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NY
Judge's Remarks Cause Stir
Over Goal of Pro Bono Work
By Mark Hamblett
New York Law Journal
New York Lawyer
October 31, 2008
Chief Judge Dennis Jacobs of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit raised some hackles earlier this month with a speech
on pro bono lawyering at a Federalist Society dinner in Rochester.
The Oct. 6 speech, entitled
"Pro
Bono for Fun and Profit," promised at the
outset to be "unusually provocative" and the judge said straight
away, "My point, in a nutshell, is that much of what we call legal
work for the public interest is essentially self-serving: Lawyers
use public interest litigation to promote their own agendas, social
and political - and (on a wider plane) to promote the power and the
role of the legal profession itself."
Judge Jacobs cited examples where litigation against governments and
officials had unintended consequences. He criticized "so-called
impact litigation" as overtly political and divorced from the
requirements of standing. In one case, he said, attorneys at the
Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law
challenging the legal services statute illustrated "a mechanism that
is often in the shadows, and showed how public interest litigation
promotes political interests of lawyers and activists, altogether
apart from any felt need by clients, who are marginalized or
rendered superfluous altogether."
Judge Jacobs also went out of his way to appreciate "lawyers who
serve people and institutions that otherwise would be denied
essential services and opportunities" and praised pro bono work for
providing services in the "great tradition of American
volunteerism."
The speech drew some heated reaction, with Dean Erwin Chemerinsky of
the University of California, Irvine School of Law, telling the
National Law Journal that Judge Jacobs should be "ashamed of
himself." Judge Jacobs later told a law blog that
the National Law Journal article
"grossly misstates what I said and think," adding later, "I support,
endorse and solicit pro bono work, and my talk said just that. The
talk identifies abuses."
What Do You Think?
The New York Law Journal is interested in your reaction to Judge
Jacobs' speech and Dean Chemerinsky's response.
E-mail us your comments.
Judge Jacobs declined to be interviewed when called on the matter,
but said he was satisfied to have the full text of the speech
published.
Daniel L. Greenberg, former President of the Legal Aid Society and
now special counsel at Schulte Roth & Zabel, where he heads the
firm's pro bono program, had his own reaction to the speech."It's
ironic that a federal judge misunderstands that a pro bono lawyer
prevails only after the other side has presented all of its facts,
so to rail against the bringing of a lawsuit just strikes me as kind
of odd," Mr. Greenberg said.
Mr. Greenberg was amused by the notion of powerful pro bono
attorneys overwhelming government lawyers, saying, "It just doesn't
reflect the reality of what is happening."
He added, "It's not incorrect to say that public interest as a
category sometimes is broad in terms of the entire public's interest
- by definition, there will always be somebody whose ox is gored.
I've been doing this for 30 years and I've only had one case where
everyone in the firm was pleased."
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