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Pragmatic Obots Unite

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Tuesday Open Thread

January 24, 2012 by Miranda 0 Comments

Good morning Obots! Today’s black super lawyer is Mr. Willie E. Gary.  

Attorney Willie E. Gary earned his reputation as “The Giant Killer” by taking down some of America’s most well-known corporate giants on behalf of his clients. He has won some of the largest jury awards and settlements in U.S. history, including more than 150 cases valued in excess of $1 million each. Gary’s amazing success has earned him national recognition as a leading trial attorney. Gary’s biggest victory came in 1996, when he persuaded a Mississippi jury to award $500 million in a suit against Loewen Group Inc., a Canadian owner of funeral homes. He also secured a $240 million award in 2000 against Walt Disney in a case claiming the company stole his clients’ idea for a sports theme park. In 2001, Gary won a $139 million verdict against Anheuser-Busch Cos. for the family of former baseball player Roger Maris in a suit over a beer distributorship.

Willie Gary’s triumphant rise to the top is no overnight success story. One of 11 children of Turner and Mary Gary, Willie Gary was born in Eastman, Georgia and raised in migrant farming communities in Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas. 
 
His unwavering desire to earn a college education ultimately led him to Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina, where he earned a bachelor’s buy viagra australia degree in Business Administration. Gary went on to North Carolina Central University in Durham, North Carolina where he earned a Juris Doctorate in 1974. 
 
Gary has been featured in Ebony magazine as one of the “100 Most Influential Black Americans.” Forbes magazine has listed him as one of the “Top 50 Attorneys in the U.S.” He has been highlighted in many of the Nation’s most respected media publications, including The New York Times, The Chicago Tribune, The Boston Globe, Ebony, Jet, People, Black Enterprise, Fortune, The New Yorker and The National Law Journal.
 
 Known as a businessman, church man, humanitarian and philanthropist, Gary is deeply involved in charity and civic work. He is in great demand as a motivational speaker delivering speeches at law schools, universities, churches and various organizations throughout the country. In addition, Gary is committed to enhancing the lives of young people through education and drug prevention. In 1994, he and his wife, Gloria, formed The Gary Foundation to carry out this formidable task. The Gary Foundation provides scholarships and other resources to youth, so they can realize their dreams of achieving a higher education. In 1991, Gary donated $10.1 million to his alma mater Shaw University. He has also donated millions of dollars to other Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

Filed Under: African Americans, Open Thread Tagged With: America's top black Super Lawyers, Mr. Willie E. Gary, “The Giant Killer”

Tuesday Open Thread

September 13, 2011 by Miranda 1 Comment

Good morning P.O.U. Fam!

The lawyers of the Civil Rights Movement continues today with The Honorable Constance Baker Motley — the first African American woman to argue a case before the U.S. Supreme Court.

Early Life

Constance B. Motley was born in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1921. The ninth of 12 children of West Indian parents who had migrated to the United States from the Caribbean island of Nevis, she grew up on the outskirts of the Yale University campus.

Despite Motley’s strong academic ability and keen motivation, her parents could not afford to send her or her 11 brothers and sisters to college. For a few months following her graduation from high school, she struggled to earn a living as a domestic worker. But, after hearing her give a speech, a wealthy white philanthropist offered to pay for her college education.

She graduated from NYU and began her studies at Columbia Law School in February of 1944. During her first year of law school, she met Thurgood Marshall, who offered her a job as a law clerk in the NAACP’s New York office. After receiving her law degree in 1946, she became a full-fledged member of the legal staff.

Rise To Prominence

Over the next 15 years, Constance B. Motley served as a key attorney in dozens of school desegregation cases handled by the NAACP Legal defense Fund, appearing in dramatic courtroom trials in 11 southern states and the District of Columbia.

After helping Thurgood Marshall write the legal briefs for the historic Brown v. Board of Education case, she went on to argue ten of her own before the U.S. Supreme Court, winning nine of them.

In 1956, she helped Autherine Lucy win the right to attend graduate school at the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa. Six years later, Motley, won national recognition for representing James H. Meredith during his long but ultimately successful battle to gain admission to the University of Mississippi.

As U.S. Congressman John Lewis remembered on his Web site, “in the heart of the American South, during the early days of the Civil Rights Movement in the late 50’s and 60’s, there were only two lawyers that made white segregationists tremble and gave civil rights workers hope—Constance Baker Motley and Thurgood Marshall.”

First Female African American Federal Judge 

In 1966, Senator Robert F. Kennedy of New York requested that President Lyndon B. Johnson nominate Constance Motley for a federal district court judgeship. Johnson agreed, and despite vigorous opposition to her appointment both from conservative southern senators and other federal judges—at the time, only two other women were U.S. district judges—the Senate confirmed the nomination in August of that year.

Motley thus became the nation’s first female African American federal judge. Committed to her work, and convinced of how important it was to others, Motley continued to try cases until her death in September 2005.

 

(Pictured with Coretta Scott King and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.)


Filed Under: Open Thread, Politics Tagged With: Constance B. Motley, Judicial System, Open Thread

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