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| 1 | | HOUSE RESOLUTION |
| 2 | | WHEREAS, The members of the Illinois House of |
| 3 | | Representatives are saddened to learn of the death of Standish |
| 4 | | E. "Kwame" Willis, Esq. of Chicago, who passed away on |
| 5 | | February 28, 2025; and |
| 6 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis, born to Andrew and Plumie Willis on |
| 7 | | August 16, 1941, was a lifelong Chicagoan who was raised on the |
| 8 | | West Side and under the Church of God in Christ (COGIC) faith; |
| 9 | | he was a first-generation high school graduate who enlisted |
| 10 | | into the United States Air Force during the Vietnam War; after |
| 11 | | being honorably discharged, he worked as a bus driver for the |
| 12 | | Chicago Transit Authority (CTA), where he helped organize |
| 13 | | several wildcat strikes, including the largest in Chicago's |
| 14 | | history that disrupted travel city-wide during the 1968 |
| 15 | | Democratic National Convention, which helped win concessions |
| 16 | | from the CTA union and led the City of Chicago to begin |
| 17 | | dismantling racist policies and practices impacting Black |
| 18 | | drivers; and |
| 19 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis, while still with the CTA, attended |
| 20 | | Crane Junior College, where he was an active student leader; |
| 21 | | during his studies, he led a march to protest the murders of |
| 22 | | Black college students by South Carolina National Guardsmen in |
| 23 | | Orangeburg, South Carolina; he also served as editor of the |
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| 1 | | college yearbook, founded the Afro-American History Club, and |
| 2 | | was elected as president of Student Government, through which |
| 3 | | he led the student movement to name the new campus after |
| 4 | | Malcolm X; upon completing his associate's degree, he |
| 5 | | transferred to the University of Chicago, earning a Bachelor |
| 6 | | of Arts and a master's degree in Latin American Studies; he |
| 7 | | studied economics at the master's degree level at the |
| 8 | | University of Illinois Chicago, and he earned his Juris Doctor |
| 9 | | from Chicago-Kent College of Law; and |
| 10 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis became a lawyer who specialized in |
| 11 | | civil rights, police brutality and misconduct, criminal |
| 12 | | defense work, and human rights; he initially joined Peoples' |
| 13 | | Law Office (PLO) as a partner, during which time he also joined |
| 14 | | the Lawyers for Washington movement; he served PLO for several |
| 15 | | years prior to establishing his own firm, The Law Office of |
| 16 | | Standish E. Willis, in 1989; he tried numerous federal jury |
| 17 | | trials and several state jury and bench trials, and he argued |
| 18 | | many cases before the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals; he |
| 19 | | also litigated hundreds of civil rights lawsuits against many |
| 20 | | municipalities involving public officials, served on the |
| 21 | | Federal Defender Panel and its prestigious Selection |
| 22 | | Committee, and was named one of Chicago's "Tough Lawyers" by |
| 23 | | Chicago magazine in 2002; and |
| 24 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis taught in various settings over the |
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| 1 | | course of his professional life, devoting the same level of |
| 2 | | dedication and rigor to the classroom that he brought to the |
| 3 | | courtroom and community organizing; he taught a number of |
| 4 | | courses, including the GED program at Malcom X College, |
| 5 | | African American history at Stateville Correctional Center, |
| 6 | | and economics at Roosevelt University for ten years; he was a |
| 7 | | frequent guest lecturer at Chicago-area law schools and led |
| 8 | | annual workshops for lawyers and lay people across the nation, |
| 9 | | providing state-certified continuing legal education (CLE) |
| 10 | | credits; he served as a faculty-lecturer for the annual civil |
| 11 | | rights seminar sponsored by the Illinois Institute for |
| 12 | | Continuing Legal Education (IICLE), the Chicago-Kent College |
| 13 | | of Law, and the American Bar Association in the area of 42 |
| 14 | | U.S.C. 1983 on civil rights liability and litigation; he also |
| 15 | | maintained speaking engagements on issues related to the |
| 16 | | criminal justice system, the death penalty, police brutality, |
| 17 | | community control of police, the prison-industrial complex, |
| 18 | | America's political prisoners, racism and the American legal |
| 19 | | system, international human rights, and reparations; further, |
| 20 | | he was the subject of and contributed to chapters and articles |
| 21 | | of numerous books, dissertations, and documentaries; and |
| 22 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis founded the grassroots organization |
| 23 | | Black People Against Police Torture (BPAPT) in 2005; he led a |
| 24 | | coalition of lawyers, activists, and community members to |
