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1
HOUSE RESOLUTION

 
2    WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of
3Representatives are saddened to learn of the death of Standish
4E. "Kwame" Willis, Esq. of Chicago, who passed away on
5February 28, 2025; and
 
6    WHEREAS, Stan Willis, born to Andrew and Plumie Willis on
7August 16, 1941, was a lifelong Chicagoan who was raised on the
8West Side and under the Church of God in Christ (COGIC) faith;
9he was a first-generation high school graduate who enlisted
10into the United States Air Force during the Vietnam War; after
11being honorably discharged, he worked as a bus driver for the
12Chicago Transit Authority (CTA), where he helped organize
13several wildcat strikes, including the largest in Chicago's
14history that disrupted travel city-wide during the 1968
15Democratic National Convention, which helped win concessions
16from the CTA union and led the City of Chicago to begin
17dismantling racist policies and practices impacting Black
18drivers; and
 
19    WHEREAS, Stan Willis, while still with the CTA, attended
20Crane Junior College, where he was an active student leader;
21during his studies, he led a march to protest the murders of
22Black college students by South Carolina National Guardsmen in
23Orangeburg, South Carolina; he also served as editor of the

 

 

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1college yearbook, founded the Afro-American History Club, and
2was elected as president of Student Government, through which
3he led the student movement to name the new campus after
4Malcolm X; upon completing his associate's degree, he
5transferred to the University of Chicago, earning a Bachelor
6of Arts and a master's degree in Latin American Studies; he
7studied economics at the master's degree level at the
8University of Illinois Chicago, and he earned his Juris Doctor
9from Chicago-Kent College of Law; and
 
10    WHEREAS, Stan Willis became a lawyer who specialized in
11civil rights, police brutality and misconduct, criminal
12defense work, and human rights; he initially joined Peoples'
13Law Office (PLO) as a partner, during which time he also joined
14the Lawyers for Washington movement; he served PLO for several
15years prior to establishing his own firm, The Law Office of
16Standish E. Willis, in 1989; he tried numerous federal jury
17trials and several state jury and bench trials, and he argued
18many cases before the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals; he
19also litigated hundreds of civil rights lawsuits against many
20municipalities involving public officials, served on the
21Federal Defender Panel and its prestigious Selection
22Committee, and was named one of Chicago's "Tough Lawyers" by
23Chicago magazine in 2002; and
 
24    WHEREAS, Stan Willis taught in various settings over the

 

 

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1course of his professional life, devoting the same level of
2dedication and rigor to the classroom that he brought to the
3courtroom and community organizing; he taught a number of
4courses, including the GED program at Malcom X College,
5African American history at Stateville Correctional Center,
6and economics at Roosevelt University for ten years; he was a
7frequent guest lecturer at Chicago-area law schools and led
8annual workshops for lawyers and lay people across the nation,
9providing state-certified continuing legal education (CLE)
10credits; he served as a faculty-lecturer for the annual civil
11rights seminar sponsored by the Illinois Institute for
12Continuing Legal Education (IICLE), the Chicago-Kent College
13of Law, and the American Bar Association in the area of 42
14U.S.C. 1983 on civil rights liability and litigation; he also
15maintained speaking engagements on issues related to the
16criminal justice system, the death penalty, police brutality,
17community control of police, the prison-industrial complex,
18America's political prisoners, racism and the American legal
19system, international human rights, and reparations; further,
20he was the subject of and contributed to chapters and articles
21of numerous books, dissertations, and documentaries; and
 
22    WHEREAS, Stan Willis founded the grassroots organization
23Black People Against Police Torture (BPAPT) in 2005; he led a
24coalition of lawyers, activists, and community members to
25internationalize the Chicago Police Torture cases by means of

 

 

