Fwd: Special Program with Stephen B. Bright, Pres., Southern Center for Human Rights. Friday, 10/28 @ 1:30 pm

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Quinlan O'Connor

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Oct 25, 2011, 9:03:00 AM10/25/11
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Hey all,
 
This is supposed to be a great event. It might be worth checking out.
 
Best,
Quinlan

Massive Indifference: Neglect of the Right to Counsel

in Capital and Other Criminal Cases

 

with 

Stephen B. Bright

President and Senior Counsel, Southern Center for Human Rights 

 

Friday, October 28

1:30 pm, Byron Auditorium

 

This lecture qualifies for an honor education credit.

 

A Oktoberfest reception will follow in the Atrium

 

Stephen B. Bright

 

Stephen B. Bright is president and senior counsel of the Center and teaches at Yale Law School. He served as director of the Center from 1982 through 2005, and has been in his present position since the start of 2006. He has taught at Yale since 1993.

 

Subjects of his litigation, teaching and writing include capital punishment, legal representation for poor people accused of crimes, conditions and practices in prisons and jails, racial discrimination in the criminal justice system, judicial independence, and sentencing. He has tried cases, including capital cases, before juries and argued cases before state and federal appellate courts. He has twice argued and won cases before the United States Supreme Court, Snyder v. Louisiana, 552 U.S. 472 (2008) (hear oral argument), and Amadeo v. Zant, 486 U.S. 214 (1988) (hear oral argument). Both cases involved racial discrimination in the composition of the juries.

 

He has testified on many occasions before committees of both the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives.  He has also taught at the law schools at Harvard, Georgetown, Emory and Northeastern. His and the Center's work has been the subject of a documentary film, Finding for Life in the Death Belt, (EM Productions 2005), and two books, Proximity to Death by William McFeely (Norton 1999) and Finding Life on Death Row by Kayta Lezin (Northeastern University Press 1999).

 

He received the American Bar Association’s Thurgood Marshall Award in 1998, the American Civil Liberties Union’s Roger Baldwin Medal of Liberty in 1991, the National Legal Aid & Defender Association’s Kutak-Dodds Prize in 1992, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers’ Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008, several honorary degrees and other recognition set out in the curriculum vitae below. The Fulton Daily Law Report, Georgia's legal newspaper, named Bright “Newsmaker (and Agitator) of the Year” in 2003 for his contribution to bringing about creation of a public defender system in Georgia.

 

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