Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of HR1184
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Full Text of HR1184  100th General Assembly

HR1184 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY


  

 


 
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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 Lewis
4Myers Jr., who passed away on May 24, 2018; and
 
5    WHEREAS, Lewis Myers was born in Houston, Texas and
6graduated with honors from Phillis Wheatley High School in
71965; he was elected NAACP Youth Council President for the
8Houston branch and led student demonstrations that helped
9integrate the Houston Independent School District; and
 
10    WHEREAS, Lewis Myers studied at Tennessee State
11University, where he joined the Student Non-Violent
12Coordinating Committee (S.N.C.C.) Chapter; he also became
13chairman of the Students Rights Organization Chapter at
14Tennessee State; he transferred to Howard University, and in
151968, was elected president of the Undergraduate Student
16Council; and
 
17    WHEREAS, Lewis Myers entered law school at Rutgers
18University, where he initiated a program called the Southern
19Mobilization Committee, which gave African American law
20students the opportunity to work in the Deep South with civil
21rights firms during their summer breaks; he later transferred
22to the University of Mississippi, which allowed him to work in

 

 

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1rural Mississippi and expand his civil rights work; he earned
2his law degree from the University of Mississippi in 1972; he
3was a student assistant to famed constitutional and civil
4rights lawyer Herbert Reid who was the former Dean of the Law
5School at Howard University, as well as Chief Counsel to
6legendary Congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr. from New York;
7and
 
8    WHEREAS, In 1971, Lewis Myers worked with what was then
9called the Goldberg Commission in New York City; he served as
10an assistant on the staff and visited many of the cities where
11the Black Panther Party had been involved in confrontations
12with the local police departments; and
 
13    WHEREAS, Lewis Myers accepted a Reginald Heber Smith
14Fellowship, which enabled him to work with a civil rights legal
15services program across the United States; he was selected to
16work in Mississippi, where he started working as a staff
17attorney with North Mississippi Rural Legal Services in Oxford;
18initially, he handled school desegregation cases; however,
19within a year of his graduation from law school, he filed suit
20on behalf of African American law students at the University in
21the case of Robinson vs. University of Mississippi; the lawsuit
22challenged the University's historic policies of racial
23discrimination and exclusion of African Americans from
24admission to its law school and subsequently opened up the

 

 

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1admissions process which has allowed many African American
2students to complete their education since that time; and
 
3    WHEREAS, After serving for several years at North
4Mississippi Rural Legal Services, Lewis Myers became Director
5of Litigation in charge of more than 45 lawyers and 40
6paralegals; he was responsible for managing seven legal service
7offices throughout cities in Northern Mississippi and the
8Mississippi Delta; he initiated numerous lawsuits challenging
9racial discrimination in municipal governments and in private
10employment practices in the State of Mississippi; in 1973, he
11was one of the lawyers that filed the historic case of Ayers
12vs. Mississippi which ultimately led to the desegregation of
13institutions of higher learning in the United States after
14reaching the United States Supreme Court; between 1974 and
151976, he was on the cutting edge of filing more than six
16lawsuits against county jails in the State of Mississippi for
17inhumane conditions and the treatment of their inmates; and
 
18    WHEREAS, Lewis Myers was involved in numerous historic
19cases, including Ayers vs. Mississippi, the People of the State
20of Illinois vs. Larry Hoover, New Jersey vs. Joanne Chesmard
21a/k/a Assata Shakur-mother of Tupac Shakur, the United States
22vs. Rene Leon, and the Elmer "Geronimo" Pratt case; he served
23as counsel for seven young boys who were expelled from the
24Decatur public schools after a fight at a football game; and
 

 

 

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1    WHEREAS, Lewis Myers served as general counsel for several
2national civil rights leaders, including Minister Louis
3Farrakhan, Rev. Jesse L. Jackson, and Rev. Al Sharpton; he
4served as chief operating officer and the national deputy
5director of the NAACP in Baltimore; in August of 1993, he
6served as national deputy coordinator of the historic 30th
7anniversary for the March on Washington; and
 
8    WHEREAS, Lewis Myers was one of the top litigation lawyers
9in the Chicago area; he taught Evidence and Trial Advocacy as
10an adjunct professor at DePaul University's School of Law in
11Chicago; he taught at several Chicago City Colleges and served
12as director of the Criminal Justice Program at Kennedy King
13College; he was also a professor teaching Criminal Justice at
14Chicago State University; and
 
15    WHEREAS, Lewis Myers was a member of the Illinois Bar, the
16Bar of the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, the Bar of the
17Federal Appellate Court for the Third Circuit, the Bar for the
18Federal Appellate Court for the Fifth Circuit, the Bar of the
19United States Federal District Court for the Northern District
20of California, and the Bar for the Federal Court of Claims; he
21was a member of the National Conference of Black Lawyers, the
22National Lawyers' Guild (Executive Board, Chicago Chapter),
23the National Bar Association, the National Association of

 

 

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1Criminal Defense Attorneys, and the National Conference of
2Black Lawyers (Chairperson, Chicago Chapter); he held
3memberships with several professional organizations, including
4Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity, the NAACP (Life Member), 500 Black
5Men (Founder of Chicago Chapter), Black Men's Forum, and the
6American Historical Association; he was the recipient of many
7accolades and awards; he was listed in several Who's Who
8publications and was recognized as one of the most influential
9African Americans in the United States in various national
10publications; and
 
11    WHEREAS, Lewis Myers is survived by his wife, Celestine
12Narcisse-Myers, and his son, Lewis Myers III; therefore, be it
 
13    RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ONE
14HUNDREDTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we
15mourn the passing of Lewis Myers Jr., and extend our sincere
16condolences to his family, friends, and all who knew and loved
17him; and be it further
 
18    RESOLVED, That a suitable copy of this resolution be
19presented to the family of Lewis Myers as an expression of our
20deepest sympathy.