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1international human rights mechanisms and treaties to which
2the U.S. was subject; he presented evidence of police torture
3before both the Organization of American States'
4Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in 2005 and the
5United Nations' Committee to Eliminate Racial Discrimination
6(CERD) in 2008, helping to bring a modicum of justice in the
7Chicago police torture cases by sparking the indictment of
8former Chicago Police Department Commander Jon Burge; through
9BPAPT, he called for reparations, was among the first to
10challenge Chicago's right to host the Olympics, coined the now
11familiar phrase of "the torture capital of the U. S.", and
12personally initiated and drafted the legislative bill which
13was ultimately enacted in 2009 in the form of the Illinois
14Torture Inquiry and Relief Commission (TIRC), securing justice
15and freeing many torture victims and survivors; and
 
16    WHEREAS, Stan Kwame was involved in many social justice
17campaigns, including the Free South Africa Movement to end
18Apartheid; he organized the African-American Defense Committee
19Against Police Violence after the televised beating of Rodney
20King in 1991 and The Riverdale Eight, a group of
21African-American women who were brutalized by Riverdale police
22officers, in 1995; he joined many abolitionists globally to
23spare former Black Panther Party member Mumia Abu Jamal from
24execution, organizing and chairing the African-American
25Committee to Free Mumia Abu Jamal; he continued educating and

 

 

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1mobilizing support for all victims of racial and political
2oppression, including the numerous victims of the notorious
3Counter-Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO) by authoring a
4stakeholders' report on COINTELPRO Political Prisoners in
52010, which was submitted to the first UN Universal Periodic
6Review (UPR) of the United States; he was also instrumental in
7leading then-Governor George H. Ryan to clearing Illinois'
8death row and commuting the death sentences of four men who had
9been convicted based on tortured confessions; and
 
10    WHEREAS, Stan Willis was a longtime member of the National
11Conference of Black Lawyers (NCBL), serving as chair of its
12Chicago Chapter; he was a longtime board member for the Black
13United Fund of Illinois (BUFI) and co-founded several
14significant institutions, including the Communiversity, a
15pre-cursor to the Center for Inner City Studies, the Black
16Student Congress, African Liberation Day in Chicago, the
17National Anti-Imperialist Movement in Solidarity with African
18Liberation, the Chicago Conference of Black Lawyers/NCBL
19affiliate, and the Office of HBCU Development and
20International Cooperation (OHBCUD); he also served as a member
21of the Durban 400 in 2001, helping secure a UN declaration that
22the Transatlantic slave trade was a crime against humanity;
23and
 
24    WHEREAS, Stan Willis was often recognized for his

 

 

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1unswerving commitment to social justice work and solidarity by
2groups across racial, generational, and class lines, including
3the National Lawyers Guild, the Arab American Action Network,
4the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists, the Cook County Bar
5Association, and the National Conference of Black Lawyers; he
6became the namesake of the Standish E. Willis Community
7Service Award by Black law students at Chicago-Kent College of
8Law in 1984; and
 
9    WHEREAS, Stan Willis will be remembered as a tireless
10advocate for oppressed communities across the globe who stayed
11true to his Chicago roots and Pan African calling, remaining
12guided by the needs of the community and the people; and
 
13    WHEREAS, Stan Willis was preceded in death by his parents
14and his youngest brother, Sheldon "Rell"; and
 
15    WHEREAS, Stan Willis is survived by his wife, Sali Vickie
16Casanova-Willis; his children, Lil' Reggie, Heavenly, Akiza,
17Kimani, Ayesha, Amilcar, Charis, Ricky, Carlos, and Reyna; his
18siblings, Winnette and Reginald; and a host of grandchildren,
19great-grandchildren, great-great-grandchildren, cousins,
20friends, and comrades; therefore, be it
 
21    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE
22HUNDRED FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that

 

 

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1we mourn the passing of Standish E. "Kwame" Willis, Esq. and
2extend our sincere condolences to his family, friends, and all
3who knew and loved him; and be it further
 
4    RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be
5presented to the family of Stan Willis as an expression of our
6deepest sympathy.