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A History of Service 2013 Pro Bono & Community SERVICE REPORT Cover image: Sidley's first office on the third floor of the Marine Bank Building at Lake and La Salle Streets in Chicago in 1866. Photo Credit: Chicago History Museum color reproduction of Lithograph; ICHi-63077; Jevne and Almini Lithograph: Marine Bank Building; Chicago, IL; 1866; Lithographer Jevne and Almini. Image has been cropped and edges faded for this publication. www.sidley.com INSIDE THIS ISSUE SIDLEY’S FIRMWIDE PRO BONO INITIATIVES ❯❯ ❯❯ ❯❯ ❯❯ 2 Capital Litigation Project Political Asylum and Immigrants‘ Rights Project Veterans Benefits Project Africa & Asia Agricultural Enterprise Program SEEKING JUSTICE FOR CRIMINAL DEFENDANTS 13 PROTECTING CIVIL AND CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS 16 SERVING NEIGHBORS IN NEED 18 Protecting Economic Rights Serving Families and Senior Citizens Serving our Neighbors with Disabilities Protecting Our Neighbors’ Homes PROTECTING THE ENVIRONMENT 21 SUPPORTING NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS 21 SIDLEY’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE BROADER COMMUNITY – MORE THAN LEGAL SERVICES 23 PRO BONO HONORS AND AWARDS 28 SIDLEY‘S PRO BONO AWARDS CEREMONIES – HONORING OUR OWN 31 SPONSORSHIP OF PRO BONO GRADUATE FELLOWS, EXTERNS, AND LOANED ASSOCIATES 35 2013 PRO BONO AND PUBLIC INTEREST LAW COMMITTEE MEMBERS 40 A HISTORY OF SERVICE In 2013, we celebrated the 50th anniversary of Sidley’s presence in Washington, D.C. Such milestones inspire us to consider the road we have travelled as a firm and the values that have defined Sidley across the generations. Sidley’s history reveals a firm whose commitment to the public interest is long-standing and deeply imbedded, as author Herman Kogan described in his 1983 book, Traditions and Challenges: The Story of Sidley & Austin. Shortly after the firm’s founding in Chicago in 1866, Sidley began representing charitable and educational institutions, including Northwestern University and many other colleges. The firm has been a major supporter of the Legal Aid Bureau of Chicago since its founding in 1905, and two Sidley partners were on the founding board of the Chicago office of the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights in 1969. A few years later, associate (now D.C. Circuit Judge) David Tatel and partner Jules Perlberg filed a ground-breaking case on behalf of the Lawyers’ Committee in which the D.C. Circuit held that the Civil Service Commission’s Federal Service Entrance Examination, which had an unjustified racially disproportionate impact, violated the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Over the years, under the leadership of firm pro bono pioneers like Tom Morsch and Newt Minow, Sidley’s range of pro bono work has expanded to cover all areas of the law. Sidley lawyers have protected First Amendment rights and religious freedom, represented criminal defendants and prisoners on death row, preserved low-income housing, supported community development, defended immigrants’ rights, ensured veterans receive benefits to which they are entitled, and helped families and children combat every threat to their ability to grow and thrive. And, as Sidley’s geographic footprint has continued to expand, so has the influence of its pro bono culture. We now have vibrant pro bono programs in all of our U.S. offices and, in recent years, Sidley has developed a global pro bono program, which includes the recentlyestablished Africa-Asia Agricultural Enterprise Program. This history forms the backdrop for the wide range of pro bono and community service reflected in this year’s report. In 2013, Sidley’s lawyers devoted over 100,000 hours to pro bono service. That is in addition to the thousands of hours and millions of dollars that the firm has contributed to serve other community needs—efforts ranging from supporting students in under-performing schools, to participating on the boards of hospitals and community food banks, and to mentoring kids just released from juvenile detention. Sidley’s $250,000 contribution to the Children’s National Medical Center to commemorate the firm’s 50 years in Washington is but one example of how the firm always gives back to the communities where we live and work. These contributions of time and resources mirror the dedication of our lawyers to the firm's pro bono clients and their communities, but they also reflect the principles upon which the firm was founded nearly 150 years ago. Our latest report confirms that this tradition remains as strong today as ever. Carter G. Phillips Chair, Executive Committee Charles W. Douglas Chair, Management Committee 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. Robin Maher, 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 represents indigent inmates on Alabama’s death row in their post-conviction proceedings. At the end of 2013, Alabama had almost 200 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. Sidley’s Capital Litigation Project is a long- circuit court with respect to one claim in his term, resource-intensive undertaking that post-conviction petition. Although the court provides hope to inmates incarcerated on affirmed the dismissal of the other claims Alabama’s death row. Since the project’s in the petition, the court found that our inception, more than 100 Sidley partners, client’s juror misconduct claim was facially counsel, and associates, along with legal assistants and project assistants, have volunteered more than 120,000 hours to these cases. In 2013, Sidley lawyers donated more than 11,000 hours to the representation of these men on death row. Sidley’s nine-year 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 In the last nine years, Sidley teams of Montgomery, Alabama, has achieved lawyers and legal assistants from across national prominence from its advocacy on Sidley’s domestic offices have represented death penalty issues and provides on-going 21 prisoners, traveling to Alabama to expert guidance to Sidley’s lawyers on visit their clients, interview witnesses, Alabama post-conviction practice and and participate in hearings. In addition, procedure. 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. 2 CH meritorious and that he should have been given an opportunity to submit evidence on that claim. The Sidley team included Richard Raskin, Chad Schafer (who argued the appeal), Alison Potter, Ashley Martin, Daniel Greenfield and Tom Heisler.* Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP serves as local counsel on the case. This year, the Project achieved a victory on behalf of Alabama death row inmate James Yeomans. On March 29, the Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals issued a decision remanding our client’s case to the * Indicates former Sidley lawyer or staff member Political Asylum and Immigrants’ Rights Project In 2006, Sidley established a firmwide pro bono initiative to help indigent asylum seekers and other indigent immigrants seeking legal status in the United States. Mel Washburn of our Chicago office and Martin Gold of our New York office spearheaded the initiative, and Kelly Huggins manages the Project in our Chicago office. Through the Project, Sidley handles a wide variety of immigration matters, including asylum cases, Violence Against Women Act (VAWA) cases, U visa petitions, adjustments to lawful permanent residence, and representation of immigrant minors in Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) cases. In 2013, Sidley lawyers devoted 11,225 hours to matters that are part of the Project. DC The case was handled by Chris Gaul under Brian Friedman* and Tatiana Zakharova* detainee from Honduras who applied for the supervision of David Gordon and and legal assistants Stephanie LaPerle,* and eventually received Special Immigrant Rachel Niewoehner. Alyse Andalman, Madeleine Buras* and Leroy Lee Prowse.* Juvenile Status and permanent U.S. Arturo Rodriguez, Daniel Ruiz Bucio. residency after two years in U.S. custody. Paula Spada* and Susan Brehm* provided We represented the detainee before the assistance. A Sidley team represented a juvenile Immigration Court in Arlington, Virginia, NY as well as before U.S. Citizenship and behalf of a man who sought U.S. asylum Immigration Services (USCIS). We also because his family’s political affiliations negotiated the juvenile’s placement in foster put him in danger of future persecution care in Portland, Oregon. Adam Rusnak* if he were forced to return to his native handled the case under the supervision of DC Haiti. The case took more than seven years Lisa Crosby. a 16-year-old boy who feared future and involved difficult evidentiary issues DA persecution by Central American gangs and numerous merits hearings in federal because of his family ties if he were forced Chilean national and her brother who immigration court. The immigration judge to return to his native country of El Salvador. sought U.S. immigration relief through the granted our client’s application for asylum, The case involved difficult jurisdictional and U visa program. The clients cooperated taking the unusual step of issuing a detailed, mental health issues, but through detailed with the Grand Prairie police department written opinion in which she found that our supplemental affidavits and expert reports, to prosecute her abuser. Kelley Conaty client had presented “reliable, specific, and Sidley lawyers successfully argued that the represented the Sidley clients throughout objective evidence” of a reasonable fear of Arlington Asylum Office should grant the the application process before USCIS. future persecution. Stephen Rutenberg and boy asylum, thus avoiding a merits hearing Jon Muenz handled the merits hearings. before an immigration judge. The result Over the long course of the case, the expands the body of law regarding gang- team included lawyers Milan Markovic,* based persecution on account of family CH Sidley successfully represented a A Sidley team represented a woman from Honduras who was the victim of domestic violence. At a hearing on January A Sidley team obtained a victory on 28, the immigration judge granted asylum. Sidley lawyers successfully represented ties under the 2011 Fourth Circuit case of Crespin-Valladares, and will be included in the Capital Area Immigrants’ Rights (CAIR) Immigration Remedies 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 self-petition 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 Coalition practice manual for pro bono attorneys representing unaccompanied children. The CAIR Coalition referred the matter to us. Seema Kakad Jain and Paul Sampson handled the matter under Kristin Koehler’s supervision. status in the United States on an annual basis until they receive legal permanent CH residency. The U visa is a remedy for immigrant victims of certain crimes who have a young teacher from Eritrea who was helped with the investigation or prosecution of those crimes. Successful U visa persecuted in his native country for his petitioners receive employment authorization and lawful status in the U.S. for four political opinions. After opposing the years and become eligible to apply for lawful permanent residency. Only 10,000 U Eritrean Government’s curriculum and visas may be issued in a fiscal year. Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) petitions forced conscription of students, he was provide immigration relief to immigrant minors who have been abused or neglected in arrested and imprisoned for six months in their native countries. deplorable conditions and beaten daily Sidley successfully represented before he escaped. Because our client Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 3 requested asylum at the U.S. border and was detained by U.S. Immigration authorities thereafter, the merits hearing was Adjustment of Status Clinic held six weeks after we took the case. Josh Since 2007, with the assistance of the National Immigrant Justice Center (NIJC), Avratin, Jason Griffith, Mike Wawszczak Sidley’s Chicago office has hosted quarterly clinics with our client Exelon to help and summer associate Jason Marisco asylees and refugees obtain lawful permanent resident status and bring family handled the matter. members to the United States. Each clinic begins with a training session that DC NIJC conducts on how to complete the applications, and NIJC staff members are Sidley prevailed in an ongoing effort to obtain asylum for a Yemeni woman. available during the clinic to answer questions. In its first six years, the clinic has On appeal in the Fourth Circuit, Sidley assisted more than 255 clients. In our quarterly clinics in 2013, we helped 32 asylees challenged the holding of the Board of and refugees apply for legal permanent resident status, and we helped asylee Immigration Appeals that our client's fear of future persecution—though genuine—was objectively unreasonable. After defeating DOJ’s jurisdictional challenge, Sidley asked the court to vacate the Board's decision. After receiving Sidley’s brief, the government chose not to contest the arguments raised and agreed to the requested relief. The case is now back before the BIA. The Sidley team included clients petition to bring 19 family members to the United States. Lawyers Christina Coleman, Dannia Altemimei, Emily Underwood, Cynthia Okechukwu, Menesh Patel, Sarah Bermingham, Eric Schmitt, Samantha Spiro, William Bruce, Julie Klaff, Marjorie Baltazar, Adam Murad, Katharine Falahee Newman, Kendra Stead, Michael Gustafson, Audrey Austin, Alan Bielawski, Chad Vance, Emily Olson,* Mel Washburn, Andrea Reed, Mike Wawszczak, Kevin White, Emily Wexler, Mark Biggar, Susan Harris, and Kelly Huggins helped with the clinics in 2013. Project and legal assistants and staff members who helped included Elizabeth Gleason, Debra Amann, Katherine Cooper, Karen Smith,* Mari Barnes, Brigid Esposito, Daniel Ruiz Bucio, Megan Scholl Lindberg, Svein Hoexter, Samantha Taylor and Carol Graf. Robert Keeling, Aaron Wredberg, Katie Strong Carner* and Ray Mangum. because of his religion and because he had LA CH fled the country. Because he was detained and district court victories in Rodriguez v. by U.S. immigration authorities upon Robbins, a high-profile case that Sidley entering the United States, his case moved is handling with lawyers from the ACLU very quickly—the merits hearing took place and the Stanford Law School Immigrants’ just six weeks after we took the case. Sarah Rights Clinic. In April 2013, the Ninth Circuit Newman, Mel Washburn, Gerritt Wieringa issued an order upholding a preliminary and legal assistant Dana Velkovich handled injunction in favor of a certified class of the case. noncitizens who challenged their prolonged Sidley lawyers secured U.S. asylum for a young Pentecostal Christian from Eritrea. Before fleeing his native country, our client was arrested at a secret prayer meeting, tortured and imprisoned for a year because he refused to recant his faith. He sought U.S. asylum because he feared future persecution if returned to Eritrea, both 4 Sidley secured significant appellate detentions, requiring the government to provide each of them an individualized ranging from direct participation in violent bond hearing before an immigration judge terrorist activities to indirect and unknowing within six months of detention. Prior to support of those who participate in terrorist the injunction, some persons had waited activities. The client filed a lawsuit alleging for years without having a bond hearing, that the denial of the visa implicated her despite the fact that many of them were constitutional right to freedom of personal eligible for release based on the merits of choice in matters of marriage and family their claims. As the Ninth Circuit noted in life and that citation to the very broad its published decision, the injunction did “terrorist activities” statute, without more, not require the release of anyone. Rather, was not facially legitimate and bona fide. it simply stated that a detained person is The district court granted the government's entitled to have a hearing to determine motion to dismiss the complaint. Sidley whether a bond should be set for his or her handled the appeal of that decision and, release. “While [Immigrations and Customs in a published decision, the majority Enforcement is] entitled to carry out its duty reversed and remanded, holding that the to enforce the mandates of Congress, it government's citation to a statute, in the must do so in a manner consistent with our absence of any allegations of proscribed constitutional values.” Rodriguez v. Robbins, conduct, was not a facially legitimate reason 715 F.3d 1127, 1146 (9th Cir. 2013). to deny the visa. Heidi Larson Howell Following remand, on August 8, 2013, the argued the appeal with supervision from district court granted summary judgment Geoff DeBoskey. Doug Hart and Mark and entered a permanent injunction on Haddad helped Heidi prepare for oral behalf of the entire class, ensuring that argument. the entire class receives the same benefits and protections recognized in the Ninth Circuit’s preliminary injunction ruling. These twin victories have resulted in thousands of persons receiving bond hearings, and hundreds of persons being reunited with their families. Due to the significance of their work on this case, the Sidley team received California Lawyer Attorney of the Year (CLAY) awards. The Sidley team primarily responsible for these victories includes attorneys Sean Commons, Cody Jacobs* and Jonathan Feingold* and legal assistants and staff members Eva Fitzhugh,* Lynn Westman,* Karen