Cultivating a lifelong commitment to public interest law

 
 
   
 

PILI : programs : alumni

 

 

Twenty years ago in the summer of 1992, Jean Choi, then a rising 2L at Loyola University Chicago School of Law, began her PILI Internship at the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. It was an experience that impacted her life in more ways than she could have anticipated. PILI has been placing Interns at the Chicago Lawyer’s Committee since our founding 35 years ago. The agency works on a broad range of legal issues related to social justice, and Jean’s work in the summer of 1992 was accordingly diverse and extensive. “It was my first real experience working as a lawyer,” says Jean. “I got to work with actual clients – for me it was very exciting.” Many of the clients with whom Jean worked were victims of employment discrimination. Others clients came through the Lawyers’ Committee’s Fair Housing Project, which Jean worked on with Betsy Schuman-Moore, a 1981 PILI Intern Alum who still supervises PILI Interns at the Lawyers’ Committee today. Jean also worked with Maria Woltjen, a 1987 PILI Fellow Alum, on juvenile justice issues related to transfer hearings. At the time of Jean’s Internship, the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee’s Executive Director was Roslyn Lieb; Roz would later go on to become the Executive Director of PILI until her retirement in 2004.

 

In addition to her employment, housing, and juvenile justice work, much of Jean’s focus during her Internship was on hate crime policy, particularly with Asian communities in Chicago. “In 1992, hate crime laws were fairly new,” explains Jean. Having grown up in Chicago herself in a Korean family on the northwest side, Jean recounts how things had been different in the 1970s. “My family was a victim of hate crimes, and my community ,” she says. “Our windows were broken, our church was vandalized. We called the police and they said there was nothing they could do.” But the 1980s brought greater awareness of hate crimes and better laws, as well as better resources for victims. Jean’s PILI Internship gave her the chance to support communities in ways her own community had been ignored when she was a child. “I was able to do workshops at Asian community service centers across the city,” says Jean. She worked with Vietnamese and Korean communities on the north side, and on the south side with newly expanding Chinese communities. “We would talk to them about how the laws protected them and about what they could do if someone they knew was the victim of a hate crime.”

 

Jean’s experience as a PILI Intern left her wanting more. During her third year of law school, she got a placement clerking for the Deputy Commissioner of the Chicago Commission on Human Relations, where she worked again on housing and employment discrimination issues. Following this, Jean worked for the Chicago Board of Education’s Law Department, where she gained experience not only in school reform law, but in immigration issues as well. Since 2003, Jean has been working in business immigration law, and she now manages her own firm helping corporations, universities, hospitals and other employers lawfully employ non-US citizens and permanent residents.

 

And, Jean’s experience as a PILI taught her that pro bono legal work is a high priority in her life. “The Chicago Lawyers’ Committee opened my eyes that I could be an advocate in so many ways, that I could change the landscape of the law,” says Jean. “You do not have to be passive when you see something is unjust, you can be an advocate for change in a meaningful way.  It just clicked with me.” Professionally, Jean is a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, the Illinois State Bar Association, the Chicago Bar Association, the Korean American Bar Association, and the Asian American Bar Association. With her school reform experience, Jean co-founded Passages Charter School in Edgewater on the north side. She has also served on the Chicago Advisory Board of “Facing History and Ourselves,” a worldwide organization to combat racism and nurture democracy. Jean got involved with this nonprofit through her continued friendship with Maria Woltjen, then former colleague and fellow PILI alum from the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee. In 2006, Jean received a Distinguished Alumni Award from PILI at our Annual Awards Luncheon.

 

As it turns out, Maria is not the only former colleague from her time as a PILI with whom Jean still keeps in touch. Jean was one of five PILI Interns and Fellows at the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee in 1992, and one of the other PILI Interns, Peter, a rising 2L at Harvard Law School, also caught Jean’s attention. The two stayed in touch throughout their remaining years at separate law schools and, a few years after graduating, they got married. “Roz came to our wedding!” says Jean, laughing. “During that summer of our PILI Internship, we had such an interesting and good group of people. We all worked together and learned from what the other interns and attorneys were doing.”

Kathy Clark, 1997 PILI Intern

 

The American Bar Association recommends that lawyers aspire to engage in 50 hours of pro bono service each year. Justin, in his 11 years of practice, has logged an overwhelming 5,700 pro bono hours, more than ten times this recommended amount. Much of his work has focused on death penalty cases, though he has also represented other types of clients, including a group of Togolese citizens who suffered political persecution as well as clients in race and disability discrimination suits. Justin helped create and now leads Serving Our Seniors, the ABA Young Lawyers Division 2011-2012 Public Service Project. Serving Our Seniors is a national program that provides estate planning advice to low-income seniors. In addition to his professional and pro bono work, Justin participates extensively in several professional associations. He is the current Chair of the Chicago Bar Association Young Lawyers Section, and he is a member of the Young Professionals Boards of the Chicago Bar Foundation and the Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago. Justin has also been involved in PILI’s Alumni program. Justin’s career embodies PILI’s mission to cultivate a lifelong commitment to public interest law and pro bono work, and we were proud to present him with a Distinguished Alumni Award in recognition of his strong leadership in the legal profession and his extraordinary dedication to pro bono.

