#Gratitude Post: Putting a Name to As Much as I Can

By Shana-Tara O’Toole | Due Process Institute | President

There is a magic to naming things. A name can make a feeling or experience more real. It can turn an animate object into something more than just the sum of its partsIn what I feel are some of the most beautiful pages of prose in the English language, the Sri Lankan-born Canadian novelist Michael Ondaatje merely names various winds. To name is to give power.

I, like you, have spent so much time this year naming the big and little difficulties—a global deadly pandemic, deep political unrest, racial hatred, businesses–including my own–shuttered, friends and family sick or even gone forever, devastating fires, joyous music festivals cancelled, America’s pastime played to empty stadiums, the trips not taken, the meetings not made, the cases not argued, the people in jails and nursing homes not visited, all the handshakes and hugs we’ve gone without. So it seems particularly important this year to make sure I also take the time to put a name to what I am grateful for—lest the good things lose some of their power in a world that is already hurting.

A Thank You to Our Advocacy Partners

I name and honor the hard-working staff at the following organizations (in no particular order) for joining Due Process Institute advocacy letters, amicus briefs, or lobbying campaigns. The list is stunningly long and I feel deep and abiding gratitude for these partnerships during a challenging year. Together, we have done some collective good and for that I am grateful:

ACLU; ACLU of Illinois; ACLU of Maryland; ACLU of Ohio; ACLU of Pennsylvania; ACLU of Washington

Buried Alive Project 

National Alliance on Mental Illness

Cato Institute

Center for Democracy & Technology

Freedomworks 

Deason Criminal Justice Reform Center at Southern Methodist University

FAMM

The Bronx Defenders

Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia (PDS)

Quattrone Center for the Fair Administration of Justice at the University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School

#cut50, a program of Dream Corps

Southern Center for Human Rights

Brennan Center for Justice

Texas Public Policy Foundation + Right on Crime

Center for Disability Rights 

Prison Fellowship

Fines and Fees Justice Center

Innocence Project

James Madison Institute

Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)

American Bar Association

National Association for Public Defense (NAPD)

National Employment Law Project (NELP)

Pretrial Justice Institute (PJI)

Fair Trials

Americans for Prosperity

Black Public Defender Association

Federal Public and Community Defenders

TechFreedom

Institute for Justice 

Forensic Justice Project

Justice Action Network 

Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)

American Conservative Union

The Legal Aid Society

National Legal Aid and Defender Association (NLADA)

Fair and Just Prosecution

The Project on Government Oversight

Americans for Tax Reform

The Justice Collaborative

National Urban League

REFORM Alliance

Academy for Justice at the Arizona State University Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law

Demand Progress

R Street Institute

Faith and Freedom Coalition

Aleph Institute

NAACP Legal Defense Fund

ALEC Action

National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers 

Reason Foundation

Amistad Law Project

National Council of Churches 

Drug Policy Alliance

The Sentencing Project

Human Rights Watch

Tzedek Association 

Justice Roundtable

Law Enforcement Action Partnership (LEAP)

Access Now

We Got Us Now

Center for Security, Race and Rights

Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR)

Media Alliance

Oakland Privacy

People Demanding Action

South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT)

CAN-DO Clemency Project

Center for Constitutional Rights

College and Community Fellowship

CURE International

Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

Just Future Project

American Friends Service Committee-WV

Defending Rights & Dissent

Free Press Action

Government Accountability Project

National Coalition Against Censorship

New America’s Open Technology Institute

Restore The Fourth

S.T.O.P. – The Surveillance Technology Oversight Project

X-Lab

American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee (ADC)

Center for Biological Diversity

People For the American Way

Project for Privacy and Surveillance Accountability (PPSA)

Revolutionary Love Project

RootsAction.org

Center for Justice Research at Texas Southern University

Center for Integrity in Forensic Sciences

Computational Justice Lab at Claremont Graduate University

Wilson Center for Science and Justice at Duke University School of Law

JustLeadershipUSA 

Safer Foundation

Mackinac Center for Public Policy

DKT Liberty Project

A Little Piece Of Light

All of Us or None

Braxton Institute

Church of Scientology National Affairs Office

Congregation of Our Lady of Charity of the Good Shepherd, U.S. Provinces

Consult CR/ Co Founder of Racial Justice Initiative

Criminal Justice Clinic, UC Irvine School of Law

CURE 

DC Jail and Prison Advocacy Project

Free Minds Book Club & Writing Workshop

FREE! Families Rally for Emancipation and Empowerment

Health in Justice Action Lab, Northeastern University School of Law

Illinois Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers

Equal Justice USA

Human Rights for Kids

Virginia Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers 

Alabama Appleseed Center for Law and Justice

Chicago Council of Lawyers

Civil Rights Corps

Lawyer’s Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area

Legal Aid Justice Center 

LatinoJustice PRLDEF

Oklahoma Women’s Coalition

Oregon Law Center

Still She Rises; Still She Rises, Tulsa

FedCURE

The First 72+

Poligon Education Fund

Center for Employment Opportunities

Chicago Jobs Council

Equal Justice Under Law

Good + Foundation

Harvard Undergraduates for Bipartisan Solutions

Human Rights Defense Center

Insight Center for Community Economic Development

Justice & Accountability Center of Louisiana

Juvenile Law Center

Libertas Institute

Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition

Minnesota Asset Building Coalition

National Center for Law and Economic Justice

National Center for Youth Law

National Consumer Law Center

New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty

North Carolina Justice Center

Ohio Poverty Law Center

Oklahoma Women’s Coalition

Prison Policy Initiative

Shriver Center on Poverty Law

Southern Legal Counsel, Inc.