Nelms, John Berry, Fidel Castaneda, Kelley Gmoser, Jenny Borrelli, Tiffany Katata and Diliana Stamatova. LA Sidley, working in conjunction with the Asian Law Caucus, 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 visa petition but, rather than provide a reason for the denial, simply cited an extensive portion of the Immigration and Nationality Act regarding “terrorist DC Sidley secured relief for a Somali national who feared torture if he were returned to his native country. In this Convention Against Torture (CAT) case, we argued successfully that our client was more likely than not to be tortured with the acquiescence of Somali public officials because of his membership in a minority clan. The U.S. Immigration Court in Arlington, Virginia, ordered deferral of removal under CAT; the result expands the body of law regarding public acquiescence in torture committed by non-state actors. The CAIR Coalition referred the case to Sidley, which was handled by John Hebden under the supervision of Betsy Howe. NY We obtained a U visa for a client who left El Salvador many years ago and came to the United States with her two young daughters to escape poverty and rampant gang violence. The client was the victim of her husband’s constant verbal and physical abuse. She obtained her U visa because she helped the police investigate her husband’s domestic abuse. Mary Kate Leonard and Aryeh Zarchan handled the case. activities,” which contains six subsections Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 5 NY to law enforcement and the many years of escape from prison and flee to the United with her child many years ago and was abuse she suffered. Edward Fierro and States, where he requested asylum on the victim of domestic violence in at least Aryeh Zarchan handled the case. the basis of past persecution because of two relationships since immigrating. At CH his faith and fear of future persecution if times, her injuries were so severe they young man who sought U.S. asylum after required hospitalization. During the latest being imprisoned and tortured in his relationship, our client called the authorities native Eritrea for converting to Pentecostal to report her abuser and then cooperated Christianity. Our client had been arrested in his prosecution. We obtained a U visa at a prayer meeting in Eritrea and was for her based on her invaluable assistance repeatedly asked to recant his faith while Our client immigrated from Mexico Sidley successfully represented a in prison for nearly a year. He managed to returned to Eritrea. Agreeing with these arguments, U.S. Immigration authorities granted him asylum on August 1, 2013. The case was handled by Mel Washburn, Gerritt Wieringa, Catherine Kim and legal assistants Dana Velkovich and Maud Such. LA Sidley successfully represented a 17-year-old immigrant who came to the United States after suffering many years of abuse at home in Honduras, where he was forced to work in construction from the age of 14 rather than attend school. Soon after arriving in the United States, he was detained and deportation proceedings were initiated against him. With our assistance, he sought permanent U.S. residency as a Special Immigrant Juvenile Status (SIJS) applicant. U.S. immigration authorities approved his application, and our client is currently under the guardianship of his aunt. Patrick Liu handled the case under the supervision of Jeff Bjork. Mirna Thompson provided translation services. NY Sidley obtained a U visa for a woman from Ecuador who suffered from a long history of domestic violence at the hands of her husband, who was the legal, but not the biological, father of her daughter. She had left Ecuador to be with her husband and for economic opportunities, but also to escape the verbal and psychological abuse of her husband’s family. Her husband often insulted her and even threatened to kill her. After years of abuse, our client finally obtained a limited one-year family court order of protection against her husband. The abuse and her cooperation with authorities led to the grant of the U visa. Elisabetta Assi and Aryeh Zarchan handled the case. 6 NY We obtained a U visa for a a single his naturalization interview, which was mother from St. Vincent and the Grenadines conducted at the U.S. Citizenship and who was brought to the U.S. when she was Immigration Services (USCIS) field office a child and experienced years of abuse by in San Francisco. The interview primarily her former partner. The client had spent consists of verifying the facts on the her whole life in the U.S. and her child is a naturalization application, fluency in English U.S. citizen. She is now in status and able and knowledge of U.S. civics. We prepared to work and support her family. Jim Arden our client for the interview and attended and Pouneh Aravand handled the case, the interview with him. In November, he with assistance from Christine LiCalzi. took the citizenship oath at a ceremony in NY Oakland. Sue Wang handled this under the We obtained a U visa for a woman from Mexico who suffered from physical supervision of Peter Kang. and verbal violence at the hand of her former boyfriend and father of their two young children. When our client was just a teenager, she left Mexico for the United NY States, where she met her now-former Pentecostal Christian who, like other boyfriend. After some time, he became members of his family, was severely abusive. It started with verbal abuse but persecuted in his native Eritrea because soon escalated to physical violence. This of his religious beliefs. Our client suffered culminated with her boyfriend punching repeated torture, imprisonment, abuse and her in the eye in front of their daughter. He humiliation for more than a decade before was charged with assault in the third degree escaping, embarking on a six-month journey and harassment in the second degree. Our through numerous countries in order to client also obtained a six-month temporary seek asylum in the United States. The man order of protection from the court. Based on had been detained by U.S. Immigration these facts, Narimane Nabahi and Aryeh authorities since July 2013 and was in Zarchan were able to secure a U visa for removal proceedings when Sidley accepted their client. the case from Human Rights First. We NY successfully represented our client in a A Sidley team obtained political asylum for a young man who fled his native Guinea to escape political persecution. Military forces targeted our client after he helped organize a political rally at which government security forces opened fire on the protesters, killing our client’s brother and subjecting our client to persecution. A federal immigration judge in New York Sidley successfully represented a hearing before a U.S. Immigration judge in Elizabeth, New Jersey, who granted him asylum on December 2, 2013. Josh Levy, under the supervision of Stephen Rutenberg, led the Sidley team, which included Helena Haywoode, Aimee Krause, Cliff Laney, Shaun McFall and Tian Wang. granted him asylum on November 21, 2013. The case was handled by Stephen Rutenberg, Sara Reichstein, Erin Braatz* and summer associate Angela Zhu. SF/PA Sidley successfully represented an immigrant from Uganda in his efforts to obtain U.S. citizenship. We had previously obtained asylum and permanent residency for the client. In October, he passed Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 7 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 100 matters. Sidley receives the majority 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 secured more than $3.6 billion in veterans benefits for class members. The Project also accepts cases from the Veterans Legal Support Center & Clinic at The John Marshall Law School, the Veterans Consortium Pro Bono Program, Swords to Plowshares, and the Veterans Assistance Project of the New York City Bar Justice Center. 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. Emily Wexler manages the Project out of the Chicago office. This initiative focuses primarily on three types of clients: 1.Veterans seeking “service-connected” disability benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). These clients must prove that they currently have a disability that can be linked to an illness or injury during service, which requires locating records, obtaining medical opinions, preparing briefs, and enduring lengthy waiting times to obtain a just result. In 2013, Sidley took 11 new VA benefit cases. 2.Current or recently-discharged service members seeking disability benefits from the Armed Forces. These clients have disabilities that render them “unfit” to serve and thus are eligible for a military medical retirement. We guide them through the Physical Disability Evaluation System and ensure that their assigned level of disability, which dictates pension and healthcare eligibility, is accurate and fair. 3.Veterans seeking Combat-Related Special Compensation (CRSC) from the Armed Forces. These clients have been medically retired by the Armed Forces and awarded service-connected disability benefits from the VA, yet due to the traditional ban on “concurrent receipt” of both benefits, their benefits are offset against each other another. Proving that a disabling condition is “combat-related,” however, makes the clients eligible for additional disability compensation. Sidley prepares these applications on behalf of the veterans and in 2013, took 23 new cases. In 2013, Sidley lawyers devoted more than evidence and argument, the VA granted DC 3,900 hours to matters that were part of our client ongoing benefits, as well as the U.S. Army Reserves obtain a medical the Veterans Benefits Project. The Project retroactive benefits dating from 2004. Emily retirement from the military (and with it, posted the following victories in 2013: Wexler and Bob Scarborough handled the disability and insurance benefits) that had CH matter. taken more than five years to resolve. The disability benefits from the VA for an CH client suffered from a laundry list of medical 86-year-old Navy veteran with hearing loss. disability benefits for a Vietnam veteran problems that were linked to her time and Our client was injured during deep-diving suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress duties in service as a diesel truck driver, amphibious training exercises during World Disorder (PTSD). The VA had awarded the including problems with her nervous and War II. The Chicago VA Regional Office veteran a 30 percent disability rating in pulmonary systems. Finally, in the summer previously had denied him benefits. The 2010. Sidley appealed the disability rating, of 2013, the Army found her to be 70% VA granted him retroactive and ongoing arguing that it was too low. The VA then disabled and thus eligible for a medical benefits after we submitted his military granted the veteran a rating of 100 percent retirement. Scott Border, Paul Kalb, Dan medical records from the 1940s, as well as for his PTSD, retroactive to November Twetten,* and Hannah Ruehlman* handled new evidence from his current doctor. Chris 2009. As a result, his monthly disability the matter. Meyer and James Mizgala handled the benefits jumped from $888 to $2,988, and DA matter. he received a lump sum of $89,000 for the peacetime Army veteran with his appeal CH retroactive rating increase. In addition, to the U.S. Court of Appeals for Veterans his wife now qualifies for military health Claims. Our client sought service- benefits, and they may now buy groceries connected disability benefits from the and other items from the Armed Forces VA for an ankle injury, but had received Commissary and Exchange. Priscilla Ryan* an inadequate disability rating from the and Sarah Konsky handled the matter. VA Regional Office and the Board of The firm obtained service-connected The firm obtained service-connected disability benefits for a peacetime Navy veteran with a recurring ankle disability. Our client had previously lost three times before the Chicago VA Regional Office. More than two years after Sidley submitted new 8 The firm obtained service-connected Sidley helped a Staff Sergeant in Sidley successfully represented a Veterans Appeals. On appeal, the VA Office of General Counsel agreed that the rating given did not fully consider all of the evidence and entered into a joint motion for remand, requiring the Board of Veterans Appeals to re-evaluate the matter. Demarron Berkley* and Michael Hatcher handled the matter. CH/DC/HN/NY/SF/PA Sidley teams in multiple offices obtained Combat-Related Special Compensation (CRSC) awards for 19 veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan in 2013. Lauren Cook Jackson (DC) and Neal Sullivan (DC) obtained CRSC benefits for a for a retired U.S. Army Staff Sergeant who served in Iraq and who suffers from PTSD, traumatic brain injury, and a knee injury. Thanks to the award, the veteran received $58,000 in a retroactive award and will receive approximately $800/month in additional disability compensation going forward. In another case, Jocelyn Prepon (NY) and Jim Arden (NY) obtained CRSC benefits for an Army veteran who served in Iraq and suffers from PTSD and tinnitus, both of which were caused by his combat duties. The veteran will receive additional monthly compensation of approximately $135/month and also received a retroactive award of approximately $7,000. Other attorneys who handled successful CRSC matters for their clients in 2013 are: Greg Sherman, Peter Kang, Jenny Cheung, Marianne Bellucci, Joseph Kelly, Gerritt Wieringa, Stephen Carlson, Paul Monson, Caroline Schiff, Emily Wexler, David Jorgensen, Kevin Blaugh, Vanessa Richelle Wilson, Timothy Moran, Ariele Lessing, Frank Bruno, Eric Schmitt, Stephanie Koh, Sally Wagner Partin, Hae Won Min Liao, Whitney Cox,* Richard O’Brien, Matthew Powers,* Tracy LeRoy, Mark Glasser, Jenna Gallagher, Robert O’Keefe, Salen Churi,* Sean Siekkinen, Jana Jobes, David Layfer,* Lindsey Cara, John Hutchinson, Amanda Todd, Sean Higgins, Lisa Schneider, and Andy O’Neill. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 9 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 residents of 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. The major components of the Program are: 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. 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 and 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 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. 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 agro-inputs 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 International Fund for Agricultural Development, the World Bank, Ernst & Young, PriceWaterhouseCoopers, Technoserve, CNFA, ACDI/VOCA, FairTrade International, Trustlaw, Self Help Africa and government aid and finance agencies. This cross-border Program is led by Scott Andersen and Ronalee Biasca in Sidley’s Geneva office. Under the Program, the firm helped Land organization in the United States. Gene selling solar powered battery packs to O’Lakes International Development review Elrod and Hanna Chouest (both in DC) are accommodate energy needs of off-grid Tanzanian cooperative law. We handled this handling the matter. communities in Africa and Asia. The matter for the department of Land O’Lakes that works on development assistance projects, in collaboration with USAID. This partial pro bono assignment was handled by Dorothee Fischer-Appelt (London), Caroline McHale (NY) and John Fordyce, Robert Brown and Raj Sultanian (all in Chicago). Sidley is representing Suminter India Organics, a marketing company specializing in high-quality organic food and fiber products produced by 15,000 marginal farmers in India. Sidley is helping draft and analyze purchase and sales contracts relating to Suminter’s transactions with international exporters, buyers and Sidley is representing Africa Atlantic, a suppliers. The matter is being handled by private commercial farming venture in Alexander Moon (NY), Buvini Kularatne Ghana, in building a not-for-profit research (London) and Prerna Gandhi (Singapore). and training facility, the Agribusiness Knowledge Center. Sidley is securing registration for the facility as a 501(c)(3) 10 A cross-office Sidley team is advising BBOXX Ltd., a UK-based company products offer a cleaner, more efficient alternative to kerosene-based generators. The company was started by electrical engineering students at Imperial College, London, as an extension of a charitable project and now sells in 14 countries. Sidley has assisted BBOXX with its franchise/ distribution model in order to increase operations throughout Africa and Asia. The team includes John Box (Chicago), Michael Yanowitch (NY), Tommer Yoked (Houston) and Gaby Carnwath (London). A Sidley team is advising Esoko, a Ghanaian mobile technology company that operates an Internet- and mobile-based information Stephen Fronk (San Francisco) and Sarah Verigan, Minhaj Rahman, Sha Hua (all in platform used by farmers, traders and Preisler (Palo Alto), with the support of two Chicago), Cindy Change (New York) and agribusinesses to access information corporate in-house lawyers from Colgate- John Wisse (Dallas). on market prices for commodities and Palmolive Co.’s Swiss affiliate, Rita Gomes farming methods. Sidley has reviewed and Lyse Pachoud. agreements to establish reselling partners in several African countries. Jeff Rothstein, Yael Resnick (both in Chicago), Jay Huh (Palo Alto) and Jonathan Adams* (DC) are handling the matter. Jan Nicholls, an in-house lawyer from Sidley client Caterpillar, provided support for this matter. Mocambique, a maize mill in Mozambique, Sidley