[nfbmi-talk] Fw: just a reminder

joe harcz Comcast joeharcz at comcast.net
Thu Jan 12 02:31:14 UTC 2012


----- Original Message ----- 
From: Richard Bernstein 
To: joe harcz 
Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2007 5:04 PM
Subject: RE: just a reminder


Hi Joe:



Rick appreciates everything you're saying.  He asked me to give you his number and tell you to give him a call sometime.  His direct dial is 800-588-7128.



Best Regards,

David Cohen



-----Original Message-----
From: joe harcz [mailto:michiganadapt at peoplepc.com] 
Sent: Thursday, May 31, 2007 6:18 AM
To: Richard Bernstein
Subject: just a reminder



Hi Richard,



As a person who is blind I would also remind you that courts need to have paper work and all communications accessible to people with visual, hearing and speech impairments (ADA, Title II, subpart e, communications). This is every bit as significant as physical access for it too goes to issues of "due process".



Other than these comments I highly applud these efforts for equity in our courts and if I can be of any assistence please let me know. I also highly appluad your other work including the Detroit Metro suit and the U-M Stadium action.



Please keep it up!



Peace with Justice for All,



Joe Harcz

Mt. Morris, Michigan

810-516-5262 (cell)

michiganadapt at peoplepc.com



Courts urged to go beyond justice-for-some



May 31, 2007



BY SUZETTE HACKNEY



FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER



A consortium of legal professionals, civil rights activists and religious leaders has joined to promote change in Michigan's judicial system.



Led by the Detroit Branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the "And Justice for All" campaign offers solutions for what

backers called a system that is ineffective for people who are poor, young or have physical disabilities.



They called Wednesday for the state Supreme Court and Legislature to help diversify jury pools, ensure accessibility for disabled people and integrate the

body that oversees judicial conduct.



"One of the great concerns of our nation ... is that we can proclaim and claim justice for all," the Rev. Wendell Anthony, president of the Detroit Branch

NAACP, said in announcing the campaign. "But when you look at the state of Michigan, you will see that there is only justice for some."



Campaign objectives unveiled at Wayne State University's Law School include:



. A law change to allow former felons to serve as jurors.



. A program called Jury Sundays to encourage jury participation through partnerships with churches.



. New court rules to promote more effective legal representation for poor people.



. Division of counties into districts to get proportional representation on juries.



. Full compliance of courts with the Americans with Disabilities Act.



"Throughout Michigan, most courthouses are not accessible. Jury boxes are not accessible. Witness stands are not accessible," said attorney Richard Bernstein.



The group said Wayne County has been plagued with underrepresented jury pools since Detroit's Recorder's Court was abolished by the Legislature in 1997.

According to the latest study by the National Center for State Courts, African Americans make up less than 12% of juries in Wayne County, though the county

is about 40% black.



Leaders also said the lack of diversity on the Michigan Judicial Tenure Commission, the disciplinary body that oversees more than 600 trial and appellate

judges, is troubling.



"These are the judges of the judges," said Melvin Butch Hollowell, an NAACP attorney. "Right now, it's an all-white club."



Contact SUZETTE HACKNEY at 313-222-6614 or

shackney at freepress.com.

http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070531/NEWS05/705310406/1001/NEWS



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