LawyersandSettlements.com has a new column that looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we’re talking about the annual Business Clothes Drive by Clothes the Deal, which is supported by many Los Angeles area law firms…
The Consumer Attorneys Association of Los Angeles (CAALA) is among the many volunteers behind an important organization that has helped thousands of Americans get back into the job market. Since 1995, Clothes the Deal (CTD) has gathered high-quality business clothing and accessories that are then given to job hunters who may not otherwise have the resources to afford a new “interview suit”.
CAALA is the final homerun phase of its annual clothing drive for Clothes the Deal. Last year alone, CTD distributed 15,000 pieces of business clothing to over 6,000 job seekers in California alone.
Clothes the Deal was the brainchild of Ann Gusiff who wrote the The Deal’s first business plan as part of an MBA Thesis in Chicago in 1995. Two years later in 1997, Clothes The Deal was recognized by the IRS as a 501(c)(3) organization.
The organization, which also helps job seekers learn to dress for success, established an important partnership in 1998 with the Los Angeles County Office of Education (LACOE). Clothes The Deal moved their operations out of the garage it had been using and into a space at LACOE’s facility in Downey, California.
Volunteers who gather from organizations like CAALA are critical to the success of Clothes the Deal.
“With the rise in unemployment and the decrease in funding, we have had to brainstorm ideas of how to fundraise to help those in need of our services,” says CTD president, Deborah Brusavich. “We soon realized how many people are willing to donate their time to help our organization thrive during a time of such uncertainty.”
Law firms generate thousands of pieces of business clothing for Clothes the Deal. In 2010, the Consumer Attorneys Association of Los Angeles and 30 individual law firms such as Agnew Brusavich, Esner Chang and Todd Bloomfield LLP hosted clothing drives for CTD or provided drop-off spots.
Last spring, the Paul Hastings Janofsky & Walker law firm pitched in and ran a successful two-week clothing drive for CTD. The firm was so impressed with the work that Clothes the Deal does that it offered a number of pro bono services to CTD.
“We are really grateful to the work Paul Hastings Janofsky & Walker is doing on our behalf and proud to be one of their charitable causes,” says Brusavich. “We are looking forward to a long and prosperous relationship.”
The current CTD Business Wear Drive ends tomorrow, January 5, 2011–but there is still time to drop off your donation at the following locations:
Girardi and Keese, 1126 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90017
Law Office of Lisa Maki, 1111 S. Grand Avenue, Suite 101, Los Angeles, CA 90015
Rice and Bloomfield,LLP, 5550 Topanga Canyon Blvd, Suite 200, Woodland Hills, CA 91367
The Cochran Firm, 4929 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 1010, Los Angeles, CA 90010
Greene, Broillet & Wheeler, 100 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 21, Santa Monica, CA 90401
Cheong, Denove, Rowell & Bennett, 10100 Santa Monica Blvd., Suite 2460, Los Angeles, CA 90067
Esner and Chang, 234 E. Colorado Blvd., Suite 750, Pasadena, CA 91101
Tim Ryan and Associates, 8072 Warner Avenue, Huntington Beach, CA 92647
Law Offices of C. Michael Alder, 9308 Civic Center Drive, Beverly Hills, CA 90210
AgnewBrusavich, 20355 Hawthorne Blvd. 2nd Floor, Torrance, CA 90503
Chapman, Glucksman, Dean, Rober & Barger, 11900 West Olympic Blvd., Suite 800, Los Angeles, CA 90064
Dimarco, Arujo & Montevideo, 1324 North Broadway, Santa Ana, CA 92706
Clothes The Deal is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization that assist men, women, and at-risk youth in transition, empowering them to interview with confidence, gain employment and achieve economic self-sufficiency.
LawyersandSettlements.com has a new column that looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we talk with Attorney Jameika Williams Mangum of The Mangum Law Firm in Chicago…
It might sound like a small case, but in David Liberty’s world, the stakes were high. The 51-year-old homeless man was accused of assaulting another homeless man, and without a lawyer to defend him, he would likely do 30 days in the notorious Cook County Jail.
“He asked me if I had ever been in the Cook County jail,” says young attorney Jameika Williams Mangum. “I told I had not and he said ‘well, you don’t want to go there, because I have been there before and it isn’t a place you want to be`.”
The center of Liberty’s world was his truck. He did odd jobs and worked as a painter sometimes. If he went to jail, he would almost certainly lose the truck and everything in it.
“He was very worried about that—he wanted to know what would happen to his truck,” says Mangum.
So you see, to David Liberty, this case was huge.
Chicago lawyers are expected to work out a deal with clients who have a limited ability to pay, but Mangum knew from the beginning that this was definitely a pro bono case—even if it meant hours of preparation and going to trial, she had no intention of sending him a bill.