is providing international trade advice Sidley has drafted a franchise agreement to Jasmine Bee, a start-up company that to develop best practices for establishing will work with over 1,000 rural beekeepers maize-milling franchising opportunities. in Tanzania to help expand their access to Sarah Preisler (Palo Alto), Michael Rugen new markets and market their products. (San Francisco), Xiao Jiang (Hong Kong) The company will provide modern and James Hardgrove (Chicago) are beekeeping facilities that are safer and working on this matter. more efficient than conventional methods Farm Concern International seeks to of beekeeping. Sidley is assisting with support poorer households in Sub-Saharan trademark registration, providing advice Africa through market development on trading honey to the EU and US, and initiatives and commercialization. Sidley reviewing agreements with honey buyers. has helped with IP protection of Farm Scott Andersen, Diana Kuitkowski, Concern’s Commercial Village Model, U.S. Laure-Helene Laissue (all in Geneva), and non-profit organization registration and Nicole Lai (New York) are working on this UK charity registration. The team includes matter with trainee Selena Bruderer and Mary Critharis, Jonathan Adams* (both in economist Andreas Lendle (also both in DC), Whitney Cox, C.J. Loos and Elizabeth Geneva). Three students from New York Massaro (all in Chicago), Imran Islam, University School of Law are providing Bethany Burrow (both in London) and research support. Calamus Huang (Shanghai). Working with Moageiras Milenio de For Kenya Biologics, Sidley is reviewing Ice Ice Baby supplies the fishing industry distribution and purchase agreements and consumers in Sierra Leone with ice, one with their suppliers and their investment of the water-starved West African country’s agreements with private equity investors. most sought-after products. Sidley is Kenya Biologics is a bio-pesticide producing reviewing an investment agreement and company that provides 18,000 horticulture other contracts. Sidley lawyers working on farmers with green, safe and cost-effective this matter are Raymond Oh and Joy Lam crop protection. The team includes Rob (both in Hong Kong), Louisa Kiu (New York), Sidley is reviewing employment contracts and developing forward contracts for seed and fertilizer distributors of myAgro, a service that allows farmers to purchase the inputs they need on layaway via an SMS platform and a network of local vendors MyAgro’s mission is to help move small farmers out of poverty. The team includes Nathan Howell, Julie Klaaf, Raj Sultanian (all in Chicago), Laure-Helene Laissue (Geneva) and Marlon Layton (Singapore). Sidley is representing Rent-to-Own, a Zambian company that provides agricultural equipment, technical training and business planning support to entrepreneurs engaged in rural farming and manufacturing businesses. Sidley is reviewing Rentto-Own’s s hire-purchase contract and contracts with its donors. The team includes Tung Nguyen (Dallas), Josh Avratin (Chicago), Sofya Abrams (LA) and Annie Wallis (Chicago). Program Statistics Number of projects since the Program’s inception in 2012: 45 Number of Sidley lawyers participating in the Program: 170 (from 16 Sidley offices worldwide) Countries in Africa with projects under the Program: 16 Countries in Asia with projects under the Program: 3 Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 11 SeKaf Ghana specializes in shea-based bath Cindy Chang (New York), John Wisse up an international holding company and and beauty products aiming to improve the (Dallas) and Sarah Preisler (Palo Alto) are reviewing donor and funder contracts Tim economic status of shea nut pickers, who working on this matter. Devetski (Houston), Michael O’Brien, are mainly rural women, and shea butter processors in northern Ghana through innovative and sustainable employment. Sidley is providing IP advice and drafting the agreement with the cooperatives with whom SeKaf works. Lisa Schneider, Louani Bascara, Alexandria Glispie (all in Chicago), Sidley is advising SmartMoney, an innovative mobile money project serving rural farmers and large agricultural companies in Tanzania and Uganda that Gabriel Lopez, Ilan Hornstein, Charles Cotropia, Eric Hoffman (all in New York) and Courtney Hikawa (DC) are working on this matter. provides affordable, accessible, and Emerging Cooking Solutions, a Zambian secure financial services in the developing company, promotes clean cooking by world. We are helping SmartMoney set distributing stoves that use fuel pellets made with sustainable biomass and agricultural waste, providing a healthier alternative to the use of charcoal in rural areas. Sidley’s advice is enabling the company to negotiate investment terms with larger companies and to plan for its continued growth. Nancy Corbett (New York), Charles Allen, Joy Lam (both in Hong Kong), Kataryzna Orzolek (London), Jade Williams-Adedeji (London), Sarah Preisler (Palo Alto) and Christopher Bell (Houston) are working on this matter. Sidley is providing pro bono services to the non-profit organization Bangladesh Shrimp and Fish Foundation (BSFF) on trade and food safety requirements. As part of that representation, in January 2013, Sidley-DC attorney Erica Jackson made a presentation to Bangladeshi shrimp farmers, exporters and stakeholders in Dhaka, the capital of A Zambian woman using a clean cook stove. Bangladesh. During her presentation, she discussed U.S. food safety law and Sybilla Fries from our Geneva office outlined WTO Law and EU food safety law. In March, Syed Mahmudal Huq, the Chairperson of the Bangladesh Shrimp and Fish Foundation (second from right) and Asif Hossain, a Bangladeshi shrimp producer (far right), came to Sidley’s D.C. office to meet with attorneys Erica Jackson, Brenda Jacobs, Raj Pal, Sara Wexler, Gabriel Lopez and Becky Troth. Diane McEnroe in New York, and Sybilla Fries and Josefine Sommer in Geneva participated by video conference. 12 SEEKING JUSTICE FOR CRIMINAL DEFENDANTS Second Chances SF SF a man who had pleaded no contest to those forms of relief, but the process can vehicular manslaughter and was granted be complicated and many of these people probation in 2000. His conviction caused do not have access to the help they need him to lose his DMV job and, despite to navigate the system to receive a Second his best efforts, prevented him from Chance. Cabrini Green Legal Aid (CGLA) finding full-time employment for the has been providing this service since 2005, past 13 years. Although he successfully advising more than 4,000 people a year on completed probation in 2005, he still their options for moving past their criminal owes approximately $7,000 in restitution. backgrounds. That number is miniscule Exercising its discretion, the court granted compared to the 3.9 million people (1 in 3) our petition to dismiss his felony conviction in Illinois with a criminal record who could and reduce the conviction from a felony to a benefit from legal counsel, and while many misdemeanor. Zeke Rauscher handled the people do not qualify for expungement, a matter under Peter Kang’s supervision. large number could benefit from alternative Clinic (EBCLC), which provides free legal CH forms of relief that would allow them to help to eligible individuals who are seeking participated in a program inspired by to clean up their Alameda County criminal a meeting between members of the Sidley attorneys Susan Harris, Michelle records. Association of Pro Bono Counsel (APBCo) Halverson, Scott Stein and Angie Weis and Vice President Biden in September participated in the IMPACT Second 2012, in which they discussed access to Chances Project Clinic in November. justice issues and the role of pro bono CGLA conducted intake before the clinic attorneys in delivering legal services to the to determine what legal assistance was poor. The resulting IMPACT (Involving More appropriate for individuals attending the Pro Bono Attorneys in our Communities clinic. Susan and Michelle helped their Together) Program is a long-term effort client apply to the Department of Public to design innovative and sustainable Heath for a Health Care Waiver, which allows solutions that will increase access to free a person with a criminal record to be hired in legal services in major cities across the a health care setting. Twelve years ago, our country. After considering the critical client had been arrested and charged with issues facing the Chicago legal community, theft by exerting unauthorized control over the participating Chicago firms agreed to property valued at about $700. Our client, create the Second Chance Project to focus who had strong family and community ties, efforts on individuals who need a chance had never been involved with the law before to move forward in their lives despite past nor after this incident. She had health-care mistakes. The State of Illinois and Cook related jobs before Illinois enacted a law County have progressive laws providing imposing liability on health care employers Sidley successfully represented a California woman whose arrest record prevented her from pursuing a career as a firefighter. The Alameda Superior Court ordered that our client’s arrest record be sealed. The order came after Sidley submitted a brief to the court, setting forth a factual record not available to the arresting officers, and made two court appearances. Sheila Armbrust handled the case under the supervision of Josh Hill. The case marks the first matter that Sidley has handled as part of its recent partnership with the East Bay Community Law Center’s Clean Slate In an email thanking Sidley, the EBCLC’s director said: “I really appreciate how much support the Sidley partners supervising these cases have provided the associates. This has included trekking to courtrooms across Alameda County and doing extensive prep beforehand. Seeing Peter [Kang] in the courtroom today (and Josh [Hill] in Oakland a few months ago) gives me an idea of how deep Sidley’s support for high quality pro bono work runs.” Under the EBCLC, we also represented Sidley attorneys in Chicago Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report relief from criminal records and access to demonstrate that their rehabilitation. 13 that hire a person with a disqualifying conviction. Our client had begun working for a public health institution but was laid off when this 12-year old incident appeared on her background check. The Department granted the waiver. Although the waiver does not prevent a public health institution from denying employment, IMPACT is continuing to educate local employers about the waivers, and with this waiver, our client will have many more opportunities in her chosen field. Sidley’s Supreme Court Clinic at Northwestern University Law School Since 2006, Sidley has sponsored the United States Supreme Court Clinic with Northwestern University School of Law. Students who participate help brief cases on the merits and identify court of appeals and state supreme court decisions as candidates for petitions for writ of certiorari, all in partnership with the firm’s Supreme Court pro bono program. In 2013, the Clinic filed six petitions for a writ of certiorari and seven reply briefs. The Clinic wrote seven briefs on the merits, as well as several briefs as amicus curiae at both the petition and merit stages. The Clinic also hosted several speakers in 2013. In early March, Jeffrey Minear, Counselor to the Chief Justice of the United States, taught a class on cases falling under the Court’s original jurisdiction. Later in the Spring, the Honorable Judge Gary Feinerman of the U.S. Scott and Angie successfully petitioned District Court of the Northern District of Illinois (and former Sidley partner) spoke for a Certificate of Good Conduct for their to students about Supreme Court advocacy. When the students visited Washington client who, because of a 1994 conviction and attended arguments at the Supreme Court, Justice Thomas took time from his for possession of a controlled substance, schedule to speak to them and offer his insights into Supreme Court practice. In the had been subject to a statutory barrier Fall of 2013, Donald Verrilli, the Solicitor General of the United States, taught the that prevented her employment with students about the role of the Solicitor General at the Supreme Court, while Dan the Chicago Public Schools. Because it Schweitzer of the National Association of Attorneys General taught a class on state was the client’s only conviction, she was attorneys general. Carter Phillips, Executive Committee chair, and Jeff Green, eligible to apply for a Certificate of Good firm-wide chair of Pro Bono, are the Clinic’s head instructors. Additional members of Conduct, which is a court-ordered finding Sidley’s Appellate Group who taught this year include Tacy Flint and Peter Keisler. of rehabilitation that will help in the search Washington Pro Bono Counsel Becky Troth and legal assistants Heath Ingram,* for employment. A Certificate also provides Kristyn Kenn, and Meg Huntington supported the program’s activities. employers immunity for claims of negligent hiring of the petitioner. The judge awarded our client the Certificate after considering her rehabilitation based on her employment history, her dedication to raising her four daughters, and the absence of further illegal conduct. CH In Hooper v. Ryan, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit vacated the district court’s denial of our client’s habeas petition. The court held that the Illinois Supreme Court had unreasonably applied Batson in finding no prima facie case of race discrimination where the prosecutor struck all five eligible African-Americans from the jury venire, thereby producing an all-white jury. The court held further that the defendant was entitled to an evidentiary hearing in which the state must articulate (and the district court must evaluate for credibility) non-discriminatory reasons for each of the prosecutor’s peremptory challenges of African-Americans in the original trial that occurred approximately 32 years ago. Nat Love argued the appeal and wrote the briefs with assistance from Rob Hochman and summer associate Neil Conrad Housler. DC A Sidley team, working with Northwestern’s Supreme Court Clinic, helped secure a victory in Missouri v. McNeely, a case the U.S. Supreme Court decided in a 5-4 decision. The Court affirmed the judgment of the Missouri Supreme Court and rejected the state’s argument that the natural dissipation of blood alcohol presents a per se exigent circumstance that would permit the police to draw the driver’s blood in a drunkdriving investigation without a warrant. We represented the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and the At the IMPACT Second Chances Clinic in Chicago. Standing: Angie Weis, Scott Stein, seated (l-r): Michelle Halverson and Susan V. Harris. 14 National College for DUI Defense as amici in support of the respondent. Jeff Green and Jeff Beelaert handled the matter. Legal assistant Heath Ingram* and project assistant Kristyn Kenn provided support. DC In a ground-breaking victory for our David Housler’s Journey to Justice DC On January 30, 1994, police discovered four victims shot to death inside a Clarksville, Tennessee, Taco Bell. The State convicted a man named Courtney Mathews of the killings in 1996, based on overwhelming physical evidence, in a trial clients on death row, plaintiffs-appellees in in which the State argued he had acted alone in committing the murders. Nearly 18 Cook v. Food and Drug Administration, the months later, David Housler was tried as an accomplice to the murders, based on U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit prosecutors’ new claim that Mr. Housler had acted as a lookout for Mathews, even affirmed the district court’s holding that the though the only evidence against Housler was his own “confession,” an uncounseled FDA’s decision to allow state correctional custodial statement that even prosecutors admitted was largely false. Mr. Housler departments to import an unapproved new nevertheless was convicted and sentenced to four consecutive life prison terms. drug from an unregistered foreign source for use in lethal injections violated the Administrative Procedure Act. The United States declined to seek certiorari in the case. Coleen Klasmeier led the Sidley team, which included Sean Griffin, Jennifer Clark and Sara Beardsley.* Brad Berenson* (now head of litigation at the General Electric Company) was instrumental in this matter and argued the case in the district court. Eric Shumsky* argued the appeal. DC Shortly before oral argument, The After his unsuccessful direct appeals, Sidley took Mr. Housler’s case in 2007. Partner Paul Hemmersbaugh led the Sidley team of James Owens,* Jason Vendel,* Bryson Bachman,* Michael Flanagan and legal assistant Rebecca Richardson.