[nfbmi-talk] state ag joins blind man's suit

joe harcz Comcast joeharcz at comcast.net
Tue Nov 8 17:55:43 UTC 2011


State Attorney General Joins Blind Man's Lawsuit Alleging LSAT Discrimination

 

State Attorney General Bill Schuette filed a brief Thursday on behalf of Angelo Binno, a blind man from West Bloomfield who sued the American Bar Association

for discrimination.

List of 3 items

• By

Timothy Rath

• Email the author

• November 4, 2011

list end

attorney-general-joins-bernstein-against-american-bar-association&t=Attorney Richard

Bernstein (right) described his representation of Angelo Binno as a case of a "blind attorney representing a future blind attorney

patch.com/A-n2cC

void(0)

Attorney Richard Bernstein (right) described his representation of Angelo Binno as a case of a "blind attorney representing a future blind attorney." Tim

MacLean

Photos (1)

 

Photos

Attorney Richard Bernstein (right) described his representation of Angelo Binno as a case of a "blind attorney representing a future blind attorney."

Credit Tim MacLean

Pdfs (1)

 

Pdfs

According to documents filed by Schuette, if Binno's allegations are proven true, the ABA not only has violated the ADA, the organization also has violated

the Michigan Persons with Disabilities Civil Rights Act (MDCRA).

Credit

Timothy Rath

http://o5.aolcdn.com/dims-shared/dims3/PATCH/resize/273x203/http://hss-prod.hss.aol.com/hss/storage/patch/6951877dc3e09f6fa8ca85526141adf9 http://o5.aolcdn.com/hss/storage/patch/637e448b4253ef57f9bf91aadcc8fe30

Add your photos

 

Michigan Atty. Gen. Bill Schuette filed a brief Thursday on behalf of Angelo Binno, a blind man from West Bloomfield, who claims that the Law School Admission

Test is "inherently discriminatory."

 

The lawsuit was originally filed in May

against the American Bar Association by Farmington Hills-based attorney Richard Bernstein, claiming that requiring blind or visually impaired law school

applicants to take the LSAT is a violation of their civil rights under the Americans with Disabilities Act.

 

According to documents filed by Schuette, if Binno's allegations are proven true, the ABA not only has violated the ADA, but the organization also has violated

the Michigan Persons with Disabilities Civil Rights Act.

 

Bernstein said in May that filing in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan Southern Division was “the last resort” in a situation

that has been ongoing since 1996. The LSAT tells testees “it may be useful to draw a rough diagram” to answer 23 questions in the logic games section of

the three-part exam, which Binno describes as “impossible” for someone who is blind.

 

A high LSAT score is considered to be the most important factor in being admitted to law school. According to Bernstein, if a law school were to waive the

requirement, the ABA would threaten that institution with removing its accreditation as a law school, as a result of a lobbying effort by the Law School

Admissions Council (LSAC). The ABA and the LSAC are private entities.

 

Bernstein, a noted civil rights attorney, was told as a blind applicant in a May 25, 1995, letter from the LSAC that he should seek an LSAT waiver as a

reasonable accommodation under the ADA. He eventually graduated from Northwestern University with his law degree in 1999.

 

“That letter was sent to me by mistake,” Bernstein said. “The people who administer the test are completely aware of the fact that this exam is inappropriate

for a blind person.”

 

Oral arguments are scheduled for 2 p.m. Nov. 22 before Judge Denise Paige Hood in Detroit.

Related Topics:

Americans With Disabilities Act,

Richard Bernstein,

and

angelo binno

 

http://westbloomfield.patch.com/articles/state-attorney-general-joins-bernstein-against-american-bar-association



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