Mangum runs a general law practice, and Liberty is definitely not any lawyer’s dream client. “You can`t call him on the telephone, or send him a letter in the mail because he basically lives on the street,” says Mangum. “All our meetings took place at the courthouse and I would write notes down for him.”
And although justice is supposed to be blind, the reality is appearance counts when you go before a judge or jury.
“I immediately let the court know this man cannot afford to buy a suit and tie,” says Mangum.
“He would come to court and he had not changed his clothes in weeks,” says Mangum. “So I explained the situation to the prosecutor and asked him to let the judge and everyone else know why he looked the way he did.”
In the end, Liberty’s charge was negotiated down to disorderly conduct. No jail time, and no fine.
“You don’t have to do pro bono work—but I think pro bono is extremely important and I am involved in another right now,” says Mangum. “In these economic times, people can not always afford to pay a lawyer $300, $400 or $500 an hour. They have real issues and real problems and there are not very many places where they can get help.”
“It is unfortunate that people with limited means end up serving jail time for a crime they didn’t commit or serve time when it could have been avoided if they had proper representation,” she says.
Jamieka Williams Mangum is a native of Los Angeles who recently opened a law office in Chicago and is proving herself to be a force to be reckoned with. She recently won an eyebrow-raising not guilty verdict for a man accused of knowingly bringing a gun on board an aircraft. Mangum argued he had simply forgotten it in his bag.
LawyersandSettlements.com has a new column that looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we talk with Attorney Joseph Dunn of Wigington, Rumley & Dunn…
Attorneys Joseph Dunn and David Rumley haveinvited 11-year-old Mason Archer to go hunting with them again this year in January on Rumley’s ranch in Texas. They first met little Mason when he was just five. A drunk driver slammed into the family’s truck leaving Mason paralyzed from the chest down and lawyers from Wigington, Rumley & Dunn were asked to represent the family in a complex personal injury lawsuit.
“We’ve come to know Mason and his family very well over the years. He is just such a special kid and he has such a positive attitude,” says Dunn.
“He likes to hunt,” says Joesph Dunn. “So, I asked him last hunting season if he wanted to come down [to the ranch]. He got excited about that. We got all set up for him and flew him down.”
“We got some wheelchair accessible hunting blinds,” says Dunn. “I brought my two boys and my partner, David Rumley, brought his son and we had a boys weekend, hunting and sitting around the campfire at night.”
“We were out hunting on the ranch for 3 or 4 days and it was a special time,” says Dunn.
It’s been five years since Mason’s accident and life has changed for the Archers in so many ways since that night on a twisty Arkansas road in 2005. Mason was riding in the back seat of the family’s GM extended cab truck. The seat belt failed to protect Mason and it wrapped around Mason like a barber pole says Dunn. To make matters worse, the medical team at the hospital took hours to notice that the little boy couldn’t move his legs. Quick and proper treatment likely would have mitigated his injuries.
Dunn and the other members of the legal team representing the Archers obtained a confidential settlement from GM in a product liability suit for defective seat belts and another medical malpractice suit against the hospital for delayed treatment. The 24-year-old drunk driver who caused the accident died at the scene. The Archers sued his estate.
“Mason has done wonderful things even from a wheelchair,” says Dunn. “He started an awareness campaign about the dangers of drunk driving and he is just a great role model.”
With the money from the settlements, the Archers have been able to a set up their home to accommodate Mason and provide him with the care he needs. His dad bought him a 6-wheel ATV that he can drive around their property.
“I think it is one of the highlights of my career, meeting Mason and his family,” says Dunn. “I know people don’t think lawyers have feelings, but we do. And it just feels good to have Mason come down here to visit and to help people like the Archers.”
“He’s special. Just look at how well he’s doing.”
Joseph (Joe) Dunn is a name partner with the firm of Wigington, Rumley & Dunn. He holds a B.S. from Texas A&M and a J.D. from St. Mary’s University Law School. He handles a variety of personal injury and medical malpractice cases. He also likes to hunt.
LawyersandSettlements.com has a new column that looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we talk with Attorney Odis Williams of The Law Offices of Odis Williams PC…
Attorney Odis Williams says he still has student loans to pay off—and he has a fiancé. “Yes, those are both expensive!,” says Williams as he tries to grab lunch during another busy day. Although most of his practice is devoted to civil litigation and small business corporate law, he finds the harrowing stories of some people, especially women, so compelling that he makes time to do pro bono work for them.
“Right now I am trying to secure support payments on behalf of a woman who was abandoned by her husband,” says Williams. “She has had six surgeries and she’s been fighting for her life after a kidney transplant—while her husband of 20 years lives comfortably with a younger woman.”
“She’s a very sick woman who has put up with a series of infidelities. She broke down and cried as she told me the story,” says Williams. “I had to help.”
