Lennox Hinds
Lennox Hinds is founder of the National Conference of Black Lawyers and former counsel for the Government of South Africa and the African National Congress, teaches in the Criminal Justice Program at Rutgers University[1].
National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression
The 10th Anniversary Conference in 1983 Chicago, May 13-15, 1983 held at McCormick Inn - Featured speakers including Lennox Hinds[2]
World Peace Council
In the late 1970s, the Information Centre of the Soviet front World Peace Council, Helsinki Finland, published a booklet naming members of the organization, worldwide.[3]
- We publish in this booklet a list of members of the World Peace Council elected at the Council's Session in Warsaw in 1977.
U.S. members listed, included; Lennox Hinds, Director, National Conference of Black Lawyers; US Representative, International Association of Democratic Lawyers.
CoC National Conference endorser
In 1992 Lennox Hinds, chair emeritus National Coalition of Black Lawyers, New York, endorsed the Committees of Correspondence national conference Conference on Perspectives for Democracy and Socialism in the 90s held at Berkeley California July 17-19.[4]
Black Radical Congress
In March 1998 “Endorsers of the Call” to found a Black Radical Congress included Lennox Hinds, International Association of Democratic Lawyers, North American Chair[5].
Free Mumia Abu-Jamal
In 2008 Lennox Hinds, Professor and Lawyer, New York signed a statement circulated by the Partisan Defense Committee calling for the release of convicted “cop-killer” Mumia Abu-Jamal.[6]
Critical Resistance event
Critical Resistance and Brecht Forum presented Angela Y. Davis/Ruthie Gilmore/Vijay Prashad/ Laura Flanders...
Friday, May, 20, 2011 Riverside Church, South Hall Admission: $50-$250. (includes admission to main event -"The World We Want is the World We Need". Riverside Church, Nave 490 Riverside Drive. Admission: $20-$30
Host Committee: Rashidah Ismaili AbuBakr, Malaika Adero, Seth Adler, Shana Agid, Sam Anderson, Kai Barrow, Andrea Bible, Jean Carey Bond, Dorothy Burnham, Melanie Bush, Rod Bush, Angela Cali, Susie Day, Jesse Ehrensaft-Hawley, Joan Gibbs, Elspeth Gilmore, Farah Jasmine Griffin, Lennox Hinds, Esther Cooper Jackson, Peter Marcuse, Jerry Meyer, Charlene Mitchell, Mary Morgan, Mary Lou Patterson, Beth E. Richie, Shreya Shah, Alvin Starks, Farrah Tanis, Laura Whitehorn.[7]
International Association of Democratic Lawyers
Lennox Hinds serves on the board of the old Soviet front organization, the International Association of Democratic Lawyers.[8].
National Conference on Government Spying
Lennox Hinds was cited by Rep. Larry McDonald of Georgia in the congressional record on January 31, 1977 as being on the steering committee of the National Conference on Government Spying NCGS, which was held at Northwestern University School of Law in Chicago, on January 20-23, 1977. The NCGS was organized by the National Lawyers Guild, which, as Rep. Larry McDonald explained:[9]
- "has explicitly stated its support for revolutionary 'armed struggle' and terrorism as in the armed occupation of Wounded Knee and in violent prison riots. The NLG International Committee maintains open liaison with terrorist Marxist "liberation movements" such as the Palestine Liberation Organization. The NLG is a member of the Soviet-controlled International Association of Democratic Lawyers (IADL): the NLG was formed with the assistance of the Comintern in 1936 and was cited as the "foremost legal bulwark of the Communist Party, its fronts and controlled unions." The NLG now operates as a working coalition of Communist Party, U.S.A. (CPUSA members and supporters, Castroite Communists, Maoist Communists, and various New Left activists."
Steering Committee
The NCGS steering committee consisted of:
- Bob Borosage, Washington, D.C.; NLG activist; codirector of the Center for National Security Studies-CNSS; and trustee of and attorney for the Institute for Policy Studies-IPS.
- Len Cavise, Chicago; NLG.
- Paul Chevigny, New York; NLG speaker and staff attorney for the New York Civil Liberties Union; author of "Cops and Rebels" and "Police Power."
- Terry Gilbert, Cleveland.
- Bill Goodman, Detroit; president of the NLG.
- Leonard Grossman, Detroit.
- Lance Haddix, Chicago; NLG.
- Morton Halperin, Washington, D.C.; director of the joint CNSS/ ACLU Project on National Security and Civil Liberties, funded, as are many ACLU and Fund for Peace/CNSS activities, by the Field Foundation.