* After extensive research, discovery, and case development, the team filed a Petition for Post-Conviction Relief in January 2009, raising several constitutional claims as well as claims based on newly-available evidence of Mr. Housler’s innocence. At a 10-day evidentiary hearing in October 2009 in the Montgomery County Circuit Court, the Sidley team demonstrated Housler’s innocence through the testimony and interview notes and memoranda of the actual murderer’s defense counsel and investigators. The team showed that lone gunman Mathews had waived his privilege to documents recording his confessions to his trial team, prompting the court to order that the evidence be admitted. Mathews’ own defense lawyers, forced to testify in the Des Moines Register noted Sidley’s role in proceeding, verified that Mr. Housler could not have been involved in the murders. the pro bono representation of petitioner Mathews had told his investigators and lawyers repeatedly that he had acted alone, Marcus Burrage in a high-profile Supreme and did not even know Housler. Court case, Burrage v. United States. Sidley wrote the merits briefs and aided trial counsel as she prepared for the November oral argument. Sidley and co-counsel represented the petitioner in challenging his conviction under 21 U.S.C. § 841(b)(1)(C) for distributing heroin that resulted in death. On September 23, 2010, the court issued a 244-page order granting Housler’s habeas corpus petition, vacating his four homicide convictions and four consecutive life prison sentences, and granting him a new trial. Ten days later, over the State’s strong objection, the court granted Sidley’s request for reduced bail. Housler was released on October 4, 2010. Now a free man, he was able to visit his wife and 17-year-old daughter outside of prison for the first time in 16 years. Petitioner contended that § 841(b)(1)(C) The State of Tennessee appealed the court’s ruling to the Tennessee Court of Criminal requires “but for” and proximate cause Appeals. But—once again—the Sidley team prevailed, after devoting hundreds for the imposition of a 20-year minimum of additional hours to briefing and arguing Housler’s appeal. In September 2013, sentence when death results from heroin the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the historic trial court decision that vacated use and cannot rely on mere “contributory Housler’s convictions. The State of Tennessee declined to seek review by the cause,” as the government argued. The Supreme Court of Tennessee. In all, over the course of the six-year representation, Court agreed with our client’s arguments the Sidley team devoted more than 12,000 hours to their quest to vindicate David and on January 27, 2014, unanimously Housler. In addition to the attorneys who participated in the post-conviction hearing reversed the conviction. The ruling likely will in Tennessee, Karen Smith, Brian Fox (now in NY) and Kevin Garvey worked on the affect a significant number of prosecutions appellate phase of the case. for drug crimes throughout the United On January 6, 2014, the National Law Journal named Sidley to its Pro Bono Hotlist, States. The Sidley team consisted of Jeff Green, Ryan Morris and Jeremy Bylund, as well as students from Northwestern University Law School’s Supreme Court honoring partner Paul Hemmersbaugh and the team for successfully representing David Housler in his efforts to secure post-conviction relief after serving 16 years in prison for murders he did not commit. Clinic. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 15 PROTECTING CIVIL AND CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS DC Maryland Attorney General challenged the statutory protections for voters’ rights, brief on behalf of a coalition of former administrative law judge’s decision, which as explained in greater detail below, Secretaries of Defense, Department of was reversed on appeal. The Maryland LatinoJustice PRLDEF awarded Sidley Defense officials, United States Senators Court of Special Appeals held, without its 2013 Pro Bono Publico Award, in part and Members of Congress, Flag and considering the conditions of release, for Sidley’s efforts in this matter. The General Officers, advisors for national that the individual was not eligible for Sidley team included Mark Haddad, Jose security, and groups representing tens of conditional release because it found that Sanchez, Brent Wilner, Alex Doherty, thousands of veterans in Windsor v. United he posed some danger to the community. Lillian Park, Amanda Lopez, Will Rosenthal States, 133 S. Ct. 2675 (2013), the historic Sidley took over the representation of the and legal assistant Cecibel Alvarenga (all in case challenging the constitutionality of appellant and petitioned for certiorari in LA) as well as Carter Phillips (DC/Chicago) the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA). The Maryland’s highest court. The Maryland and legal assistants Randy Luce and John brief argued that supporting all military Court of Appeals granted certiorari and, Meehan (both in DC). This pro bono families is integral to national security after merits briefing and argument, held opportunity arose from Jose Sanchez’s and demonstrated that DOMA harms in a 7-0 decision that the court below service on MALDEF’s National Board of service members, undermines recruiting applied the incorrect statutory standard Directors. and retention, and runs contrary to for conditional release. The court vacated military values. In the opening of his oral the decision below and, on a 4-3 basis, argument, the Solicitor General stressed remanded to the ALJ for the limited the unique adverse impact of DOMA on determination that Sidley had requested of the military. In a 5-4 decision, the Court whether the original conditions of release struck down the relevant section of DOMA could be satisfied. Clay Northouse handled as an unconstitutional deprivation of equal the matter under the supervision of Paul liberty. The amicus brief was featured on Zidlicky and Kurt Jacobs. national television news. Within hours of LA/CH/DC the Supreme Court’s decision, the Secretary American Legal Defense and Educational United States Senators and Members of the of Defense announced that the Pentagon Fund (MALDEF), Sidley filed an amicus United States House of Representatives who would grant equal benefits to gay service brief in Shelby County v. Holder, the high- were instrumental in the passage of the Act members and their families. Carter Phillips, profile Supreme Court case challenging the and/or its 2008 reauthorization. The brief Eamon Joyce (NY), Stephanie Hales, and constitutionality of a provision in the Voting challenged the government’s contentions JP Schnapper-Casteras worked on the Rights Act of 1965 that requires jurisdictions that the Policy Requirement is permissible matter. with records of voting discrimination to under the First Amendment. The Court DC preclear electoral changes. MALDEF’s brief agreed and held the Policy Requirement Sidley filed a Supreme Court amicus Sidley took the case of a Maryland On behalf of the Mexican LA/CH/DC Sidley pursued a First Amendment challenge to a provision of the United States Leadership Against HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria Act, that requires non-governmental organizations to adopt a policy explicitly opposing prostitution as a condition of receiving federal funds. Sidley filed an amicus brief on behalf of a bipartisan group of nine current and former resident who has been involuntarily stressed that these provisions remain vital unconstitutional. Mark Haddad, Carter institutionalized in a state mental health to protecting the voting rights of Latinos. Phillips, Robert Holland, Daron Watts, facility since 2001. The resident sought and Although the Court, in a 5-4 decision, Joshua Anderson and Tacy Flint worked on received conditional release in 2009, but the ultimately struck down the long-standing the brief. 16 DC The U.S. Supreme Court let stand a landmark decision by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit upholding a Compensation Clause challenge to judicial pay brought by a group of Article III judges. In denying a petition for certiorari, the Supreme Court left in place the en banc decision of the Federal Circuit in Beer v. United States, which agreed with the position urged in the amicus brief Sidley filed on behalf of the Federal Circuit Bar Association. Four other bar associations—the American Intellectual Property Law Association, the Customs and International Trade Bar Association, the Intellectual Property Owners Association and the Federal Bar Association—joined our brief. Carter Phillips, Becky Wood and Adam Doverspike* briefed the issue in the Federal Circuit. Carter serves on the Board of Governors of the Federal Circuit Bar Association. Virginia Seitz* was involved in a prior round of the case before entering government service. DC Sidley lawyers reached a favorable settlement for our client in a housing discrimination case referred by the Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs. Our client, a civil rights organization, sued a realty company in D.C. Superior Court for refusing to rent available apartments to housing testers based on their perceived source of income, which is illegal under District law. As a result of the settlement, the realty company agreed to implement a new anti-discrimination policy, advertise that it is housing-choice-voucher friendly and train its staff to prevent discrimination. Our representation included drafting the complaint, multiple meetings with the client, court appearances, multiple mediation sessions with a court-appointed mediator and settlement discussions with opposing counsel. Justin Benson handled the case under the supervision of Jim Bendernagel. DC Sidley represented an engineer for the U.S. Navy’s Submarine Division in negotiating a settlement agreement with the Secretary of the Navy. In 2009, our client filed a civil action against the Navy in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., alleging that the Navy discriminated against him on the basis of age and race when it failed to promote him to be Chief Engineer of his division. After he survived a motion to dismiss, the parties agreed to participate in the District Court’s mediation program, and Sidley was appointed to represent the plaintiff on a pro bono basis in that process. After lengthy negotiations, both sides agreed to a Stipulation of Settlement and Dismissal, which was filed at the end of 2013. As part of the settlement, the Navy awarded our client a retroactive promotion to the position that he originally applied for. Pete Jensen, under Jeff Green’s supervision, helped negotiate the settlement. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 17 SERVING NEIGHBORS IN NEED Protecting Economic Rights The case was complicated because our presented our client’s case at trial. The D.C. DC client was a minor living in foster care in Superior Court found that guardianship with South Carolina when she gave birth and our client served the child’s best interests her daughter’s father was incarcerated, and granted our motion for permanent making it difficult to serve him and obtain guardianship. Paul Perkins handled the his consent. Our client’s great aunt had matter under Matt Warren’s supervision. received temporary legal custody of the The Children’s Law Center referred the case daughter. After a prolonged mediation to Sidley. Sidley represented a D.C. resident seeking unemployment compensation benefits after she was discharged by George Washington University Hospital. An administrative law judge in the District of Columbia Office of Administrative Hearings found that our client had been discharged for simple misconduct after she lied during an internal investigation to protect a co-worker. On appeal to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, Sidley argued that mitigating circumstances precluded the finding of simple misconduct and that equitable estoppel precluded the denial of benefits. The Court of Appeals vacated the ALJ’s determination and remanded the case to the ALJ for further consideration. Ryan Morris argued and briefed the appeal with the assistance of Peter Keisler and David Morell.* session, the great aunt agreed to allow our client to have permanent legal custody of her daughter. Our representation included multiple meetings with the client, attending hearings and mediation sessions, drafting and serving amended complaints and motions, and finalizing an agreement with the great aunt and father, which the court ultimately approved. Sara Wexler Koblitz handled the case with the help of Legal Assistant Jennifer Gordon and under the supervision of Ron Flagg* and James Brigagliano. The D.C. Bar Advocacy and Justice Clinic referred the case to the firm. Serving Families and Senior Citizens guardianship over her 11-year-old grandson, LA who had cycled in and out of five different Sidley clients sought permanent DC A Sidley team helped our client obtain guardianship of their four-year-old foster homes over a two-year period before granddaughter for whom they had been finally living with his grandmother. The child caring since birth. After a one-day bench first entered the neglect system after his trial, a Los Angeles Superior Court judge mother threatened to kill him and his four awarded our clients guardianship over the siblings during 2010’s “Snowmageddon.” objections of the child’s mother who lives After moving for permanent guardianship, in Louisiana and wanted the child to live we secured consent from both parents and with her despite evidence that she had mistreated the child on the few occasions when the child visited her. At one point, prior to Sidley’s involvement, the child’s mother filed false kidnapping charges against the grandmother, which resulted in the grandmother spending seven days in jail. Bet Tzedek referred the matter to Sidley, which Thomas Powell and Andy Dunbar handled to its successful conclusion. Bet Tzedek then awarded Tom and Andy its Pro Bono Attorney for the Year Award for their excellent work (see Honors and Awards, below). DC Sidley negotiated a consent decree giving our client full legal custody of her seven-year-old daughter, allowing her to see her daughter for the first time in months. 18 LA Sidley helped a Los Angeles woman in a domestic violence case in which our client’s ex-boyfriend attacked her, sending her to the hospital, and subsequently threatened her and their children. After the Los Angeles Center for Law and Justice referred this matter to us, Sidley obtained a restraining order against the man for a three-year period and also obtained an order granting our client sole custody of the children, with the ex-boyfriend receiving no visitation rights, which is rarely ordered. The ex-boyfriend had anger issues and even threatened the process server who served the notice of the restraining order hearing. Erik Carlson handled the case under the supervision of Ted Chandler and with the assistance of Heidi Larson Howell, Miles Fuller (who completed a fellowship at the a secure placement for the woman, and in judgment refunding 70 percent of the rent Los Angeles Center for Law and Justice) and 2012, after she was injured because of the our client paid during his tenancy. Sidley Normarie Segurola. negligence of group home staff, the State took the appeal as part of its ongoing LA finally agreed to her transfer to an ICF/ID. loaned associate partnership with the Legal Chanda Betourney,* Marci Haarburger Aid Society of the District of Columbia. Rozen, Eric Ives (now in Chicago) and Dan Kyle Fiet argued the case, which Jackie Rabinowitz* handled the case under the Cooper supervised. supervision of Jeff Green and Becky Troth. LA been attacked by her former partner, who DC mother of three who lived in a rat- and had pushed her head into furniture in the been denied disability benefits by the U.S. cockroach-infested apartment that sustained presence of their child, and made threats of Social Security Administration (SSA) despite periodic electricity losses for over eight violence to her. He then began to stalk our the chronic pain, fatigue and dizziness months. When our client withheld her rent client at home and work. Amanda Lopez associated with her multiple conditions. because of the apartment’s deficiencies, her and Lauren McCray handled the case under After we presented our case through the landlord filed an unlawful-detainer action Geoff DeBoskey’s supervision. administrative reconsideration process, the against her, seeking her eviction or payment SSA accepted our argument that, under its of eight months of back rent. Upon Sidley’s regulations, our client was legally entitled to engagement, the firm quickly obtained a directed conclusion that she was disabled evidence and testimony that established and granted her benefits retroactive to the severity of the apartment’s problems, 2011. Judah Ariel led the Sidley team, and the landlord ultimately agreed to waive which included Mark Schneider and staff his right to collect any prior rent from our members Colleen Campbell* and Adam client, allowed our client to remain in her Hartmann.* apartment for another six weeks for free, DC and to pay her nearly $3,000 in relocation Sidley obtained a five-year restraining order against our client’s abusive ex-boyfriend and an order providing our client full legal and physical custody of their two-year-old child. Our client had NY We represented a Her Justice (f/k/a inMotion) client in her custody battle for her six-month old son, obtaining a favorable custody order in the Bronx Family Court. The client, a single mother, reported a history of domestic violence and was concerned with continued threats from the father. The judge issued a final order of joint legal custody, and sole physical custody, to the client. Jesselyn Pe and Maria Meléndez handled the representation. Our client, a 56-year-old woman, had The SSA denied a homeless man disability benefits although he experienced depression, pain and limited mobility as a result of the lasting effects of gunshot benefits. Emily Watkins led the team, Sidley had represented the two since 2004, when the guardian became concerned about the sub-standard care provided at the ward’s group home and sought her transfer to an Intermediate Care Facility for People with Intellectual Disabilities (ICF/ ID). Maryland’s Secretary of the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene denied the request without a hearing. On appeal to the Maryland Court of Special Appeals, Sidley successfully argued that the failure to provide a hearing violated our client’s due process rights. On remand at the hearing, however, the ALJ affirmed the Secretary’s denial. Sidley continued to advocate for Ratner’s supervision. and submitting them to the SSA. After DC developmental disabilities and her guardian. and Jonathan Feingold under Jennifer collecting additional client medical records reviewing the records, the SSA claims of a 68-year-old woman with severe costs. The case was handled by Francis Lam injuries. Sidley’s representation included Serving Our Neighbors with Disabilities Sidley achieved a victory on behalf We represented a low-income, single examiner quickly reversed the denial of working with Mark Schneider and legal LA assistant Katharine Sullivan.