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1 | | SENATE RESOLUTION
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2 | | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois Senate are saddened to |
3 | | learn of the death of Lewis Myers Jr., who passed away on May |
4 | | 24, 2018; and
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5 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers was born in Houston, Texas and |
6 | | graduated with honors from Phillis Wheatley High School in |
7 | | 1965, where he was recognized in Who's Who Among Students in |
8 | | American High Schools; he was elected NAACP Youth Council |
9 | | President for the Houston branch and led student demonstrations |
10 | | that helped integrate the Houston Independent School District; |
11 | | and |
12 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers studied at Tennessee State |
13 | | University, where he joined the Student Non-Violent |
14 | | Coordinating Committee (S.N.C.C.) Chapter; he also became |
15 | | chairman of the Students Rights Organization Chapter at |
16 | | Tennessee State; he transferred to Howard University, and in |
17 | | 1968, was elected president of the Undergraduate Student |
18 | | Council; he was recognized in Who's Who Among Students in |
19 | | American Colleges and Universities in 1969; and
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20 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers entered law school at Rutgers |
21 | | University; he later transferred to the University of |
22 | | Mississippi, which allowed him to work in rural Mississippi and |
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1 | | expand his civil rights work; he earned his law degree from the |
2 | | University of Mississippi in 1972; he was a student assistant |
3 | | to famed constitutional and civil rights lawyer Herbert Reid
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4 | | who was the former Dean of the Law School at Howard University, |
5 | | as well as Chief Counsel to legendary
Congressman Adam Clayton |
6 | | Powell Jr. from New York; and
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7 | | WHEREAS, In 1971, Lewis Myers worked with what was then |
8 | | called the Goldberg
Commission in New York City; he served as |
9 | | an assistant on the staff and visited
many of the cities where |
10 | | the Black Panther Party had been involved in confrontations |
11 | | with the local police
departments; and |
12 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers accepted a Reginald Heber Smith |
13 | | Fellowship, which enabled him to work with a civil rights legal |
14 | | services
program across the United States; he was selected to |
15 | | work in Mississippi, where he started working as a
staff |
16 | | attorney with North Mississippi Rural Legal Services in Oxford; |
17 | | initially, he handled school
desegregation cases; however, |
18 | | within a year of his graduation from law school, he filed suit |
19 | | on behalf of
African American law students at the University in |
20 | | the case of Robinson vs. University of Mississippi; the
lawsuit |
21 | | challenged the University's historic policies of racial |
22 | | discrimination and exclusion of African
Americans from |
23 | | admission to its law school and subsequently opened up the |
24 | | admissions process which has allowed many African American |
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1 | | students to complete their education since that time; and |
2 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers became Director of Litigation in |
3 | | charge of more than 45 lawyers and 40 paralegals; he was
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4 | | responsible for managing seven legal service offices |
5 | | throughout cities in Northern Mississippi and the
Mississippi |
6 | | Delta; he initiated numerous lawsuits challenging racial |
7 | | discrimination in municipal governments and in private
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8 | | employment practices in the State of Mississippi; in 1973, he |
9 | | was one of the lawyers that filed the
historic case of Ayers |
10 | | vs. Mississippi which ultimately led to the desegregation of |
11 | | institutions of higher
learning in the United States after |
12 | | reaching the United States Supreme Court; between 1974 and |
13 | | 1976,
he was on the cutting edge of filing more than six |
14 | | lawsuits against county jails in the State of Mississippi
for |
15 | | inhumane conditions and the treatment of their inmates; and |
16 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers was involved in numerous historic |
17 | | cases, including the case of New
Jersey vs. Joanne Chesmard |
18 | | a/k/a Assata Shakur-mother of Tupac Shakur, the United States |
19 | | vs. Rene Leon, and the Elmer "Geronimo" Pratt case; he served |
20 | | as counsel for seven young boys who were expelled
from the |
21 | | Decatur public schools after a fight at a football game; and |
22 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers served as general counsel for several |
23 | | national civil rights leaders, including Minister Louis
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1 | | Farrakhan, Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, and Rev. Al Sharpton; he |
2 | | served as
chief operating officer and the national deputy |
3 | | director of the NAACP in Baltimore; in August of 1993,
he |
4 | | served as national deputy coordinator of the historic 30th |
5 | | anniversary for the March on
Washington; and
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6 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers was one of the top litigation lawyers |
7 | | in the Chicago area; he taught Evidence and Trial Advocacy as
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8 | | an adjunct professor at DePaul University's School of Law in |
9 | | Chicago; he taught at several Chicago City Colleges and served |
10 | | as director of the Criminal Justice Program at Kennedy King |
11 | | College; he
was also a professor teaching Criminal Justice at |
12 | | Chicago State University; and |
13 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers was a member of
the Illinois Bar, the |
14 | | Bar of the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, the Bar of the |
15 | | Federal Appellate Court for
the Third Circuit, the Bar for the |
16 | | Federal Appellate Court for the Fifth Circuit, the Bar of the |
17 | | United States
Federal District Court for the Northern District |
18 | | of California, and the Bar for the Federal Court of Claims;
he |
19 | | was a member of the National
Conference of Black Lawyers, the |
20 | | National Lawyers' Guild (Executive Board, Chicago Chapter), |
21 | | the National
Bar Association, the National Association of |
22 | | Criminal Defense Attorneys, and the National Conference of
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23 | | Black Lawyers (Chairperson, Chicago Chapter); he held |
24 | | memberships with several professional
organizations, including |
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1 | | Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, the NAACP (Life Member), 500 Black |
2 | | Men (Founder of
Chicago Chapter), Black Men's Forum, and the |
3 | | American Historical Association; he was the recipient of many |
4 | | accolades and awards; he was listed in several
Who's Who |
5 | | publications and was recognized as one of the most influential |
6 | | African Americans in the United
States in various national |
7 | | publications; and
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8 | | WHEREAS, Lewis Myers is survived by his wife, Celestine |
9 | | Narcisse-Myers, and his son, Lewis Myers III; therefore, be it
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10 | | RESOLVED, BY THE SENATE OF THE ONE HUNDREDTH GENERAL |
11 | | ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we mourn the passing of |
12 | | Lewis Myers Jr., and extend our sincere condolences to his |
13 | | family, friends, and all who knew and loved him; and be it |
14 | | further
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15 | | RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be |
16 | | presented to the family of Lewis Myers as an expression of our |
17 | | deepest sympathy.
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