As young lawyer, Williams says, it wasn’t long before he realized how many people there are who have no resources and are struggling to handle legal problems. “I realized how fortunate I was,” says Williams. “We didn’t have much money when I was growing up, but my parents gave us support, stability and love. We all went to college and I know I am lucky, even blessed.”
“So as my practice grew and I could sustain an office, a home and everything else, I just felt an obligation to step up when I can,” says Williams. “The cases I take on are the really ugly, nasty ones, where people find themselves in a very bad position.”
Williams is also working on a complex child custody case on behalf a young woman whose husband was falsely accused of molestation. “The child’s biological father seized the opportunity to leverage the accusation and the woman has not been able to see her child for months,” says Williams. “The husband was exonerated, there are no problems in the home and the situation is completely unfair.”
The woman is a stay-at-home mom with little education and few skills. “She didn’t have a driver’s license or even know how to drive,” says Williams. So he helped her find a job, get a new apartment and reorganize her life to make a better impression on the courts. “We wanted to show she was a fit mother,” says Williams. “You end up being a psychologist and a counsellor and everything else when you take these cases.”
Williams could spend all of his time doing pro bono, but of course, that isn’t possible. “I have to consider what else I have going on—how much time I have to give to pro bono work and I have to consider the obligations I have to my paying clients,” he says. “I don’t want to let anybody down.”
“I have another lawyer who works with me and a paralegal and it is a busy office,” says Williams.
Williams is currently litigating against a number of banks on behalf of homeowners in foreclosure disputes.
Odis Williams is a graduate of the Georgia State College of Law. He also holds an MA in public administration from the University of South Carolina. The Law Offices of Odis Williams, located in Decatur, Georgia, handles business law and civil litigation.
LawyersandSettlements.com has a new column that looks at a side of lawyers you don’t hear too much about—the side that gives back…pays it forward..and shares the love. We’ve found quite a number of attorneys who log non-billable hours helping others—simply because they believe it’s the right thing to do. Their stories are inspiring, and hey, who knew lawyers were so…good? If you’ve got a story to share about an attorney who’s doing the right thing, let us know—we’d love to let others know, too. Today, we talk with Attorney Robert Hilliard of Hilliard, Munoz & Gonzales…
Texas attorney Robert Hilliard went to Minnesota to sue Toyota in a products liability case but ended up fighting to free a man wrongfully convicted of vehicular homicide. It was a strange turn of events, but as Hilliard explains he believed it was something he just had to do.
“When I got to Minneapolis and I started to understand what had happened, I asked ‘what about the guy in jail?’”, says Hilliard.
The man in jail was Koua Fong Lee, a 38-year-old immigrant from Thailand who had been sent to prison after his Toyota Camry slammed into an Oldsmobile at 90 miles an hour and killed three people in 2006. From the beginning Fong had insisted his foot was not on the accelerator, but no one believed him.
Then last January, after Lee had spent more than two years in prison, it was revealed that Toyota was indeed having problems with the accelerator system in some of its vehicles.
Although Hilliard was there to sue Toyota on behalf of a family whose loved ones had been killed in the accident, he began to believe it was Koua Fong Lee who needed the help of a top lawyer.
Hilliard quickly arranged a meeting with the young criminal attorney who was representing Lee. A new trial had been ordered because of the Toyota revelations.
As Hilliard says, he isn’t a criminal lawyer. However he has an established and very successful civil practice in Corpus Christi. He offered to bring the full weight of the firm, experts, money, time, staff—to defend Lee. Hilliard would foot the bill for everything and anything. His services would all be pro bono.
“Of course, I ended up not being able to continue my representation of the other family,” says Hilliard.
Hilliard went to meet Lee where he was being held in prison. “He walked out and sat down at the table. I saw what a powerfully quiet fellow he was and how sincere he was.”
Part way through the trial, the prosecution offered to free Lee immediately if he would plead guilty. Lee refused. He’d take his chances rather than admit to a crime he did not commit.
On the last day of the trial, as the judge began to read her opinion, Hilliard knew Lee would be released. “It was a very poignant moment,” recalls Hilliard. “I had my hand on his arm and once I got the sense of where she was going I wrote Koua a note that said ‘you are free, you are free’.”
“It is not like I woke up one morning and thought I have to find someone to help,” says Hilliard. “I mean, I have been a criminal lawyer for all of four days in my whole career. But I thought the right thing to do was to help this guy get out of jail.”
Robert Hilliard is a personal injury lawyer from the firm of Hilliard, Munoz & Gonzales. He was recently honored for his work on the Lee case by the Innocence Project of Minnesota and was a recipient of the organization’s “Never Forgotten Award”. Among other things, Hilliard is representing a large commercial fishing company in its fight against BP in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill litigation.