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<font size=3><b>For Immediate Release </b>September 13, 2011<br><br>
<b>Contact:</b> Nathan Tempey<br><br>
<a href="mailto:communications@nlg.org">communications@nlg.org</a>
<br><br>
<a href="tel:212-679-5100">212-679-5100</a>, ext. 15<br><br>
New York:<br><br>
The National Lawyers Guild filed an <i>amicus curiae</i> ("friend of
the court") brief Monday on behalf of Ward Churchill, the tenured
professor fired in retaliation for his essay response to the September 11
attacks.<br><br>
<br>
The essay drew a storm of media coverage for its sharp criticism of
American foreign policy, which in turn prompted a malicious investigation
of Prof. Churchill by University of Colorado administrators. In 2009 a
unanimous jury found that the university violated the First Amendment by
firing Churchill not because of alleged research misconduct, but because
of his constitutionally protected speech. A district judge then vacated
the verdict, declaring that the university and its regents have
"quasi-judicial" immunity. Churchill's appeal is currently
before the Colorado Supreme Court.<br><br>
The Guild brief argues, in support of the appeal, that this
politically-motivated firing poses a threat to the First Amendment rights
of all people, and particularly to academic freedom. The brief contends
further that immunity granted to university regents for their role in
Churchill's firing could undermine Section 1983 of Title 42 of the U.S.
Code, which has been a bulwark of civil rights since Reconstruction.
<br><br>
[The Court maintaining university regents immunity] will allow state
universities to violate with impunity the protections afforded faculty
members under the First Amendment as well as the Constitution's
guarantees of due process and equal protection, the brief
states.<br><br>
The National Lawyers Guild filed the brief on behalf of itself and the
Colorado Conference of the American Association of University Professors,
the Center for Constitutional Rights, the Society of American Law
Teachers, Latino/a Critical Legal Theory, and the National Conference of
Black Lawyers, as well as many individual attorneys and law professors.
The full text is available on the Guild's
<a href="http://www.nlg.org/resources/amicus-curiae/"><i>amicus
curiae</a></i><a href="http://www.nlg.org/resources/amicus-curiae/">
page</a>. For a full timeline of the case, see Prof. Churchill's
<a href="http://wardchurchill.net/churchill-v-cu-2/timeline/">website</a>
. <br><br>
The National Lawyers Guild was founded in 1937 and is the oldest and
largest public interest/human rights bar organization in the United
States. Its headquarters are in New York and it has chapters in every
state.<br><br>
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