* represented an elderly man who had rented Protecting Our Neighbors’ Homes DC Sidley obtained a victory in the In another housing case, we a guest house (an unlicensed rental unit) for approximately 20 years. When the property was sold to a small investment company, a representative of the new owners informed District of Columbia Court of Appeals for our client that he would need to vacate a homeless District resident. The Court of the property. The representative failed Appeals reversed a decision of the D.C. to inform our client how and to whom he Superior Court, which declined to enforce should pay future rent. Instead of clarifying an administrative award against our client’s how rent could be paid, the new owners former landlord for refusing to make repairs. served our client with a Notice to Quit form The Court of Appeals held that the Superior that (improperly) failed to state the amount Court erred by allowing the landlord to of rent that was purportedly due and/or challenge the merits of the administrative how the default could be cured. Then, only award during an enforcement proceeding, days before Christmas, the owners filed an and remanded with instructions to enter unlawful-detainer action against our client Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 19 to forcibly remove him from the property. a licensed exterminator. After purchasing the security deposit. They also provided a Jonathan Feingold served the new owners pesticide on the Internet, the landlord reference letter for our client to use during with extensive discovery and identified sprayed the pesticide in the building’s his (ultimately successful) apartment search. numerous deficiencies in the notice. In apartments, causing several of the tenants Robert Conlan and Ellen Crisham handled response, the new owners dismissed to become sick, including our client and the matter. the unlawful detainer action. Jonathan her four-month-old child. Together with ultimately obtained an excellent settlement Public Counsel, which was representing LA for our client, including seven months other tenants, we negotiated a settlement of free rent, over $18,000 in relocation that included coverage for medical bills and compensation and all of our client’s court personal property loss, and an emotional costs. Frank Broccolo supervised the distress component totaling $17,000 for our matter. client and her child. David R. Carpenter DC and summer associate Adam Micale Sidley lawyers successfully represented a low-income resident of the District in a lawsuit against the D.C. Housing Authority, handled the case, which Public Counsel referred to us. Sidley partnered with the Western Center on Law and Poverty and Inland Counties Legal Services to help two low income clients who were denied rental assistance from the Upland Housing Authority (UHA) without due process of law. Amy Lally, Alex Doherty, and Lauren McCray and our co-counsel filed and won a motion for preliminary injunction, leading the UHA to grant our clients’ permanent which had terminated her Section 8 vouchers for rental assistance. They have payments, and defended her in a related both since located and moved into new lawsuit her landlord filed seeking possession apartments and UHA agreed to implement of her apartment for nonpayment of rent. critical changes to its review process for After Sidley lawyers argued a preliminary Section 8 applicants to ensure compliance injunction motion in D.C. Superior Court DC to reinstate the client’s Section 8 voucher, favorable settlement for our client, ending opposing counsel agreed to court- his years-long dispute with his landlord ordered mediation. The parties reached a and property manager. Our client and his settlement agreement that allows our client two young children had endured years to keep her Section 8 voucher and move of unsanitary and uninhabitable living into a larger apartment. The D.C. Housing conditions, including mold, exposed wiring Authority also agreed to pay half of the back in the living areas, and a rodent infestation. rent it had failed to pay, while the landlord Sidley sued the landlord and property forgave the rest. Kurt Jacobs and Jeff manager to recover damages and the Beelaert handled the case. return of three years’ rent. After months of LA We represented a woman in a dispute discovery, Sidley negotiated a settlement in with her landlord stemming from his decision to handle a cockroach infestation in her building by himself rather than engage 20 A Sidley team obtained an extremely which the defendants, in addition to making a lump sum payment, agreed to help our client rent a new apartment by paying his application fees, his moving costs, and with minimum due process requirements. PROTECTING THE ENVIRONMENT DC Sidley’s client, Potomac Riverkeeper, Inc., successfully appealed the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection’s (WVDEP’s) issuance of a permit authorizing the discharge of industrial wastes into the Potomac River. After briefing and oral argument, the West Virginia Environmental Quality Board found that the permit lacked adequate protections for monthly effluent limitations as well as for the water quality standards of Maryland. The board granted Riverkeeper’s motion for summary judgment and remanded the permit to WVDEP. Jim Wedeking, who argued the motion before the board, handled the matter with David Buente and John Hebden. SUPPORTING NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LA Sidley successfully represented NY Nicole Lai and Alexandra Shear provides fresh produce in what was once a the Economic Roundtable, a nonprofit represented the North Bronx Youth Sports food desert. Added Value produces large organization that conducts economic and Association (NBYSA), which is an afterschool harvests of fresh produce for donation, sale related research on a number of public- program for kids in the Bronx. NBYSA had and consumption; serves as an educational policy subjects, including homelessness, a football team they tried to enter into the and work site for community youth; leads affordable healthcare and environmental league run by Grid-Iron (the defendant). educational programs and workshops for sustainability, in lease negotiations with its Grid-Iron put the entire NBYSA team in the school children; and generates revenue for landlord. Katie McCarthy, working with Ed 15-17 year old bracket, which our client youth stipends. Benjamin Burry and Peter Prokop, handled the matter. was not even aware existed. NBYSA asked McGowan handled the case under John NY Grid-Iron for a refund since the coach didn’t Lavelle’s supervision. Sidley is providing corporate law want his 13-14 year old kids playing football NY Sidley continues to advise the New against 15-17 year-olds. Grid-Iron told York Immigration Coalition on their lease him that the deposit was non-refundable. and employment contracts, among other Alexandra Shear litigated and won the case corporate issues. The Coalition is an in the Commercial Claim Court of Nassau umbrella policy and advocacy organization County, 4th District, for the deposit amount representing approximately 200 groups in plus interest and other fees. Grid-Iron New York State that work with immigrants refused to pay, and we have obtained an and refugees. Their membership includes order for execution and the local Sheriff will grassroots community organizations, collect the judgment. non-profit health and human services homes and community were devastated NY Sidley successfully represented an organizations, religious and academic by Hurricane Sandy. As part of this organic farm in Brooklyn in a landlord-tenant institutions, labor unions, and legal, social, project, Sidley is representing the group dispute. The New York Supreme Court and economic justice organizations. in a co-branding relationship with Michel granted Sidley’s motion to dismiss all claims The NYIC advocates for better laws and Cluizel Chocolate, set to coincide with against the client, ruling that, under the policies at the local, state and national Mother’s Day. The project came to the firm terms of the lease, the landlord could not levels to improve the lives of immigrants through a client relationship at Goldman shift blame to our client for alleged injuries and all New Yorkers, with a particular focus Sachs. Stephen Rutenberg, Jessica Ho on a public sidewalk. The client, Added on the needs of low income immigrant and Michelle Galvez* are handling the Value and Herban Solutions, is a non-profit communities. Carlos Rodriguez handles the assignment. urban farm in Red Hook, Brooklyn, that representation. and related advice to Doctors of the World—USA Inc., the U.S. branch of the international humanitarian organization that provides medical care to vulnerable populations affected by war, natural disasters, disease, famine, poverty or exclusion. We are helping the group launch its “Treat, Connect & Restore” initiative to help hundreds of former residents of The Rockaways in Queens, New York, whose Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 21 DA/NY We successfully registered with conduct. The Sidley team included Mark Hopson, Tom Green, Angie Xenakis, Jeff BRUSSELS for the client’s umbrella line, Marisol . Young and Stephen Blank, as well as Amy Brussels is providing pro bono The client, Joyaux Marisol LLC, is a small Markopoulos,* John Meiser* and Ben advice to a campaign to abolish business that designs and hand-makes Mundel.* the European Parliament’s “two umbrellas using African wax prints, DC seat” arrangement under which the and donates 20% of its net profits to 717 F.3d 72 (2d Cir. 2013), Sidley worked parliament’s working headquarters women survivors of sexual violence in the with New York City’s Corporation Counsel in are in Brussels, but the parliament Democratic Republic of Congo. The client briefing a Second Circuit appeal challenging must move all of its operations to also designs and hand-makes one-of-a-kind a judgment entered against the City on Strasbourg, France for four days jewelry, for which Sidley also successfully a claim that the City had intentionally each month. Ken Daly recently registered the trademark. Jesselyn discriminated in hiring New York City presented on the legal issues Pe and Charles Cotropia handled the firefighters. On appeal, the Second Circuit at a hearing in the European representation. ruled, inter alia, that (i) the trial court Parliament and participated in a DC improperly granted summary judgment press conference after the hearing. of Attorney General, Sidley successfully against the City on the private plaintiff’s In an article covering the event, The defended former District of Columbia claim of disparate treatment, (ii) the trial Parliament Magazine noted that Deputy Attorney General Robert J. Hildum, court properly dismissed discrimination Sidley is “an international law firm one of multiple defendants who was sued claims against Mayor Bloomberg, and (iii) which has advised the single seat by three D.C. police officers under the portions of the remedial order entered by campaign,” and quoted Ken as District’s Whistleblower Protection Act for the trial court, especially those predicated saying that the European Parliament alleged retaliatory actions. After extensive on the improper intentional discrimination “had exhausted all its powers” on discovery, depositions and briefing, the D.C. determination, exceeded the trial court’s the issue, adding that the “ball is Superior Court granted defendants’ motion remedial discretion. Paul Zidlicky handled now in the court of member states” for summary judgment, finding no genuine the matter. and it is up to them to trigger the the U.S. Trademark Office the trademark ® Working with the District’s Office dispute that Mr. Hildum or the other OAG defendants had engaged in any retaliatory In United States v. City of New York, A Sidley team in change to a single seat arrangement by changing their treaties. Stephen Kinsella and Jessica Walch* also advise the campaign. Raj Sultanian participates in the Thanksgiving basket packing event at Kanoon Elementary Magnet School. 22 SIDLEY’S CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE BROADER COMMUNITY – MORE THAN LEGAL SERVICES CH contributions of time, funding and resources CH office has held an annual collection drive have helped the school in numerous ways annual Thanksgiving Food Drive. The food for the United Way. Sidley associates and and improved the educational experience of drive typically generates enough revenue staff donate approximately $20,000 and the its students. Under the leadership of John to feed 250 families. In 2013, we raised Sidley Foundation contributes the balance, Levi and Michele Ilene Ruiz, Sidley lawyers $11,205 from 130 Sidley lawyers and staff. for an annual donation of $150,000. In and staff became involved in mentoring 2013, Sidley associates and staff contributed activities at Kanoon as well as book, winter- $19,663.12. Jonathan Lotsoff chairs this clothing, school-supply and food drives. program. During our annual back-to-school drive for CH Kanoon in 2013, 107 Sidley lawyers and staff For more than 20 years, the Chicago Since 1995, the office has participated in the annual Chicago Cares event. This event involves staff and lawyers spending one day at a local Chicago school cleaning, painting and decorating the school and contributed almost $10,000. Sidley also provided ad hoc in-kind donations to the school, including used computers, furniture and office supplies. Sidley sponsors Baile CH In November, the office held its an Sidley lawyers participate in the Lawyers 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 2013, Pascale Thomas headed this program with help from Scott Berliant. Follkoric and Suzuki Violin lessons for DC Kanoon students, and holds two Jeans Washington, Sidley was among 36 law firms Days per year, with proceeds benefitting recognized for donating a total of more than the school’s literacy efforts. In 2013, we $3.6 million to local legal service providers collected $8,508 for Kanoon from the two as part of the inaugural ”Raising the Bar Jeans Days. Chicago staff and lawyers also in D.C.” fundraiser. The Honorable David participated in the 2013 Book Chat with the Tatel of the United States Court of Appeals participated in the annual Heart Walk to Kanoon 5th graders. Fifty-two lawyers and for the D.C. Circuit and Washington, D.C. benefit the American Heart Association. staff read a book that the school selected Mayor Vincent Gray spoke at the event Sidley staff raised $10,000 for the event in and then exchanged questions and answers honoring those firms responding to the 2013. with the students by email. This event D.C. Access to Justice Commission’s call culminated with the Sidley participants for increased funding for legal services for chatting with the students about the book. vulnerable D.C. residents. This initiative playground. On June 15, 2013, six Sidley personnel volunteered at Sherman School of Excellence., and we presented a $2,500 donation to Chicago Cares. Richard Astle is the chair of this program. CH CH Since 2000, the Chicago office has The Chicago office participates in an annual clothing drive for the Cara Program, During an April 2013 reception in a non-profit organization that provides training and job placement services to individuals who are homeless. The office donated 30 boxes of clothing in 2013. 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 in 2013. 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 April 2013, Sidley lawyers and staff donated two racks of clothing and several boxes of shoes, sweaters, and shirts to the program. 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 DC Senator Al Franken, Maria Foscarinis, Executive Director of the National Law Center on Homelessness & Poverty (NLCHP), G.W. Rolle, member of NLCHP’s Board, and Sidley lawyer Ed McNicholas, NLCHP Board Chair, attend NLCHP’s Annual McKinney-Vento Dinner. NLCHP, based in Washington, D.C. is the only national legal group dedicated to ending and preventing homelessness. It operates programs across the United States that serve America’s more than 3.5 million homeless families, children and individuals. