco and Palo Alto Chair DALLAS Kristoffer Leftwich, Dallas Co-Chair +1.214.981.3429 Scott Parel, Dallas Co-Chair +1.214.981.3431 GENEVA 56 Charles Allen, China Chair Scott Andersen, Africa & Asia Agricultural Enterprise Program Managing Partner +41.22.308.00.35 Ronalee Biasca, Africa & Asia Agricultural Enterprise Program Coordinator +41.22.308.00.20 +1.415.772.1248 WASHINGTON, D.C. Paul Zidlicky, D.C. Chair +1.202.736.8013 Paul Hemmersbaugh +1.202.736.8538 Dennis Hensley +1.202.736.8163 Nathan Sheers +1.202.736.8085 Becky Troth, Pro Bono Counsel +1.202.736.8339 BEIJING HONG KONG SHANGHAI Suite 608, Tower C2 Oriental Plaza No. 1 East Chang An Avenue Dong Cheng District Beijing 100738 China +86.10.5905.5588 39/F, Two Int’l Finance Centre Central, Hong Kong +852.2509.7888 Suite 2009 5 Corporate Avenue 150 Hubin Road Shanghai 200021 China +86.21.2322.9322 BOSTON 60 State Street 34th Floor Boston, Massachusetts 02109 +1.617.223.0300 BRUSSELS NEO Building Rue Montoyer 51 Montoyerstraat B-1000 Brussels Belgium +32.2.504.6400 CHICAGO One South Dearborn Chicago, Illinois 60603 +1.312.853.7000 DALLAS 2001 Ross Avenue Suite 3600 Dallas, Texas 75201 +1.214.981.3300 GENEVA Rue du Pré-de-la-Bichette 1 1202 Geneva Switzerland +41.22.308.00.00 HOUSTON 1000 Louisiana Street Suite 6000 Houston, Texas 77002 +1.713.495.4500 LONDON Woolgate Exchange 25 Basinghall Street London, EC2V 5HA United Kingdom +44.20.7360.3600 LOS ANGELES 555 West Fifth Street Los Angeles, California 90013 +1.213.896.6000 NEW YORK 787 Seventh Avenue New York, New York 10019 +1.212.839.5300 PALO ALTO 1001 Page Mill Road Building 1 Palo Alto, California 94304 +1.650.565.7000 SINGAPORE Level 31 Six Battery Road Singapore 049909 +65.6230.3900 Sidley Austin LLP • 2014 Pro Bono and Community Service Report OFFICES SYDNEY Level 10, 7 Macquarie Place Sydney NSW 2000 Australia +61.2.8214.2200 TOKYO Sidley Austin Nishikawa Foreign Law Joint Enterprise Marunouchi Building 23F 4-1, Marunouchi 2-chome Chiyoda-Ku, Tokyo 100-6323 Japan +81.3.3218.5900 WASHINGTON, D.C. 1501 K Street N.W. Washington, D.C. 20005 +1.202.736.8000 SAN FRANCISCO 555 California Street Suite 2000 San Francisco, California 94104 +1.415.772.1200 www.sidley.com Attorney Advertising - For purposes of compliance with New York State Bar rules, our headquarters are Sidley Austin LLP, 787 Seventh Avenue, New York, NY 10019, 212.839.5300; One South Dearborn, Chicago, IL 60603, 312.853.7000; and 1501 K Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20005, 202.736.8000. Sidley Austin refers to Sidley Austin LLP and affiliated partnerships as explained at www.sidley.com/disclaimer. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. 04/15 57
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