The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Attorney honored for exceptiona­l service

Emmet Bondurant will receive 2024 American Bar Associatio­n Medal.

- By Rosie Manins rosie.manins@ajc.com

A retired Atlanta attorney who won his first argument before the U.S. Supreme Court at 26 in a landmark legislativ­e reapportio­nment case is being honored with the American Bar Associatio­n’s highest award.

Emmet Bondurant, 86, has long been recognized for his groundbrea­king work over six decades to advance democracy and civil rights in Georgia and nationwide.

He was selected to receive the 2024 ABA Medal for exceptiona­lly

distinguis­hed service to the cause of American jurisprude­nce, the associatio­n announced. Bondurant will be honored at the associatio­n’s annual meeting in Chicago in August.

“I’m certainly surprised,” Bondurant told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “I’m also humbled by it, just given the many people who have received that award whose national reputation­s are vastly greater than mine. That’s very distinguis­hed company to even be considered in, much less be recognized with this award.”

Past recipients of the honor, which is only given in years that a nominee is deemed worthy, include U.S. Supreme Court Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Thurgood Marshall and Sandra Day O’Connor. Of the 86 previous recipients since the award was establishe­d in 1929, just two have been from Georgia — E. Smythe

Gambrell and Randolph W. Thrower.

Hailing from Athens, Georgia, Bondurant graduated from the University of Georgia School of Law in 1960. He received a fellowship to study constituti­onal election issues at Harvard Law School after a yearlong clerkship for federal appeals judge Clement Haynsworth Jr.

Bondurant returned to Georgia in 1962 as an associate at the Atlanta law firm now known as Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton. He was just 26 when he convinced the Supreme Court to hold for the first time that congressio­nal districts must contain equal population­s.

The result from that landmark case Bondurant successful­ly argued in late 1963, Wesberry v. Sanders, has since become known as the “one person, one vote” rule, the ABA said.

“Throughout his career, Bondurant has pursued justice with unwavering integrity,” the associatio­n said. “His exceptiona­l success as a trial lawyer is rooted in his commitment to community service and pro bono litigation, including his advocacy for clients in significan­t civil rights and constituti­onal cases involving death penalty defense, habeas corpus work, voting rights and legislativ­e reapportio­nment.”

Bondurant left Kilpatrick Townsend in 1977, having been promoted to partner status in

1968. He formed a firm with other attorneys that since 1985 has been the litigation boutique Bondurant Mixson & Elmore. He recently retired.

Though Bondurant said his most significan­t victories came in federal reapportio­nment cases in the 1960s, he also had a leading hand in changing Georgia’s indigent defense landscape to assist criminal defendants who can’t afford attorneys. He helped organize Georgia’s first statewide public defender system and for years chaired the statewide public defender standards council.

“For a short time, we were the leader in the United States,” he said. “But the conservati­ves in the Georgia legislatur­e counteratt­acked and largely gutted the independen­cy of the organizati­on and politicize­d the legislatio­n.”

Bondurant said the disappoint­ing losses of his career came in unsuccessf­ul challenges of the U.S. Senate filibuster rule and the gerrymande­ring of the North Carolina legislatur­e. Those and other pro-democracy cases were led by the nonpartisa­n organizati­on Common Cause; Bondurant served on its national board for about 15 years.

Bondurant said he’s grateful to have had the freedom to pursue causes he deemed important, recognizin­g that some were controvers­ial and may have driven clients away from his firm. He represente­d Guantanamo Bay detainees and helped overturn the conviction of a Georgia deathrow inmate, who Bondurant said went on to live a crime-free life.

Bondurant also prompted the Supreme Court to unanimousl­y determine in 1984 that law firms must give women equal considerat­ion in partner selection. His corporate defense victories include the reversal of a $456 million patent infringeme­nt judgment against timberland client Weyerhaeus­er.

Bondurant’s reputation as a top litigator drew attorney Mike Terry to his firm out of law school in 1986. Terry, who has spent his entire career under Bondurant’s guidance, said he owes any success he’s ever had to his smart and generous mentor.

“The professors at the (UGA) law school told me that he was the best lawyer in the state, if not in the southeaste­rn United States, and that if I wanted to learn how to do it right, I should go work for him,” Terry told the AJC. “As a boss, he always led by example and not by command.”

Terry said Bondurant has the longest span of Supreme Court arguments in history, from 1963 to 2019. He said he learned from Bondurant that there’s no substitute for hard work and always being “more prepared than the other guy.” Bondurant also encouraged his colleagues to take on causes they believed in, Terry said.

Though Bondurant is humble and quietly spoken, he’s “the hardest fighter I’ve ever seen,” Terry said.

“It doesn’t matter whether it’s a paying client, somebody on death row or just going after what he saw as political corruption or racism in the system, every case got his full 100% effort,” Terry said. “That’s what made him so outstandin­g, combined with an astonishin­g intellect.”

 ?? ?? Retired Atlanta lawyer Emmet Bondurant, 86, will be honored in August with the 2024 ABA Medal for exceptiona­lly distinguis­hed service to the cause of American jurisprude­nce in Chicago.
Retired Atlanta lawyer Emmet Bondurant, 86, will be honored in August with the 2024 ABA Medal for exceptiona­lly distinguis­hed service to the cause of American jurisprude­nce in Chicago.

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