Friday, January 9, 2004
CONTACT: Elaine Justice, 404/727-0643; ejustic@emory.edu
EDITORS PLEASE NOTE: Nina R. Hickson, chief presiding judge of the
Juvenile Court of Fulton County, has withdrawn her name from those being
recognized this year at the Emory Public Interest Committee (EPIC) awards
ceremony at Emory Law School. A revised version of the announcement of the
annual awards ceremony is below.
FORMER GOV. BARNES TO HOST EMORY LAW SCHOOL EPIC AWARDS
ATLANTA, Ga. - Former Gov. Roy Barnes will host Emory University
School of Law's eighth annual EPIC Inspiration Awards. The ceremony and
reception will be held 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 3 in the law school's Tull
Auditorium.
Each year, EPIC (Emory
Public Interest Committee) honors outstanding attorneys who have demonstrated a
strong commitment to public interest law. This year's recipients are: Bill Brennan, director of the Home
Defense Program of the Atlanta Legal Aid Society, Inc. and Chief Justice Norman S. Fletcher, of the Georgia
Supreme Court. Brennan has helped
thousands regain their homes caught in predatory lending schemes. Fletcher led
the effort to improve Georgia's indigent defense system. Bill Rankin, staff writer for the Atlanta Journal-Constitution,
also will receive recognition with the Special Community Collaboration Award.
EPIC is a student
organization that promotes law in the public interest at Emory Law School,
encourages and helps Emory law students get jobs in public interest law
practice, administers and supports public interest programs at the law school,
and promotes the professional responsibility of lawyers and law students to
make legal services more accessible.
The awards
ceremony is the major fund-raiser for EPIC. Donations are used to provide
stipends for law students who pursue summer internships with public interest
agencies. Donations are accepted at various levels with a minimum of $35
requested. Inquiries about contributions and reservations should be directed to
Sue McAvoy, Emory's public interest advisor, at 404-727-5503 or
smcavoy@law.emory.edu.
Last year EPIC
raised more than $64,000, which provided 17 grants. Students worked at agencies
such as Public Advocates in San Francisco, the ACLU of Georgia and the Rocky
Mountain Children's Law Center in Denver.
Brennan, who will receive the Lifetime Commitment to Public Service Award,
has served for more than 35 years as a staff attorney at the Atlanta Legal Aid
Society, specializing in housing and consumer issues. A 1967 graduate of Emory
Law School, Brennan has spent the last 12 years as director of the Home Defense
Program. That department provides referrals and legal representation to
homeowners who have been victimized by title conversion, home equity and home
purchase scams.
Most notably,
Brennan helped change Georgia laws to address predatory mortgage lending. As a
result, a proposal to license and regulate mortgage brokers and non-bank
mortgage lenders was enacted into law. He also provided written, oral and
client testimony in 1994 in the U.S. Congress in support of the Home Ownership
and Equity Protection Act of 1994. Brennan has served three terms, from 1995 to
1998, as a member of the board of directors of the National Association of
Consumer Advocates.
Fletcher, who will receive the Outstanding Leadership in the Public
Interest Award, was sworn in as chief justice of the Supreme Court of
Georgia in June 2001. He was first appointed to the court in 1989 by then-Gov.
Joe Frank Harris and was reelected to a third six-year term in August 2002.
Fletcher began his
law practice as an associate with Matthews, Maddox, Walton and Smith in Rome,
Ga., in 1958 before moving to LaFayette to form a partnership with the late
George P. Shaw and Irwin W. Stolz, Jr. While in private practice, Fletcher
represented the state of Georgia as a special assistant attorney general, and
also served as LaFayette city attorney and Walker County attorney. He continued
his general practice until his appointment to the state Supreme Court in 1989.
Fletcher has a
distinguished record of service to his community. He was presented with the
Harold G. Clarke Award by the Georgia Indigent Defense Council for his
commitment to ensuring equal justice for all Georgia citizens. He is currently
a fellow of the American Bar Foundation and the Georgia Bar Foundation, and is
a master in the Joseph Henry Lumpkin Inn of Court.
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