| 25 | | internationalize the Chicago Police Torture cases by means of |
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| 1 | | international human rights mechanisms and treaties to which |
| 2 | | the U.S. was subject; he presented evidence of police torture |
| 3 | | before both the Organization of American States' |
| 4 | | Inter-American Commission on Human Rights in 2005 and the |
| 5 | | United Nations' Committee to Eliminate Racial Discrimination |
| 6 | | (CERD) in 2008, helping to bring a modicum of justice in the |
| 7 | | Chicago police torture cases by sparking the indictment of |
| 8 | | former Chicago Police Department Commander Jon Burge; through |
| 9 | | BPAPT, he called for reparations, was among the first to |
| 10 | | challenge Chicago's right to host the Olympics, coined the now |
| 11 | | familiar phrase of "the torture capital of the U. S.", and |
| 12 | | personally initiated and drafted the legislative bill which |
| 13 | | was ultimately enacted in 2009 in the form of the Illinois |
| 14 | | Torture Inquiry and Relief Commission (TIRC), securing justice |
| 15 | | and freeing many torture victims and survivors; and |
| 16 | | WHEREAS, Stan Kwame was involved in many social justice |
| 17 | | campaigns, including the Free South Africa Movement to end |
| 18 | | Apartheid; he organized the African-American Defense Committee |
| 19 | | Against Police Violence after the televised beating of Rodney |
| 20 | | King in 1991 and The Riverdale Eight, a group of |
| 21 | | African-American women who were brutalized by Riverdale police |
| 22 | | officers, in 1995; he joined many abolitionists globally to |
| 23 | | spare former Black Panther Party member Mumia Abu Jamal from |
| 24 | | execution, organizing and chairing the African-American |
| 25 | | Committee to Free Mumia Abu Jamal; he continued educating and |
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| 1 | | mobilizing support for all victims of racial and political |
| 2 | | oppression, including the numerous victims of the notorious |
| 3 | | Counter-Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO) by authoring a |
| 4 | | stakeholders' report on COINTELPRO Political Prisoners in |
| 5 | | 2010, which was submitted to the first UN Universal Periodic |
| 6 | | Review (UPR) of the United States; he was also instrumental in |
| 7 | | leading then-Governor George H. Ryan to clearing Illinois' |
| 8 | | death row and commuting the death sentences of four men who had |
| 9 | | been convicted based on tortured confessions; and |
| 10 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis was a longtime member of the National |
| 11 | | Conference of Black Lawyers (NCBL), serving as chair of its |
| 12 | | Chicago Chapter; he was a longtime board member for the Black |
| 13 | | United Fund of Illinois (BUFI) and co-founded several |
| 14 | | significant institutions, including the Communiversity, a |
| 15 | | pre-cursor to the Center for Inner City Studies, the Black |
| 16 | | Student Congress, African Liberation Day in Chicago, the |
| 17 | | National Anti-Imperialist Movement in Solidarity with African |
| 18 | | Liberation, the Chicago Conference of Black Lawyers/NCBL |
| 19 | | affiliate, and the Office of HBCU Development and |
| 20 | | International Cooperation (OHBCUD); he also served as a member |
| 21 | | of the Durban 400 in 2001, helping secure a UN declaration that |
| 22 | | the Transatlantic slave trade was a crime against humanity; |
| 23 | | and |
| 24 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis was often recognized for his |
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| 1 | | unswerving commitment to social justice work and solidarity by |
| 2 | | groups across racial, generational, and class lines, including |
| 3 | | the National Lawyers Guild, the Arab American Action Network, |
| 4 | | the Coalition of Black Trade Unionists, the Cook County Bar |
| 5 | | Association, and the National Conference of Black Lawyers; he |
| 6 | | became the namesake of the Standish E. Willis Community |
| 7 | | Service Award by Black law students at Chicago-Kent College of |
| 8 | | Law in 1984; and |
| 9 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis will be remembered as a tireless |
| 10 | | advocate for oppressed communities across the globe who stayed |
| 11 | | true to his Chicago roots and Pan African calling, remaining |
| 12 | | guided by the needs of the community and the people; and |
| 13 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis was preceded in death by his parents |
| 14 | | and his youngest brother, Sheldon "Rell"; and |
| 15 | | WHEREAS, Stan Willis is survived by his wife, Sali Vickie |
| 16 | | Casanova-Willis; his children, Lil' Reggie, Heavenly, Akiza, |
| 17 | | Kimani, Ayesha, Amilcar, Charis, Ricky, Carlos, and Reyna; his |
| 18 | | siblings, Winnette and Reginald; and a host of grandchildren, |
| 19 | | great-grandchildren, great-great-grandchildren, cousins, |
| 20 | | friends, and comrades; therefore, be it |
| 21 | | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE |
| 22 | | HUNDRED FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that |