Appellate Summaries for January 2008

December 12, 2007

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Appellate Summaries January 2008

December 11, 2007

July 2008 cover

Features

Lawyers try to widen the pipeline
Many programs within the legal community attempt to reach young people before college, and introduce them to the law as a profession.

Women lawyers who network
Female lawyers network with one another to increase the number of women who stay in the profession, and to help female lawyers advance in their careers.

The following individuals were involved in the Chicago Bar Association’s First Annual Donald Hubert Scholars Mock Trial Competition (from left): Lindsey Dates, an associate at Jones Day; Clayton Wilson, a recent graduate of Hales Franciscan High School; U.S. District Judge David H. Coar; Mario Davis, an incoming senior at Seton Academy; and Victor P. Henderson, a partner at Holland & Knight and CBA president. A thank you is extended to Chief U.S. District Judge James F. Holderman for the use of his courtroom for this photo. Holderman also participated in the event.

The expansion of ADR
With the expense of litigation climbing, some corporations are turning to mediation to resolve their business disputes.

Diversity Surveys
The numbers from Chicago Lawyer’s eighth annual diversity survey indicate that the job of increasing diversity remains a tough one.

Profile: Theresa Cropper
She played a key role in making Northwestern University School of Law the most diverse law school in Illinois. Today, she puts her passion to work in the law firm setting.

In the collar counties
Women have begun to make some strides in their representation on the bench in the five counties bordering Cook, but racial diversity in the judiciary there is still lagging.

Departments & Columns

Q&A
Big Deals // Verdicts // Settlements
Firm Life
Diversity in Practice
Climbing the Ladder
All in the Family
Ethics
Clifford’s Notes
Counsel’s Table
3L and the City
In the Woodpile
Pro Bono
Info Tech Law
Practical Matters
Financial Services
Opening Statement
Closing Argument

Burke kicks off project on court history

December 11, 2007

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From the latest edition…

By Brian Mackey
Law Bulletin staff writer

Justice Anne M. Burke issued a call Friday for lawyers to help the Illinois Supreme Court create an historical archive on Illinois law.

Speaking at the Chicago and Illinois State bar associations’ annual Supreme Court Dinner, Burke said the ongoing renovation of the high court’s 100-year-old building in Springfield presented an unique opportunity to ”preserve the heritage and record of the court.”

”It is the court’s vision that space will be set aside to house documents and artifacts which will [tell] the story of the progress of Illinois law,” Burke told the lawyers and judges attending the black-tie dinner.

”We hope that you will take the opportunity of this milestone in the life of our court building to help the [Supreme Court Historic Preservation] Commission, in whatever way you can, in its efforts to compile materials for an historical archive,” she said.

Burke began her speech by joking about the stress of adjusting to life on the court, recalling an incident from her first term in Springfield, in September 2006.

Her husband, Chicago Alderman Edward M. Burke, and their youngest son, aged 11, were home alone and placed a call to Springfield.

It wasn’t the best time to take a call, she said, but she assumed that it must be important, given that her family knew that her work would be interrupted.

”What’s wrong?” she recalled asking.

Her husband divulged the crisis: ”The buzzer on the new stove has been going off all night and I don’t know how to turn it off.”

Turning to the history of the court, Burke explored the interconnections that run through the history of Illinois law.

She recently found a 1922 photo of the court that includes then-Chief Justice Floyd Thompson. He resigned from the court in 1928 to run (unsuccessfully) as the Democratic nominee for governor.

He became a partner in the Chicago law firm that would become Jenner & Block, and hired a young lawyer named Jerold S. Solovy, Burke said. (She did not have to remind her audience that Solovy is the firm’s chairman emeritus.)

Burke said she already has one of the first major contributions to the archive in her chambers: an 8-foot by 3-foot mural submitted more than 100 years ago by Albert Krehbiel in the competition to select an artist to decorate the Supreme Court building. Krehbiel’s murals line the walls and ceilings of the high court in Springfield and the former site of the 4th District Appellate Court across the hall.

Burke said there’s an unofficial story about how the court got its own building shortly after the turn of the century, and it involves whiskey, cigars, the governor, the justices and a card game.

Shortly after her appointment to the court in 2006, Burke was assigned to be liaison to the Capitol Development Board, the state agency that oversees new construction as well as renovation of state facilities.

Her work with the board did not require whiskey or a card game, she said, just a lot of discussion, culminating in the legislature’s creation of the Illinois Supreme Court Historic Preservation Commission in August.

Earlier in the day, the Illinois Judges Association held a luncheon in which it honored several of the state’s jurists.

Supreme Court Justice Rita B. Garman was given the Lifetime Achievement Award for ”her devotion to promoting a strong and independent judiciary and in appreciation of her time and valuable contributions to the Illinois Judges Association,” according to a news release issued by the group.

Other honorees included retired judge Robert S. Hunter, who has written legal books relied on by judges and lawyers throughout Illinois, and Adams County Circuit Judge Mark Drummond, who was recognized for his youth anti-drug presentation ”7 Reasons to Leave the Party.”

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