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 23 during the week included: interviewing detained immigrants at a regional jail to help them find pro bono representation and seek relief from deportation; a panel discussion with the leaders of five local legal services organizations on how to be effective pro bono counsel; a blood drive; stuffing backpacks for disadvantaged children; making lunches for the Salvation Army; preparing dinner for Miriam’s Kitchen; and the screening of a documentary and panel discussion about the atrocities committed during the war in Sri Lanka and Sidley’s pro bono efforts to pursue charges against individuals involved in Sri Lanka’s war crimes. Throughout Jeff Beelaert, DC Pro Bono Chair Betsy Howe, Caroline Fleetwood, Raphaelle Monty, Becky Troth, Beth Kelley and Joel Visser kicked off “Go Casual for Justice” week. the week, the entire office donated over $1,000, along with hundreds of articles of men’s and women’s business clothing, to reflects lawyers’ unique obligation to ensure entire office participated in a variety of pro support two organizations committed to equal access to justice for low-income bono and service-related projects organized providing professional attire, a network of individuals in their own communities. by the Associate Relations Committee, the support, and career development training Sidley’s D.C. office, which was honored as Diversity Committee, the Pro Bono Program, to low-income men and women in the DC a silver-level donor, was one of the eight the Summer Associate Program, and the community. original law firms that joined in the launch Women’s Committee. The week kicked off of the Campaign by pledging funds to local with the annual Vincent F. Prada Pro Bono legal services providers and by joining the Awards Ceremony, where D.C. attorneys, Commission in an appeal to the law firm legal assistants, and litigation support staff community. were recognized for meeting the ABA DC Challenge of providing at least 60 hours The D.C. office held its seventh annual Sidley Service week in mid-July, in which the of pro bono assistance in 2012. Activities DC In October, 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. Lawyers and staff contributed $5 to wear jeans and another $5 to wear sneakers on Go Casual for Justice Friday. Each office floor competed to raise the most money. The winning floors (5 and 10) won the right to wear jeans and sneakers every first Friday of the month for a year. A team that included Beth Kelley, Becky Troth, Joel Visser, Jeff Beelaert, Rishi Chhatwal, Caroline Fleetwood, Erica Guy and Raphaelle Monty, led the fundraising effort. Sidley raised over $15,000 – more than any other firm in the city. DC Sidley raised more than $15,500 as part of the Legal Aid Society of DC’s 24th Annual Generous Associates Campaign. The Campaign—organized, led, and driven Staff members Julia Kennedy, D’Esprit Smith, Alexis Atkins, and Sara Sisco and summer associate Ashwan Phatak volunteering during DC Service Week at Miriam’s Kitchen. 24 by associates across the Washington, DC area—aims to raise funds for the Legal Aid Society, the city’s oldest and largest civil DC legal services program. Clay Northouse, Washington, D.C., Sidley Austin marked community at all economic levels. “Sidley’s Kyle Fiet and Jeff Morrow led the its anniversary by giving back to the partnership helps us provide the best fundraising effort in 2013. community with a $250,000 donation to treatment to critically ill children, regardless DC the Children’s National Medical Center, of their families’ ability to pay,” said David partners and mentors to public school the premier provider of pediatric care L. Wessel, M.D., Executive Vice President students at Ross Elementary through the in Washington, D.C. Sidley’s donation and Chief Medical Officer, Hospital and Power Lunch program run by Everybody supports the hospital and its efforts to Specialty Services, Children's National Wins! DC. The Power Lunch program provide the best treatment possible to its Medical Center. “On behalf of Children’s Sidley personnel serve as reading In celebration of its 50 years in patients and to serve children in the D.C. pairs one adult with one student for the school year. The adult partner visits the school once a week during lunch to share books and the love of reading with the student. Currently Andy Shoyer, Larry Walders, D’Espirit Smith, Audrey Prescott, Keith Matthews, Warren Storrs, Rachel Christmas, Amber Tofilon, Nicole Brown, Ellen Chrisham, 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! DC for a number of years, serving at different times as its chairperson and general counsel. DC In 2013, Sidley sponsored two teams of Thomson Elementary School fourth and fifth graders in the annual Spring GeoPlunge Tournament, an initiative that teaches children U.S. political geography. Over 100 students from various D.C. Carter Phillips presenting the $250,000 check to Dr. Bear and Dr. David Wessell of the Children’s National Medical Center. public elementary schools competed. The tournament is an outgrowth of the D.C. Public School Partnership Project of the Washington Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs. Our involvement came through our long-time partnership with Thomson Elementary School and our support for the Committee. D.C. Sidley also sponsored two teams for the 9th annual Fall GeoPlunge Tournament held at the National Portrait Gallery. Sidley coaches volunteered at the school twice a week to help students prepare for the competition. Sidley also runs a spring math program, Challenge24, with Thomson Elementary. In 2013, legal assistants Heath Ingram,* Kristyn Kenn, Meg Huntington, Hilary Peterson, Alaric Smith, Zeno Lantos and associate Adam Rusnak* donated time to the program. From left to right, Heath Ingram,* Adam Rusnak,* Alaric Smith, and Zeno Lantos with students from Thomson Elementary. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 25 money for Public Counsel than any other firm or other business – $17,000. Patrick Kennell led the effort. LA For the ninth year, Sidley participated in the Revlon Run/Walk for Women, which raises money for cancer research, counseling and outreach programs nationwide. Sidley raised over $11,000 this year, bringing our total contribution over the years to over $85,000. Josh Hofmeier was the driving force behind this year’s effort. LONDON/BRUSSELS A Sidley team prevailed over other members of the UK legal and media establishment to take first prize at the recent Reprieve House of Hilary Peterson, Trey Hilberg, Alaric Smith, and Zeno Lantos attend the Angel Tree Adoption Party. Trivia event, a celebrity-studded evening to benefit Reprieve, a charity (and Sidley pro bono client) that promotes the rule National, we thank Sidley for its continued Governors and its CEO, a Sidley partner has support and look forward to working served as General Counsel of the Bar for together to advance pediatric critical care nearly 10 years. medicine.” LA DC recognized Sidley as a “Gold Partner” for Review founder Callum Campbell participated in the Salvation Army’s Angel its efforts to raise money and food as part and British actress Celia Imrie. Global Tree Program, which provides gifts of new of the 2013 “Food for the Bar” campaign. Competition Review reported on the event, clothing, shoes and toys for needy children The Los Angeles Food Bank sources, noting that the “highly competitive quiz age 12 and under. At the Angel Tree acquires and distributes food and other lasted for an intense eight rounds and Adoption Party, Sidley employees selected products to needy people (feeding one covered all manner of general and less angel tags that included the child’s name, million people in LA County every year), general knowledge.” The publication also age, gender, and their present wish list. As conducts hunger education and awareness noted our victory and quoted Kinsella, who a result of Sidley employees’ generosity and campaigns and advocates for public said: “I have been a Reprieve supporter for volunteer efforts, more than 175 “Angels” policies that alleviate hunger. Andy Dunbar a number of years. What attracted me was received gifts during the holiday season. organized Sidley’s effort this year. the creative ways in which they use the law The gifts were organized for pick up and LA to achieve just outcomes, as well as being a For the fourth year in a row, Sidley distribution by the Salvation Army, and given a festive sendoff. The Los Angeles Regional Food Bank Sidley’s pro bono work and our relationship with long-time client Public of law around the world, from “death row to Guantanamo Bay.” Stephen Kinsella (Brussels/London) led the Sidley team, which also included Global Competition lively and fun group to work with.” Counsel, the largest public interest law NY firm in Los Angeles, were highlighted in Frankson participated in the New York appointed General Counsel to the District an interview that KTLA-TV in Los Angeles County Lawyers’ Association’s annual Law of Columbia Bar, the second largest Bar conducted with Thomas Powell a few Day by speaking to 300 students at Flushing in the United States, with nearly 100,000 days before Sidley runners participated High School about civil rights and civil members. Working with a number of other in the Run for Justice, a 5K run/walk liberties, and answering questions about Sidley lawyers, Paul provides volunteer legal held in conjunction with the Los Angeles a career in the law. In conjunction with the advice and services to the D.C. Bar and its Marathon. Running and/or raising money New York office’s Corporate Responsibility Board of Governors, the D.C. Bar Pro Bono this year on behalf of Public Counsel were: program, this event was part of Sidley’s Program, the Office of Bar Counsel and the Stuart Edmiston, Claudia Espinoza, participation in “A Billion + Change,” a Board on Professional Responsibility, and Jonathan Feingold, Mark Haddad, Patrick national campaign in which companies and the many divisions and programs run by Kennell, Heidi Larson Howell, Patrick Liu, professional firms pledge to increase skills- the Bar. At the request of the Bar Board of Thomas Powell, Will Rosenthal, Helena based volunteer hours to address issues in Tseregounis and Mark Woodside. For the their communities. DC Paul Hemmersbaugh serves as the second year in a row, Sidley raised more 26 On May 1, Sara Reichstein and Luke 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. NY On June 19, the office hosted its annual Sidley Service Day, which was Robert Auray (summer associate), Patti Wu (partner) and Toi Carrion (summer associate) volunteering, alongside 60 Sidley lawyers and summer associates, at the Brooklyn High School of the Arts with New York Cares. The New York office hosted its annual Sidley Service Day in June 2013, which is part of the firm’s Corporate Responsibility Program. presented in conjunction with New the New York office’s Diversity Committee, four Legal Outreach high school students York Cares and the firm’s Corporate Benson Cohen, chair of the New York at our office for a one-week internship Responsibility and Summer Associate Associates Committee, Stacy Rotner, and provided financial assistance to cover programs. Continuing the firm’s ongoing Corporate Responsibility Manager, and SAT prep costs. During their time with us, relationship with the Brooklyn High School Client Services Officer Janet Zagorin these rising10th grade students learn a fact of the Arts, more than 50 Sidley lawyers and organized the event. pattern developed from actual Sidley cases, summer associates volunteered during this NY research relevant case law, and present oral day-long event. The day’s projects included painting the school’s new dance studio as well as three other rooms and assembling bookshelves. This was Sidley’s third time volunteering at this public high school in Brooklyn. NY On July 16, the office hosted a On November 20, Sidley hosted a volunteer event to benefit mothers and infants living in homeless shelters. The event was co-sponsored with long-standing firm client KPMG LLP, and was presented in association with New York Cares. Attendees included both Sidley and KPMG lawyers, as well as KPMG consultants, auditors and argument at the end of the week before partners and associates who serve as judges. Maria Meléndez, Karim Aoun and Helena Haywoode are among the many volunteer associates, partners, and summer associates who have been instrumental in the success of this program. volunteer event to benefit members of the accountants. The attendees assembled NY U.S. military. The event was co-sponsored over 600 infant care kits, which eventually on behalf of U.S. veterans, Sidley has with Morgan Stanley Smith Barney’s Legal will be used by mothers in the shelters. partnered with Volunteer Lawyers for and Compliance Division and presented The volunteers were welcomed by KPMG Veterans (VLV), a nonprofit pro bono in association with New York Cares. partner Marc Miller, who praised Sidley and organization which works in conjunction Attendees included lawyers, compliance KPMG’s shared commitment to giving back with Public Counsel to help veterans professionals and summer associates to the community. This event was organized address their legal needs. As part of the who assembled over 600 care kits for U.S. by Stacy Rotner and Janet Zagorin, firm’s partnership with VLV, Client Services service members stationed overseas. The working with Gary Bendinger, Greg Ballard Officer Janet Zagorin and Practice volunteers were welcomed by Nate Saint- and Kevin Burke. Group Coordinator Marianne Bellucci Victor, an executive director of Morgan NY volunteered their time on September 11, Stanley and chair of the Morgan Stanley Legal and Compliance Division’s Diversity and Inclusion Committee. In his opening remarks, he praised Sidley’s and Morgan Stanley’s shared commitment to the goals of inclusion, community involvement and philanthropy. María Meléndez, chair of Legal Outreach is a 28-year old non- profit organization dedicated to working with inner-city youth in partnership with law firms and corporations in NYC. Since 2009, Sidley has been a proud sponsor of Legal Outreach’s work and initiatives. As part of Sidley’s ongoing initiatives 2013 to commemorate 9/11 and provided in-take assistance at a legal services clinic in downtown Manhattan and subsequently authored an article describing why the experience was so meaningful. Each summer since 2009, we have hosted Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 27 PRO BONO HONORS AND AWARDS Sidley frequently is recognized for its unwavering commitment to pro bono service and the work we do. DC Judges Merrick Garland of the U.S. Court of Justice Award for Pro Bono Attorney of the Bono Week in October 2012, the District Appeals and Royce C. Lamberth of the U.S. Year to Andy Dunbar and Thomas Powell of Columbia Court of Appeals and the District Court. at an awards ceremony on July 9, 2013. Superior Court of the District of Columbia DC They received the award for their work In conjunction with National Pro launched the “Capital Pro Bono Honor Roll” to recognize D.C. Bar members who provide 50 hours or more of pro bono service per year. Those providing 100 hours of pro bono service are recognized on the “High Honor Roll.” 120 Sidley lawyers (up from 108 the year before) were listed on the Court’s honor roll posted in March 2013 for their pro bono work in 2012, and 69 of the 120 Sidley lawyers devoted more than 100 On May 8, City Year of Washington presented DC (and now firmwide) Pro Bono Chair Jeff Green with its Idealist of the Year Award at its Idealism in Action Gala. City Year is an education-focused successfully representing the couple who sought permanent guardianship of their four-year-old granddaughter (see “Helping Families and Senior Citizens” above). nonprofit that partners with public schools to keep students in school and on track to succeed. In Washington, D.C., City Year sends 264 young people between the ages of 17 and 24 to 16 high-need schools, where they serve full-time for a DC year. Jeff was honored for his leadership of Committee Outstanding Achievement the DC Pro Bono and Public Interest Law Award on June 10, 2013, for our pro bono Columbia federal courts honored Sidley’s Committee for the last 11 years, where he efforts on behalf of the Committee. This DC office at the “40 at 50” Judicial Pro has specialized in protecting the rights of award was presented in recognition of Bono Recognition Breakfast. Established by poor individuals, and argued and won two Sidley’s work with the Fair Housing Project the DC Circuit Judicial Conference Standing cases in the Supreme Court on behalf of on Johnson v. Wingate, in which we Committee on Pro Bono Legal Services, pro bono criminal defendants. The citation collected a judgment on behalf of a pro the “40 at 50” breakfast recognizes law noted that “Jeff’s unbounded energy bono client with a visual disability who was firms reporting that at least 40 percent of and determination to seek justice for his denied an upper floor apartment because of their lawyers devoted 50 or more hours to indigent clients, and the example he has set her disability. The defendant management pro bono work in the previous year. Jeff for lawyers in the firm, certainly qualify him company went into bankruptcy, significantly Green and Becky Troth represented Sidley as the “Idealist of the Year.’” complicating efforts to collect on the at the April 9 event, which was hosted by LA judgment. The Lawyers’ Committee hours to pro bono service in 2012. DC The chief judges of the District of Bet Tzedek, a non-profit in Los Angeles that provides free legal services to lowincome people, presented its Elyse S. Kline Jeff Green with his Idealist of the Year Award. 