- David Hamlin, Chicago; Illinois Civil Liberties Union.
- Lennox Hinds, New York; National Conference of Black Lawyers-NCBL; NLG; National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression-NAARPR; and the International Association of Democratic Lawyers-IADL-controlled by the U.S.S.R.
- Robert C. Howard, Chicago; general counsel of the Better Government Association, a tax-exempt "public interest organization that addresses government misconduct through investigation, public education, and legal action."
- Val R. Klink, president of the Chicago NLG chapter, attorney for the Alliance To End Repression-AER--set up by two CPUSA fronts.
- Michael Krinsky, New York; attorney with Rabinowitz, Boudin and Standard; attorney for Cuba, the Marxist Allende government of Chile, and the Socialist Workers Party-SWP.
- Ken Lawrence, Jackson, Miss.
- Judy Meade, Washington, D.C.; CNSS.
- Matt Piers, Chicago.
- Ramona Ripston (Mrs. Henry DiSuvero) , Los Angeles; NLG; executive director, ACLU of Southern California; former codirector of the National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, an identified CPUSA front.
- David Rudovsky, Philadelphia; NLG; staff attorney of the NECLC Philadelphia office; attorney for the Institute for Policy Studies.
- Franklin Siegel, New York; NLG national office staff.
- Howard Simon, Detroit.
- Zoharah Simmons, Philadelphia.
- Richard Soble, Detroit; NLG and Bill Goodman's law partner.
- Syd Stapleton, New York; member of the Socialist Workers Party National Committee and national secretary of the SWP's Political Rights Defense Fund PRDF-which raises money and distributes publicity about the SWP's lawsuits against the FBI and other law enforcement agencies.
- Margaret Van Houten, Washington, D.C.; formerly with the Organizing Committee for a Fifth Estate--OC-5- now coordinator of the OC-5 spinoff, the Public Education Project on the Intelligence Community-PEPIC.
- Margaret "Peggy" Winter, New York; national staff of the political rights fund.
- The National Conference on Government Spying was organized from room 815, 33 North Dearborn, Chicago, Ill. 60602, 312/939-2492, with Paul Bigman as information coordinator. In addition to the NLG, those assisting with conference expenses were the ACLU and the Playboy Foundation which commissioned the conference handbook, a more than 225-page manual-$15-entitled "Pleading, Discovery and Pretrial Procedure for Litigation Against Government Spying," whose principal authors are Robert C. Howard and Kathleen M. Crowley, general counsel and staff counsel, respectively. of the Better Government Association, a plaintiff in the suit against the Chicago police intelligence unit, ACLU v. Chicago, Civ. Action 75 C 6295 <N.D. Ill., Eastern Div.) which has been consolidated with Alliance To End Repression v. Rochford, 74 C 3268.
- The manual gives special acknowledgement to Robert J. Vollen, Richard M. Gutman, Constance Glass, David M. Hamlin, Lois Lipton Kraft, Margaret Winter, and Morton Halperin, and states:
- We particularly want to acknowledge the continuous assistance and information exchange with the Political Rights Defense Fund (Socialist Workers Party v. Attorney General) and the Project on National Security and Civil Liberties (which is pursuing several lawsuits).
References
Template:Black Radical Congress endorsers Template:Endorsers of the Conference on Perspectives for Democracy and Socialism in the 90s
- ↑ http://law.newark.rutgers.edu/clinics/legacy-inspired-leadership
- ↑ NAARPR newsletter Mar 24 1983 p1
- ↑ WORLD PEACE COUNCIL LIST OF MEMBERS 1977-1980, Information Centre of the World Peace Council Lönnrotinkatu 25 A 5 krs 00180 Helsinki 18 Finland
- ↑ CCDS Background
- ↑ http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/45a/524.html
- ↑ Signers of Campaign to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal, Now
- ↑ Google groups Cardozo NLG › This Friday-Angela Davis|Ruth Gilmore|Vijay Prashad|Laura Flanders Amy Cross
- ↑ http://www.iadllaw.org/en/about/officers
- ↑ [1] (accessed on August 31, 2023)
- World Peace Council
- National Conference of Black Lawyers
- Brecht Forum
- Critical Resistance
- National Conference on Government Spying
- National Lawyers Guild
- Northwestern University
- Chicago
- International Association of Democratic Lawyers
- National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression
- Committees of Correspondence
- Mumia Abu-Jamal supporter