 

Gail Kim, 2002 Intern & 2004 Fellow

Gail Kim carries the distinction of being a “double-PILI,” having served both as a PILI Intern in 2002 at Cabrini Green Legal Aid, and as a PILI Fellow in 2004 at the Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago. “My interest in public interest law started in law school, and PILI gave me a vehicle to exercise that interest,” says Kim. Kim is now the Program Director and Director of Operations at the Chicago Committee on Minorities in Large Law Firms, contributing her experience and passion to the Chicago Committee’s mission to foster racial and ethnic diversity in the Chicago legal community, impacting the broader legal profession.

After completing her PILI Fellowship in 2004, Kim was awarded a Katten Muchin Rosenman Public Service Fellowship and worked at the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee For Civil Rights Under Law in their Fair Housing Project for one year.  Then in September 2005, she started as a second year associate at Katten in the litigation department. “My experience as an Intern actually led me to want to be a litigator,” states Kim. “I found the everyday tasks involved in my work – from managing the case load to talking and advising the clients and drafting motions and letters – were really satisfying and realized that I could really be a lawyer.”

Kim credits her PILI Internship and Fellowship with giving her a leg up when she started at Katten. They gave her an opportunity to develop her skills in multitasking, problem solving and decision making, and allowed her to grow her passion for her work and her confidence. “After my fellowship, I tried to regularly be involved in pro bono cases to enhance my own professional development and skill set,” says Kim.

Kim’s experience as a “double-PILI” not only helped prepare her for a career in law, but also helped connect her to organizations and causes that remain an important part of her life. Kim is currently a member of the Board of Directors for Cabrini Green Legal Aid, where she had served as an Intern. “It is important to be involved in pro bono work,” says Kim. “It reminds me of the responsibility connected with being a lawyer.”

 

 

Anna Lusero, 2008 Intern & 2009 Intern

Anna Lusero entered law school knowing she wanted to do public interest law. In particular, Lusero knew she wanted to serve immigrant communities. Also a double-PILI, Lusero completed two summer Internships, one in 2008 at the Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago, and the second in 2009 at the Legal Aid Bureau. At LAF, she worked with the Illinois Migrant Legal Assistance Project doing outreach to migrant farm workers and landscape workers to educate them about their labor rights and to assess their legal needs, and at the Legal Aid Bureau she worked primarily with Spanish-speaking survivors of domestic violence on family law issues such as divorce, orders of protection and child custody. While in law school and after her Internships, Lusero also worked at Working Hands Legal Clinic on wage and hour litigation for low wage workers. She is active on nonprofit boards, including PILI’s Board of Directors, where she is serving for two years as an Intern Representative to the board.

Lusero was awarded a prestigious Equal Justice Works Fellowship after her graduation from Chicago-Kent College of Law in 2010. Her fellowship is with the Legal Assistance Foundation, where she served her first Internship, and focuses on finding immigration remedies for immigrant workers who have been victims of employment-related crimes, such as sexual harassment, intimidation, and involuntary servitude.

Remaining committed to her primary goal of serving immigrant communities, Lusero appreciates how her PILI Internships, through the summer educational programs, exposed her to new areas of law such as the Agricultural Workers Protection Act (AWPA), and family law, an area of law in which she had not previously worked. “I gained extensive outreach experience and was able to develop my skills in doing outreach with the community, collaborating with community organizations, and presenting to large groups,” says Lusero. “I did many ‘Know Your Labor Rights’ presentations in English and Spanish to groups of immigrant workers throughout Northern Illinois.” After completing her Equal Justice Works Fellowship, Lusero intends to remain working in public interest law.

Read more about Lusero’s Fellowship project at LAF at the Equal Justice Works website.

Kate Pomper, 2006 PILI Intern

Kate Pomper’s career has been marked by a commitment to public interest law at every stage. A current Assistant Attorney General with the Office of the Illinois Attorney General, Kate got her first experience working in public interest law as a PILI Intern at the Sargent Shriver National Center on Poverty Law. She spent most of her summer there working on a lawsuit to enforce a contract for Section 8 housing for elderly and disabled individuals. The following summer she interned at the Legal Assistance Foundation of Metropolitan Chicago in their South Side office, and in 2008, after receiving degrees from the University of Michigan's Law School and Ford School of Public Policy, she was awarded a Polikoff-Gautreaux Fellowship at Business and Professional People for the Public Interest (BPI).

While at BPI, Kate’s work was dedicated to addressing compelling issues of social justice and quality of life in the Chicago region. She participated in the representation of the Inspector General of the City of Chicago in a lawsuit to enforce a subpoena for documents sought in an investigation of possible government misconduct.  She also represented BPI on working groups for the redevelopment of four public housing developments into mixed-income communities and participated in the development and implementation of legal and policy strategies to ensure that new mixed-income communities created under the Plan for Transformation were both viable and inclusive.