28 Sidley received a Washington Lawyers’ recognized the Sidley team of David Kuney, Kurt Jacobs and Jeff Morrow. Bet Tzedek Attorney Erickson Albrecht presenting the Elyse S. Kline Justice Award for Pro Bono Attorney of the Year to Thomas Powell and Andy Dunbar. Anton Pulung Hartanto (Marjorie’s client), Senator Durbin, and Marjorie Baltazar at the National Immigrant Justice Center’s (NIJC’s) annual awards luncheon. NIJC awarded Senator Durbin, the event’s keynote speaker, the Jeanne and Joseph Sullivan Award. CH At the ADL National Commission Meeting: Barry Curtiss-Lusher, ADL National Chair; Karen Ginsberg-Greenwald; Rob Velevis; Abraham H. Foxman, ADL National Director. Richard (Dick) O’Malley, Jr., Chicago Chair of the Pro Bono Committee, accepted the Cabrini Green Legal Aid’s (CGLA) Dr. Kenneth and Margaret Taylor “Spirit of Generosity” Award on behalf of the Chicago office. CGLA honored Sidley as a long-time CH In June, Marjorie Baltazar was supporter of CGLA and leader in the legal awarded the Rising Star Award by the community. CGLA noted that the firm has National Immigrant Justice Center. She maintained a constant engagement with received the award at NIJC’s 14th Annual CGLA through Board service on CGLA’s Human Rights Awards luncheon, where U.S. Board of Directors, Advisory Board and Senator Dick Durbin also was recognized Young Professionals Board, from retired for his legislative commitment to immigrant partner Jim Archer’s contributions for and human rights. Marjorie was recognized over 40 years, to Richard “Brad” Kapnick, for her work on behalf of a gay man from who served as Chair of both the Board of Indonesia who obtained U.S. asylum Directors and Advisory Board, to Courtney following a three-year effort. Our pro bono Rosen, who served as Secretary and representation included filing an affirmative Treasurer on the Board of Directors. Sidley asylum claim with U.S. Citizenship and attorneys and staff also have provided Immigration Services (USCIS), obtaining hundreds of hours of direct service to CGLA employment authorization for our client clients over the years. Mark Taylor, the son of Dr. Kenneth and Margaret Taylor, the benefactors of CGLA for which the award is named, presented the Spirit of Generosity Award to Dick O’Malley. and subsequently defending against an order of removal before the Executive Office of Immigration Review (EOIR). At the evidentiary hearing, the EOIR heard testimony from our client as well as from his husband and partner of over 12 years. The EOIR also heard telephonic testimony from a distinguished professor who provided background regarding living conditions for gay men and lesbians in Indonesia. After nearly four hours, the Immigration Judge issued a grant of asylum. Tim Payne supervised the matter. Rob Velevis, counsel in the firm’s Dallas office, was honored by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) with the 2013 Daniel R. Ginsberg Leadership Award at its National Commission Meeting. This honor is given in recognition of leadership in the fight against anti-Semitism, racism and all forms of prejudice. Rob has been a member of the ADL’s North Texas/Oklahoma Regional Board since 2010. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 29 NY/LA Sidley was honored to receive the 2013 Pro Bono Publico Award at LatinoJustice PRLDEF’s Annual Awards Gala on October 23 in New York City. The letter announcing the award cites the ways in which Sidley has supported LatinoJustice over the years, including preparing the Supreme Court amicus brief in Shelby County v. Holder. Our partner Maria Meléndez serves on LatinoJustice’s Board, and she and Tom Cole accepted the award on the firm’s behalf. LA On June 3, 2013, the Los Angeles Center for Law and Justice (LACLJ) honored Sidley with its Pro Bono Partner of the Year Award in recognition of Sidley’s Juan Cartagena, LatinoJustice PRLDEF’s President and General Counsel, Sidley partners Maria Meléndez and Tom Cole. widespread participation in its programs to combat domestic violence. The award recognized the pro bono service of Frank Broccolo, Andy Dunbar, Bridget Johnsen, Amy Lally, Jennifer Zargarof, Stuart Edmiston, Francis Lam, Chris Munsey, Brent Nichols, Lillian Park, the 2013 nated to receive P has been nomi LL n sti Au ley tober 23,2013 m you that Sid taking place Oc pleasure to infor al Awards Gala, nu An 's It is my distinct EF LD PR ustice Award at LatinoJ Pro Bono Publico it izations that exhib in New York City. duals and organ y honored indivi bono tor o his pr ar the ye s + fie 40 pli P exem LDEF has over its Sidley Austin LL LatinoJustice PR aningful d public service. strategies in a me tice, diversity an al jus leg to t its t en ou itm rry ca to y ilit a real comm ab e's sive pro bono LatinoJustic ential comprehen is so integral to a tribute to its ess as leadership that ard aw the eiving y. The firm is rec and impactful wa e. tic work. us oJ tin La th y to carry out its partnership wi e PRLDEF's abilit fellow, ed LatinoJustic e nc iat ha oc en s ass ha n red al defer , Sidley Austi with a phenomen Through the years g rights and d LatinoJustice touching on votin the firm provide ses , ca 09 y 20 ke in of , er ple mb nu a For exam on m nues to tea nti al co stin our leg ss and Sidley Au who worked with tical to our succe cri Sonia Marquez, ovide is t pr en to tal hip al ws leg g llo e. Access to youn er Civil Rights Fe immigrant justic tino Justice Summ ed from La lud LS ec PA pr w lly ne cia r an be fin by funding ou might otherwise help on that front nt of color who xican American t to both the Me serving law stude or de a pp su to s y ide nit ov rtu t pr tha t the an oppo or eff an in Austin prepared cently, PRLDEF, Sidley rights career. Re ere d LatinoJustice pursuing a civil sev an st F) mo DE AL the is (M is d Education Fund v. Holder case. Th Legal Defense an Shelby County, AL drafted a d the an of t d or ize pp gan su or Austin amicus brief in RA), and Sidley national Latino se that will ting Rights Act (V brief informs a ca ction 5 of the Vo is Se Th to s. ue ge en iss A all ch on VR e recent tiv ec years to rsp pe for l color torica communities of presenting a his tinos and other compelling brief La ts ec aff o als t bu mediate impact have not only im d the LatinoJustice an come. sitive impact on the n has made a po of sti er Au mb ley me Sid ry ys empla many wa z has been an ex As a bonus to the every turn. Maria D. Melénde n at ow on s ssi m' mi fir d an the rk ve, pporting our wo community we ser promoting and su e ard of Directors, eak for the entir LatinoJustice Bo on and work. I sp Sidley pport of our missi of su ns its tio for ibu gh ntr ou erful co Sidley Austin en ognize the wond We cannot thank we all are to rec l you how excited tel I t. en en wh res ard rep unity we staff and Bo e and the comm m to LatinoJustic Austin and its tea Juan Cartagena neral Counsel President and Ge 30 Clarence Rowland, Mirna Thompson and Claudia Espinoza, as well as the service of Ellyce Cooper and Jodi Lopez on LACLJ’s board of directors. Frank Broccolo accepted the award on behalf of the Los Angeles office at LACLJ’s annual gala. LA Sidley received two awards from the ACLU in 2013, in addition to the award received in 2012. Sidley received the ACLU’s 2013 Community Service Pro Bono Award for the work performed for the Citizens’ Commission on Jail Violence by Kim Dunne, Doug Axel, Brent Wilner, Pat Kennell, Yolanda Ochoa, and KK O’Connell. The ACLU also awarded Sidley its 2013 Pro Bono Service Award in appreciation of the real estate work performed by Mitchell Poole, Erin Natter and Drew Norman. Frank Broccolo serves on the Board of the ACLU Foundation of Southern California. SIDLEY‘S PRO BONO AWARDS CEREMONIES – HONORING OUR OWN Chicago – The 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 the Chicago associates who exemplify the spirit and principles of pro bono service that Tom Morsch had 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’s Pro Bono Reception honoring pro bono work performed in 2012 was held on March 6, 2013. The Honorable Thomas L. Kilbride, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois, was the keynote speaker. The ceremony’s guests included local legal service agencies and non-profit organizations with whom the firm has a strong relationship, allowing us to introduce our lawyers to new pro bono opportunities. For their pro bono work in 2012, the firm honored eight Chicago attorneys. The office honored Kate Falahee Newman, malpractice, which required retaining an Donielle McCutheon, and Barbara expert and extensive discovery. The case is Barreno for their work on behalf of a pending. native Cameroon woman who had fled her country in 2007 after she was forced to marry a polygamous village chief and suffered repeated physical, sexual and emotional abuse. After extensive research, briefing, and hearing preparation, the team argued that the client had been persecuted because of her political opinion and membership in a particular social group. The client was granted asylum on Feb. 1, 2012. Susan Brehm* and Christopher Gaul represented a woman who fled Honduras in 1997 to escape her abusive ex-husband. Sidley took her case approximately 10 years ago, after an immigration judge denied her asylum. While her case was on appeal, the guidelines for domestic abuse claims of asylum changed, and her case was remanded for further investigation. Chris, Susan and others worked tirelessly, tying the abuse that our client suffered to Daniel Craig was honored for dedicating her political opinion that she—and not her more than 500 hours to representing a ex-husband—is entitled to control her body pro bono plaintiff in a Section 1983 action and, separately, that her abuse resulted from in the Northern District of Illinois. Dan’s her status as a Honduran woman unable to client, an inmate at Stateville Correctional leave an intimate relationship. Our client Center, had an ear infection that was treated obtained asylum and, at the judge’s strong inadequately by the prison’s medical staff. suggestion, the government waived appeal. What was a curable condition deteriorated into a life-threatening illness. He required major surgery, including the removal of a portion of his skull, and suffered permanent hearing loss. Dan’s work on behalf of his client entailed adding a claim for medical Sidley was appointed to represent a client in a civil rights case that the client had filed pro se against two Chicago police officers who had arrested him after a purported domestic dispute. Although the charges were dismissed, the arrest itself was a parole violation and as a result, the client lost At the Thomas H. Morsch Awards ceremony: Front row l-r: Richard O’Malley, Chicago Pro Bono Chair; Kristen Seeger; Thomas H. Morsch; Katharine Falahee Newman; Barbara Barreno; Donielle McCutcheon; John G. Levi, Sidley partner and Chair, Legal Services Corporation; Melanie Walker; and Steve Carlson. Back row l-r: David Gordon; Guest speaker Hon. Thomas L. Kilbride, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Illinois; Daniel Craig; Christopher Gaul; Susan Brehm;* Timothy Hargadon; and Lawrence Fogel. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report Charles Hoffman (left) from the Capital Post Conviction Unit chatting with Thomas H. Morsch (center) and our guest speaker, the Hon. Chief Thomas L. Kilbride, Supreme Court Chief Justice of Illinois. 31 both his liberty and his vehicle. Lawrence as successfully defending against the State’s Awards Ceremony, commemorating Sidley’s Fogel took the case, making multiple visits motion to dismiss. Tim made multiple trips late partner Vincent Prada, who devoted 14 to the correction facility, correcting and to Alabama to interview jurors and other years of his life to representing an inmate overcoming defects in the pro se filings, witnesses and was involved in the week- on death row. At the ceremony, D.C. dealing with a bright but difficult client, long evidentiary hearing in Mobile in 2010. Managing partner Mark Hopson recognized finding and dealing with a difficult witness Tim prepared multiple fact and expert 120 D.C. attorneys, legal assistants, and (the transgendered individual involved in witnesses for the hearing, including highly litigation support staff for meeting the ABA the domestic dispute), and conducting emotional evidence from family members Challenge of providing at least 60 hours of the trial. While the jury ultimately found for whose testimony during the mitigation pro bono assistance in 2012. Recipients the defendants, Larry’s performance and phase of the original trial was presented of the Vincent F. Prada Pro Bono Awards dedication were exemplary. ineffectively by trial counsel. As the court are allowed to designate a legal services found in granting relief to Mr. Ziegler in organization to which the firm contributes 2012, the conduct of the original trial fell far $100 in the recipient’s name. Tim Hargadon was honored for his contributions to the William Ziegler pro bono death penalty appeal. Tim joined the case when he was a new associate in the New York office and has been an integral member of the Ziegler team ever since, spending long hours researching, writing, and fact finding during the investigation and pleading phase of the proceedings, as well below minimum constitutional standards. Washington, DC – The Vincent F. Prada Pro Bono Awards On July 12, the Washington, D.C. office held its seventh annual Vincent F. Prada Pro Bono Carter Phillips, Rachel Ketner, Jordan Ketner, Paul Moates, Ron Flagg,* Jana Singer, Josh Prada, Bart Stichman, Becky Troth, and Betsy Howe attend the 2013 Vincent F. Prada Pro Bono Awards Ceremony. Recipients of the 2012 Vincent F. Prada Awards. 32 Bart Stichman, Joint Executive Director of the National Veterans Legal Services Programs (NVLSP), introduced the keynote speaker for the ceremony, Jordan Ketner. Jordan is an Iraq War veteran and a member of the Sabo class action NVLSP brought on behalf of veterans with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. His moving remarks brought home representatives of local legal service Alexis Buese and Chris Munsey were the impact of our pro bono work on the agencies and non-profit organizations with recognized for representing an elderly lives of the individuals we serve. Attendees whom the firm has a strong relationship. The couple who were the victims of a Ponzi at the event included Vince Prada’s speakers from our legal services partners scheme. The team obtained a favorable widow, Jana Singer, their son, Joshua, included Hector Villagra and James Gilliam settlement for our clients whereby the and representatives of the legal services of the ACLU, Diego Cartagena and Erickson perpetrators were jointly and severally organizations with whom Sidley works in the Albrecht from Bet Tzedek, and Hellen Hong liable for all the money that our clients Washington, D.C. area. We also welcomed from the Los Angeles Center for Law and invested, and our clients received a deed Ronald Flagg, former firm-wide pro bono Justice. Pat Kennell, an associate who of trust on the investment property and an chair and now Vice President and General organized the LA office team for Public agreement that a lien would remain on one Counsel of the Legal Services Corporation. Counsel’s Run for Justice and helped with perpetrator’s home until the amounts owed the legal program with Dorsey High School, our clients were fully paid. Liesl Schweizer also spoke. LA Managing Partner Mike helped on the real estate aspects of the Kelley gave the closing remarks. settlement and Amy Lally and Michelle The Los Angeles Pro Bono Awards On July 25, 2013, the Los Angeles office honored attorneys and staff for their pro bono service over the past year. Frank Broccolo, Los Angeles partner and Pro Bono Chair, was the keynote speaker at the expansive ceremony, which included In addition to the lawyers mentioned for Goodman supervised the matter. their pro bono successes in other parts Rollin Ransom and Amanda Lopez were of this report, the Los Angeles office recognized for their work with the National recognized the following teams for their Veterans Legal Services Program as a part 2013 pro bono work: of the firmwide Veterans Benefits Program. They obtained a victory for a retired U.S. Summer associates Andrew Talai,* Andria Montoya,* Charlie Sarosy,* Laura D’Iorio,* Rachael Rezabek,* and partner Jodi Lopez and Adam Grajewski (military veteran) attend the LA Pro Bono Awards ceremony. The LA Pro Bono Awards ceremony: Brent Nichols, and summer associates Andrew Talai,* Lauren Goldman,* Lauren De Lilly* and Emily Culbertson. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 33 Army staff sergeant suffering from PTSD proceeding by her landlord seeking their from the Upland Housing Authority (UHA) who had served with U.S. forces in both immediate eviction. The matter resulted in without due process of law (see “Protecting Iraq and Afghanistan. The Army retired our a settlement agreement that preserved our Our Neighbors’ Homes”). client because of his condition, but failed client’s eligibility for Section 8 benefits and to provide him the compensation to which provided her with months to relocate. Also, veterans who are retired due to combat- while working with Bet Tzedek, Jonathan related disabilities are entitled. The client Feingold was recognized for his work on the was awarded monthly compensation and unlawful detainer action mentioned above nearly five years of back pay. The office also (see “Protecting Our Neighbors’ Homes”). recognized Amanda Lopez for successfully representing an immigrant detainee at his bond hearing, for which he had waited nearly a year. Amy Lally, Alex Doherty, and Lauren McCray were recognized for their work with Western Center on Law and Poverty and Inland Counties Legal Services in which they We recognized Max Fischer and Francis successfully represented two low income Lam who, with Bet Tzedek, successfully clients who were denied rental assistance represented a disabled single mother of three facing an unlawful detainer Paul Tepper (Western Center on Law and Poverty), Amy Lally and Frank Broccolo at the LA Pro Bono Awards. Patrick Liu and Helena Tseregounis receive their Pro Bono Advocate awards. Hector Villagra, James Gilliam, Mitchell Poole and Drew Norman at the LA Pro Bono Awards. 