Imperial Valley Press

Anonymous $40 million gift funding 50 civil rights lawyers

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ATLANTA (AP) — The NAACP Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund launched a $40 million scholarshi­p program on Monday to support a new generation of civil rights lawyers, dedicated to pursuing racial justice across the South.

With that whopping gift from a single anonymous donor, the fund plans to put 50 students through law schools around the country. In return, they must commit to eight years of racial justice work in the South, starting with a two- year post-graduate fellowship in a civil rights organizati­on.

“The donor came to us,” said Sherrilyn Ifill, president of the Legal Defense and Educationa­l Fund. “The donor very much wanted to support the developmen­t of civil rights lawyers in the South. And we have a little bit of experience with that.”

Indeed, the LDF has been backing civil rights lawyers ever since its founding by Thurgood Marshall in 1940, during an era when Black people rarely had effective legal representa­tion and Black students were turned away from southern universiti­es. It funded the creation of Black and interracia­l law firms in several southern states in the 1960s and 1970s, and has built a network of lawyers since then.

Reflecting the urgency of these times, the fund has set an applicatio­n deadline of Feb. 16, giving this fall’s incoming first-year law school students less than a month to make their cases for the opportunit­y.

“While without question we are in a perilous moment in this country, we are also in a moment of tremendous possibilit­y, particular­ly in the South,” Ifill said. “The elements for change are very much present in the South, and what needs to be strengthen­ed is the capacity of lawyering.”

The LDF chose Martin Luther King Day to announce the Marshall- Motley Scholars Program, named for the Supreme Court justice and for Constance Baker Motley, who was an LDF attorney just a few years out of Columbia University Law School when she wrote the initial complaint that led to the court’s Brown v. Board of Education ruling outlawing racial segregatio­n in public schools. She later became the first Black woman federal judge.

“Our country continues to be plagued with racial injustice, and we need Nonviolent Warriors who are prepared and equipped on all fronts to deal with it — especially on the

legal front,” the Rev. Bernice King said in a statement supporting the program. “It will allow the LDF to make greater strides on behalf of the Black community for generation­s to come in the area of racial justice, just as they did during the movement led by my parents.”

The New York-based LDF, which has offices in Washington, also announced Monday that it will open a regional office in Atlanta as part of a renewed effort to fulfill the promise of that 1954 ruling. “We still have the largest desegregat­ion docket outside the Justice Department,” more than 100 cases stemming from Brown v. Board of Education that still haven’t been closed, LDF Associate Director Janai Nelson said.

 ?? HENRY GRIFFIN
AP PHOTO/CHARLES TASNADI, LEFT, AND ?? This combo of file photos from Washington show Supreme Court Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall in 1967; and Constance Baker Motley, nominated to be judge of the southern district of New York, at her confirmati­on hearing, in 1966.
HENRY GRIFFIN AP PHOTO/CHARLES TASNADI, LEFT, AND This combo of file photos from Washington show Supreme Court Associate Justice Thurgood Marshall in 1967; and Constance Baker Motley, nominated to be judge of the southern district of New York, at her confirmati­on hearing, in 1966.

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