Texas Appleseed

Texas Civil Rights Project

Texas Fair Defense Project

The Bail Project

The San Francisco Financial Justice Project

UC Berkeley School of Law, Policy Advocacy Clinic

Washington Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers

Washington Defender Association

Archdiocese of Washington Advocacy 

College & Community Fellowship 

Grassroots Alliance for Justice 

H.O.P.E., Inc

International CURE

Justice Advocates 

Life for Pot 

MI-CURE 

Chicago Appleseed Fund for Justice

Mommieactivist and Sons 

National Action Network 

National Council for Incarcerated and Formerly Incarcerated Women and Girls 

National Incarceration Association (NIA) 

National LGBTQ Task Force 

Pennsylvania CURE 

The Taifa Group 

Union for Reform Judaism

Abolitionist Law Center

Ardella’s House

Atlantic Center for Capital Representation

The Barristers’ Association of Philadelphia, Inc

Defender Association of Philadelphia

Pennsylvania Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers

Pennsylvania Prison Society

Philadelphia Bar Association

Public Interest Law Center

Youth Sentencing & Reentry Project

Presente Action

Progress America

Project Blueprint

Project South

Public Citizen

Secure Justice

Society of Professional Journalists

Union of Concerned Scientists

Union for Reform Judaism

Win Without War

Woodhull Freedom Foundation

World Privacy Forum

Yemeni Alliance Committee

Yemeni American Merchant Association

The Justice and Accountability Center of Louisiana

The Libre Initiative

Digital Liberty

Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law

Southern Poverty Law Center Action

Alianza Americas

Alianza Nacional de Campesinas 

Cause of Action Institute

Democracy 21

La Asociación Campesina de Florida

National Council of Jewish Women

National Security Counselors

Niskanen Center

Open the Government

Protect Democracy

Wind of the Spirit

Witness to Innocence

ACCESS of WNY

American Booksellers for Free Expression

American Family Voices

Americans for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain

American Friends Service Committee

American Society of Journalists and Authors (ASJA)

Arab American Civic Council

Arab American Institute

The Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI)

Beyond the Bomb

Carceral Tech Resistance Network

CODEPINK

Common Defense

Constitutional Alliance

Courage California

DuckDuckGo

Equality Labs

The Feminist Foreign Policy Project

Fight for the Future

Freedom Forward

The Freedom to Read Foundation

Free Speech Coalition

Freedom of the Press Foundation

Government Information Watch

Indivisible

Institute for Policy Studies, New Internationalism Project

Islamophobia Studies Center

Jetpac

Just Foreign Policy

Kurt Vonnegut Museum and Library

Liberty Coalition

MediaJustice

Movement Alliance Project

MPower Change

MSA West

Muslim Justice League

OpenMedia

Other98

PEN America

American Association for Justice

Physicians for Human Rights

Public Justice

Second Amendment Foundation

Innocence Project New Orleans

The Rutherford Institute

Alliance Defending Freedom

The Roderick & Solange MacArthur Justice Center

(Friends–please know that Due Process Institute is deeply grateful to the efforts of all #CriminalJusticeWarriors. Whether you are on this year’s list or not, you are in our thoughts.)

A Thank You for Our Litigation Partners 

Did you know that the term “amicus” is Latin for “friend”? In the spirit of giving thanks, we acknowledge those lawyers (and their supporting law firms) who have helped us write and file some of this year’s amicus briefs. These incredibly skilled lawyers provided their expertise and valuable time pro bono to help us illuminate the most important due process issues facing courts today. We are humbled by their service:

Lawrence S. Lustberg + Thomas R. Valen of Gibbons PC for their work on Kouisis v. US.

Kendall Turner from the DC office of O’Melveny & Myers LLP for her work on Fogleman v. Mississippi.

Timothy O’Toole + Katherine Pappas of Miller & Chevalier LLP for their work on Stein v. US.

Alec Schierenbeck at the NY office of O’Melveny & Myers LLP for his work on US v. Jackson.

Catherine Stetson + her team at Hogan Lovells US LLP for their work on Taylor v. Riojas,  Zadeh v. Robinson + Corbitt v. Vickers.

Chloé M. Chetta of Barrasso Usdin Kupperman Freeman & Sarver LLC for her work on Allen v. Edwards.

Anton Metlitskyof the NY office of O’Melveny & Myers LLP for his work on Torres v. Madrid.

Claudia Wilner of National Center for Law and Economic Justice as well as Katherine Chamblee Ryan + Tara Mikkilineni from Civil Rights Corps for their work on Motley v. Taylor.

Wesley Hottot and his team at Institute for Justice for their work on Nichols v. Wayne County.

John D. Cline for his work on Aposhian v. Barr (rehearing en banc).

Cheyenne N. Chambers of Tin, Fulton, Walker & Owen + Tyce R. Walters of Latham & Watkins for their work on Community Success Initiative v. Moore.

Jessie Ring Amunson + her team at Jenner & Block LLP for their work on West v. Winfield + Shaffer v. Pennsylvania.

And finally, a #GratitudePost wouldn’t be complete without thanking our incredible Board Members or our talented bipartisan staff or beloved independent contractors or our office dogs [the youngest of whom is pictured above wondering why none of the staff come to the office anymore]–all of whom have supported Due Process Institute’s work this year.

Conclusion

Our work with these talented individuals and organizations from across the political and ideological spectrum is undeniable proof that #BipartisanWorks. We are all made better for working with each other rather than against each other, despite our many differences. Thank you. 

As the American poet Mary Oliver wrote: “It is a serious thing just to be alive on this fresh morning in the broken world.”  Naming each of you is my humble acknowledgement of your contributions to repairing this broken world and I look forward to all our work together still to come.

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