34 SPONSORSHIP OF PRO BONO GRADUATE FELLOWS, EXTERNS, AND LOANED ASSOCIATES Sidley’s Fellowship/Externship program allows associates to work at The time spent with the non-profit organizations allows associates non-profit organizations in the community either before they begin to learn about the organizations, their staffs and their work. The working at the firm or, in the case of the New York office, after they associates develop relationships that they can continue and have been with the firm for some time. Through the program, Sidley expand when they come to Sidley. These relationships often are an provides a fellowship stipend or pays the salary of the Fellows or important source of pro bono matters for the firm and the associates Externs to allow them to work for a non-profit organization for 4 – 10 throughout their careers. We benefit because the associates acquire weeks. In Washington, D.C., Los Angeles and Chicago, they can experience in a short period of time and develop skills dealing with choose among a variety of non-profit organizations, including those clients, negotiating with other lawyers and advocating in court or in that provide direct services to indigent people, as well as those that other settings in which they need to persuade a decision-maker. engage in impact litigation and policy work. In New York, associates work for three to four months at Her Justice (f/k/a/ inMotion, Inc.), an organization that provides free legal services to indigent and lowincome women and children in domestic crisis. Chicago Office Sponsored Nine 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. Heather Benzmiller was a PILI Fellow at the McArthur Justice Center before starting a clerkship. Jaya Gupta was a PILI Fellow with Illinois Legal Aid Online, whose mission is to make legal content and resources more accessible to low-income individuals and those who cannot afford an attorney. Jaya created and revised content on common legal issues that could be understood and used by individuals with no legal training and often, little education. Jessica Krull served as a PILI Fellow with the Edwin F. Mandel Legal Aid Clinic’s Criminal and Juvenile Justice Project, which provides legal representation to juveniles accused of crime and works to improve the system of justice in the juvenile and adult criminal court. During her Fellowship, Jessica worked on several cases representing incarcerated minors in the Cook County Juvenile Justice System. She helped with client and witness interviews, memoranda drafting, pre-trial strategy development, and motion practice. Greg Oguss served as a PILI Fellow in the civil rights department of Access Living, a Chicago-based nonprofit organization committed to fostering a fully inclusive society for people with disabilities. During his fellowship, Greg principally advocated on behalf of Chicago area public housing residents with disabilities who were seeking disability accommodations from landlords and building managers under federal fair housing laws. In connection with this advocacy, Greg drafted briefs on behalf of clients with disabilities, performed legal research and interviewed prospective clients and witnesses. In addition, Greg researched and drafted a strategic memorandum concerning a proposed class action lawsuit on behalf of deaf and hearing-impaired renters against housing providers engaged in systemic patterns of unlawful disability discrimination. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 35 Kristen Rau served as a PILI Fellow at the Southern Africa Litigation Centre before starting a clerkship. Nadan Sehic served as a PILI Fellow with The Young Center for Immigrant Children’s Rights at the University of Chicago. During his Fellowship, Nadan conducted research and drafted letters advocating for the best interests of unaccompanied minors in immigration and other proceedings. He also prepared a survey of the U.S. juvenile court system and drafted memoranda to help advocate for comprehensive reform of the U.S. immigration system’s treatment of unaccompanied minors. Laura Sexton served as a PILI Fellow with Health and Disability Advocates, working primarily with the Chicago Medical-Legal Partnership for Children (CMLPC). The CMLPC is dedicated to providing legal services to low-income families on a variety of issues, including housing, domestic violence, Medicaid and private insurance, public benefits, and early intervention. In addition to providing direct legal services, the CMLPC provides training to medical staff and works on policy development at the state and local levels. As part of her work with the CMLPC, Laura researched the medical policies of local Chicago schools and wrote a report identifying possible areas of improvement. Amy Timm served as a PILI Fellow with BPI (Business and Professional People for the Public Interest), a public interest law and policy center working to create solutions to the Chicago region’s most compelling social justice challenges. During her Fellowship, Amy focused on public education reform and expanding early childhood education opportunities in Chicago, particularly in Altgeld Gardens and other public housing communities. She also researched state foreclosure law and drafted and reviewed various contracts with BPI’s outside service providers. Nicholas Tygesson was a PILI Fellow at the Center for Disability and Elder Law before starting a clerkship. 36 Washington, D.C. Office Sponsored Seven D.C. Bar Pro Bono Graduate Fellows 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, 63 incoming Sidley associates have served as Graduate Fellows at 35 different non-profit organizations in the D.C. area. Sean Dickson was a Fellow at the Domestic Violence Legal Empowerment and Appeals Project (DV LEAP), the only organization devoted to appellate advocacy and impact litigation for survivors of domestic violence. There, Sean led a docket monitoring program, evaluating whether cases pending in the Supreme Court would benefit from amici detailing the domestic violence impact of the litigation. Sean also conducted a 50-state survey of cases involving Parental Alienation Syndrome, a debunked concept often used by abusive fathers to gain custody of children. This survey is currently being adapted into an article demonstrating the gender bias in courts’ treatment of parental alienation claims. Sean is continuing to work with DV LEAP as a pro bono Sidley client, helping expand their docket monitoring program to circuit and state supreme courts. Fran Faircloth served as an Education and Employment Fellow at the National Women’s Law Center. During her fellowship, Fran worked primarily on Title IX issues, including a complaint advocating for better access to high school athletics for girls in D.C. Public Schools and a letter supporting the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights in its enforcement of Title IX’s ban on sexual harassment and assault at colleges and universities. Fran also helped draft an amicus brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in a case involving alleged civil rights violations by a government subcontractor. Kevin Garvey was a Fellow at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a non-profit, public-interest legal and educational institution with a mission to protect the free expression of all faiths, both domestically and internationally. Kevin worked primarily with the appellate litigation team on the Hobby Lobby v. Sebelius case. Kevin was involved at the Petition for Rehearing En Banc stage in the Tenth Circuit, and participated in the preparation for oral argument. Kevin also helped the Becket Fund’s litigation team with its active docket of First Amendment, RFRA and RLUIPA cases in federal district courts around the country. Nick Giles was a Fellow at The Constitution Project (TCP), a bipartisan think tank in Washington, D.C. dedicated to safeguarding the rule of law through consensus-based policy solutions. Nick worked with the TCP staff on a number of their ongoing projects, on issues ranging from ensuring adequate due process for detainees at Guantanamo Bay to achieving meaningful Brady reform. In addition, Nick helped spearhead one of TCP’s newest projects: assembling a blue-ribbon committee to examine and suggest reforms to the myriad state and local laws governing DNA collection of arrestees. S. Yasir Latifi was a Fellow at the Brookings Institution. He worked on issues ranging from foreign work permits and unemployment benefits to class action lawsuits and compliance with federal disabilities laws. Of note, Yasir led internal efforts to craft an emergency response plan for staff located throughout the world. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 37 Julia Mirabella served as a law fellow at the Center for American Progress (CAP), a think tank dedicated to progressive ideas and action. During her fellowship, Julia helped CAP’s Legal Policy team prepare for the beginning of the 2013 Supreme Court term by researching and writing articles assessing upcoming cases. She also helped plan and execute a Why Courts Matter event on religious liberty. Whitney Nebolisa served as a Fellow for Whitman Walker Health (WWH), a Washington, D.C. based non-profit community health center that specializes in HIV/AIDS care, and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender care. During her fellowship, Whitney concentrated on drafting healthcare privacy and compliance policies. She also helped assess potential internal compliance policy violations, and helped educate WWH’s staff on compliance matters. Legal Aid Society of the District of Columbia 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 approximately four months working with the Barbara McDowell Appellate Advocacy Project and is able to argue one of the cases on which he/she worked in the D.C. Court of 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, six 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, and Christopher Bates. New York Sponsors the Her Justice (f/k/a inMotion) Externship Program 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. 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. 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. 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 three externs at Her Justice in 2012. In 2013, no associates were detailed exclusively to Her Justice, but the office handled many Her Justice matters in-house. The externship program will continue with the placement of a new Her Justice extern in February 2014. 38 Los Angeles Sponsored Six Pro Bono Graduate Fellows Sidley-LA has a program where incoming associates can spend their first four – six weeks with the firm interning for the public interest organization of their choice. Sidley pays their full salary and benefits during this time. Those involved with the program this past year are: Niccolo Barber was a Fellow at the ACLU of Southern California where he focused on immigrants’ rights. He worked on a wide variety of matters, including an extended research project on the due process rights of illiterate immigrant detainees. Niccolo also worked with a team of ACLU attorneys challenging a federal program that permits U.S. immigration authorities to indefinitely delay immigration benefits to applicants from Muslim countries. Miles Fuller was a Fellow at the Los Angeles Center for Law and Justice, a non-profit organization that provides legal services to low-income families. During his fellowship, Miles helped two clients obtain restraining orders for domestic violence. He also guided two young immigrants through the process of requesting deferred action for childhood arrivals, which would allow them to work legally in the United States for two years without fear of deportation. Matt Light served as a Pro Bono Fellow at Bet Tzedek Legal Services, where he worked primarily with the impact litigation team, fighting for low-income tenants’ rights in several slumlord cases and one wrongful eviction case. Matt researched the viability of potential tort claims, helped amend a complaint to add a new defendant, interviewed clients and witnesses, and propounded and responded to discovery. Laura Richardson served as a Pro Bono Fellow at Mental Health Advocacy Services (MHAS), an organization in Los Angeles dedicated to protecting and advancing the legal rights of people with mental disabilities. As a Fellow, Laura collaborated with Maggie Brandow and Professor Jyoti Nanda in the creation of the MHAS/ UCLA School of Law Youth and Justice Clinic. In this clinic, student teams work directly with detained youth to represent the youth’s interest and with the youth’s attorney on civil legal matters. Laura also helped Maggie Brandow prepare a practice guide to help defense attorneys who represent juvenile clients with mental health needs. In addition, Laura researched and wrote memoranda on various special education topics such as state reporting requirements, home-hospital instruction, and online public education. Mark Scoville served as a Fellow at the Western Center on Law and Poverty, a non-profit organization in Los Angeles that works to help secure housing, health care and a strong safety net for low-income Californians. During his fellowship, Mark reviewed a large number of county General Relief programs for compliance with state law and conducted research on a proposal that would have allowed a public housing authority to evict families with truant children. Wen Shen was a Fellow at the ACLU of Southern California. During her fellowship, she worked on several immigration-related projects, including a motion for compliance with the permanent injunction in Rodriguez v. Robbins, in which Sidley, as co-counsel of the ACLU-SC, helped the ACLU-SC obtain a permanent injunction requiring the government to provide bond hearings to immigrant detainees experiencing prolonged detention. She also researched issues relating to the limitations period to file motions to reopen removal proceedings, intercountry adoption and how it confers citizenship on adopted children, and immigrant detainees’ right to written transcripts of certain immigration proceedings. Sidley Austin LLP • 2013 Pro Bono and Community Service Report 39 2013 PRO BONO AND PUBLIC INTEREST LAW COMMITTEE MEMBERS FIRMWIDE CHAIR Jeff Green (Washington, D.C.) HONG KONG +1.202.736.8291 BRUSSELS Ken Daly Charles Allen, China Chair +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 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 NEW YORK John Gallo +1.312.853.7494 David Gordon +1.312.853.7159 Erin Kelly +1.312.853.7272 Scott Lassar +1.312.853.7668 Courtney Rosen +1.312.853.7669 David Siegel +1.312.853.7246 Melville Washburn +1.312.853.2070 Neil Wyland +1.312.853.7869 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 +1.214.981.3385 GENEVA 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 40 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 DALLAS Li Chen, Dallas Chair LOS ANGELES Joshua Hill, San Francisco and Palo Alto Chair +1.415.772.1248 WASHINGTON, DC Betsy Howe, Washington, D.C. Chair +1.202.736.8338 Lisa Crosby +1.202.736.8754 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 Offices BEIJING GENEVA SAN FRANCISCO Suite 608, Tower C2, Oriental Plaza No. 1 East Chang An Avenue Dong Cheng District Beijing 100738 China T: +86.10.5905.5588 F: +86.10.6505.5360 Rue de Lausanne 139 Sixth Floor 1202 Geneva Switzerland T: +41.22.308.00.00 F: +41.22.308.00.01 555 California Street San Francisco, California 94104 T: +1.415.772.1200 F: +1.415.772.7400 HONG KONG BOSTON 60 State Street 34th Floor Boston, Massachusetts 02109 T: +1.617.223.0300 F: +1.617.223.0301 Level 39 Two Int’l Finance Centre 8 Finance Street Central Hong Kong T: +852.2509.7888 F: +852.2509.3110 BRUSSELS HOUSTON NEO Building Rue Montoyer 51 Montoyerstraat B-1000 Brussels Belgium T: +32.2.504.6400 F: +32.2.504.6401 1000 Louisiana Street Suite 6000 Houston, Texas 77002 T: +1.713.495.4500 F: +1.713.495.7799 SHANGHAI Suite 1901 Shui On Plaza 333 Middle Huai Hai Road Shanghai 200021 China T: +86.21.2322.9322 F: +86.21.5306.8966 SINGAPORE SYDNEY LONDON CHICAGO One South Dearborn Chicago, Illinois 60603 T: +1.312.853.7000 F: +1.312.853.7036 Woolgate Exchange 25 Basinghall Street London, EC2V 5HA United Kingdom T: +44.20.7360.3600 F: +44.20.7626.7937 DALLAS 2001 Ross Avenue Dallas, Texas 75201 T: +1.214.981.3300 F: +1.214.981.3400 LOS ANGELES 555 West Fifth Street Los Angeles, California 90013 T: +1.213.896.6000 F: +1.213.896.6600 FRANKFURT Taunusanlage 1 60329 Frankfurt am Main Germany T: +49.69.22.221.4000 F: +49.69.22.221.4001 Level 31 Six Battery Road Singapore 049909 T: +65.6230.3900 F: +65.6230.3939 NEW YORK 787 Seventh Avenue New York, New York 10019 T: +1.212.839.5300 F: +1.212.839.5599 PALO ALTO 1001 Page Mill Road Building 1 Palo Alto, California 94304 T: +1.650.565.7000 F: +1.650.565.7100 Level 10, 7 Macquarie Place Sydney NSW 2000 Australia T: +61.2.8214.2200 F: +61.2.8214.2211 TOKYO Sidley Austin Nishikawa Foreign Law Joint Enterprise Marunouchi Building 23F 4-1, Marunouchi 2-chome Chiyoda-Ku, Tokyo 100-6323 Japan T: +81.3.3218.5900 F: +81.3.3218.5922 WASHINGTON, D.C. 1501 K Street N.W. 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