[Colorado-Talk] Colorado civil rights attorney Kevin Williams, who fought to improve lives of people with disabilities, dies at 57 After a diving accident that left him paralyzed, Williams became a lawyer for the Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition

kevan at nfbco.org kevan at nfbco.org
Tue Feb 13 18:03:31 UTC 2024


Oh no! A really good guy! Gary thank you for sharing. This is really too bad. 

 

 

At your service, 

Kevan Worley

303-929-2369

Manager Project Literacy, National Federation of the Blind of Colorado

The National Federation of the Blind is a community of members and friends who believe in the hopes and dreams of the nation’s blind. Every day we work together to help blind people live the lives they want.

Colorado Center for the Blind believes when you believe in yourself and experience a thriving community of positive blind people, nothing can hold you back from pursuing your dreams.

 

 

 

From: Colorado-Talk <colorado-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf Of Gary Van Dorn via Colorado-Talk
Sent: Monday, February 12, 2024 7:00 PM
To: Curtis Chong via Colorado-Talk <colorado-talk at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Gary Van Dorn <garyvdrn at msn.com>
Subject: [Colorado-Talk] Colorado civil rights attorney Kevin Williams, who fought to improve lives of people with disabilities, dies at 57 After a diving accident that left him paralyzed, Williams became a lawyer for the Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition

 

It is with sadness that I share the obituary of Kevin Williams from yesterday’s Denver Post.  I knew Kevin and highly respected him.  I know Scott LaBarre respected him too.  We already miss Scott and shall miss Kevin too.  I am sure they are enjoying a nice drink together wherever they may be. 

 

Gary

 

Colorado civil rights attorney Kevin Williams, who fought to improve lives of people with disabilities, dies at 57

After a diving accident that left him paralyzed, Williams became a lawyer for the Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition

 

Bruce FinleyFebruary 10, 2024 at 4:48 p.m.

Civil rights lawyer Kevin Williams, left, leads paralympic athlete Scot Hollonbeck, right, away from federal court in Denver on July 28, 2003. Williams and other attorneys had filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Olympic Committee claiming discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Rehabilitation Act. (Denver Post file photo) 

Civil rights lawyer Kevin Williams, left, leads paralympic athlete Scot Hollonbeck, right, away from federal court in Denver on July 28, 2003. Williams and other attorneys had filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Olympic Committee claiming discrimination under the Americans with Disabilities Act and the Rehabilitation Act. (Denver Post file photo)

Colorado civil rights attorney Kevin Williams died this week after 26 years of fighting to improve the lives of people with disabilities. He was 57.

 

Williams died Tuesday after a short illness, according to colleagues at the Denver-based Colorado Cross-Disability Coalition, where he launched the legal program in 1997 upon graduation from law school.

 

A quadriplegic paralyzed from his chest down following a diving accident at age 19, Williams steadily increased access for disabled people by filing lawsuits — pressing for enforcement under the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Rehabilitation Act, the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act and the Fair Housing Act.

 

He began this work as a third-year law student at the University of Denver. Shortly before his graduation, he sued his law school. The issue was compliance with the ADA. He prevailed, leading to required improvements, including a wheelchair-accessible graduation venue.

 

Often serving as the plaintiff, Williams repeated that feat again and again, expanding access for Coloradans with disabilities in stores, restaurants, public transit systems, theaters, arenas and travel pathways around the state. For example, his litigation compelled the operators of Red Rocks Amphitheatre to provide accessible parking, seating and ticketing.

 

He also led other lawyers into disability rights work.

 

Williams grew up in the suburbs of Cleveland.  He made Colorado his home in 1990, the year President George H.W. Bush signed the ADA into law. He enjoyed drives in the mountains, attending concerts and visiting local breweries and distilleries.

 

Friends this week remembered him as passionate in his pursuit of civil rights.

 

“Kevin was contemplative, thorough and certain not to leave any stone unturned, especially in litigation,” said Andrew Montoya, who worked in the coalition’s legal program as an assistant and then was inspired to attend law school.

 

“Even seemingly mundane legal issues could occupy hours of lively discussion ranging from interpretive case law to contemporary and historical politics to litigation strategy to the meaning of life, and back again,” Montoya said. “His passion for civil rights, both in general and specifically those of people with disabilities, clearly animated his work, both in the courtroom and in the rest of the world.”

 

He also had a knack for making light of difficulties. Friends recalled his adaptation of the Beatles’ “Let It Be” — a rendition that he titled “Let Us Pee.” (“When I find myself in times of trouble; The bathroom door is two-foot-three; Whisper words of wisdom; Let us pee, let us pee.”

 

“He was intense, passionate, focused and very analytical. What kept him motivated was seeing people with disabilities face discrimination and knowing that the laws that are supposed to protect us are being violated,” said Julie Reiskin, co-executive director of the coalition.

 

“What bothered him was the blatant violation of the law, especially by those who should know better, such as courts and lawyers that made excuses rather than working to fix the problem.”

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