Kate intends to keep public interest law the focus of her career moving forward.  Currently, at the Office of the Illinois Attorney General, her work focuses on affirmative complex litigation with a public policy impact for the State of Illinois. She is also the co-founder of the Chicago Young Public Interest Lawyers Network, an organization that aims to help public interest lawyers in Chicago in their first ten years of practice achieve their career goals while making a significant impact in the communities they serve, by providing networking, information, and training. Kate remembers her PILI Internship as giving her a chance to learn from talented and dedicated lawyers at the Shriver Center while working on compelling public interest cases and also providing her an invaluable introduction to Chicago's broader public interest community. “My PILI internship with the Shriver Center was my first opportunity to take what I was learning in law school and try to use it to address important issues in society, as I hoped to do after law school,” says Kate. “I couldn't have had a better start to my public interest legal career.”

 

David Scriven-Young is a recognized leader in environmental law in Illinois and a strong advocate for the Great Lakes and other causes. He traces the roots of his pro bono work on environmental issues back to 2003 when, having just graduated summa cum laude from DePaul University College of Law, he was sponsored by Jenner & Block LLP to serve as a PILI Fellow at the Lake Michigan Federation (now called Alliance for the Great Lakes). His Fellowship gave him experience in the field of environmental law and valuable connections with other attorneys and legal professionals also committed to protecting the environment. In addition to conducting legal research on water quality and invasive species issues, David says the highlight of his Fellowship was drafting an amicus brief for a Michigan Supreme Court case. “The case was filed by another nonprofit citizens group,” explains David. “They sought to declare invalid a permit issued by the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality and to enjoin a sand mining operation that would impact a critical dune area.” David worked closely with the agency’s in-house counsel, which helped him understand both the demands placed on those working in that capacity, and also nonprofit citizen groups’ need for pro bono legal services.

 

After working as an associate first at Jenner & Block and then later at McDermott Will & Emery, David is now at the Chicago office of Peckar & Abramson, P.C., where he practices business litigation, environmental law, and construction law. Throughout this time since his PILI Fellowship, David’s pro bono involvement has remained central to his work as a lawyer. “I have actively pursued public interest work throughout my career,” says David. His pro bono work spans an interesting range of topics, from representing the Lake Michigan Federation in a lawsuit against a major metropolitan sewage district improperly dumping sewage into Lake Michigan, to representing homebuyers in a lawsuit against sellers who failed to disclose that the home contained toxic mold. His continued work with the Lake Michigan Federation earned him the Great Lakes Stewardship Award for Advocate of the Year in 2005. David has also taken pro bono cases not related to environmental law, including one where he represented prison guards in a Section 1983 case involving First Amendment rights, and another where he represented an artist under the Illinois Consignment of Art Act.

 

On top of his pro bono work, David is actively engaged in bar associations, serving as Co-chair of the Environmental Law Committee of the Chicago Bar Association’s Young Lawyers Section.  He also serves as Committee and Liaison Director for the American Bar Association Young Lawyers Division and as the YLD’s Liaison to the Task Force on Policy and Coordination for the ABA’s Section of Environment, Energy, and Resources.  David organizes beach and park cleanups through Friends of the Park and Alliance for the Great Lakes. He writes an award-winning blog about environmental legal issues, and regularly speaks and publishes on the topic. Among the many honors and recognitions he has garnered for his work, in 2010, David was featured as one of DePaul University’s “14 Alumni Under 40,” and in January of this year, David was named a “Rising Star” by Illinois Super Lawyers Magazine for the second year in a row. He was one of only three attorneys in the environmental law category from across the state.

 

In addition to his ongoing involvement with environmental and pro bono work, David has been actively involved in PILI’s Alumni community, and was recently selected to be a Team Leader for PILI’s Alumni Program Team, part of PILI’s new Alumni Network Leadership Council. “Serving as a PILI Fellow enhanced my career as an attorney in many ways,” says David. In addition to the work experience, he says, “it expanded my professional network and helped me gain lasting and truly meaningful friendships.” Some of his fondest memories from his time as a PILI are from events PILI organized for Interns and Fellows. “I enjoyed meeting the other Fellows and Interns and knowing that there were other students (soon to be lawyers) committed to pro bono and public interest law.” PILI is pleased to have David on board as a Team Leader in our Alumni Network Leadership Council, and we look forward to his continued involvement in PILI Alumni Network.

 

Beyond her ongoing relationship with LAF and her continued involvement with pro bono work, Snow feels that her experience as a PILI Intern helped her develop other important skills. “HOPP gave me confidence as a young associate that I otherwise would not have been able to attain,” says Snow. With her team’s support, she learned to be comfortable asking questions and digging into legal issues in order to fully understand her tasks and to best support her clients. She also learned valuable time management skills and people skills. “Given that our clients were often desperate to keep their homes, I learned to calm their fears and let them know that they had options and often, more importantly, the legal system provided them with time to work through their home ownership issue.”

 

 


 

 
     
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