PRO BONO
2015
PRO BONO MATTERS
HIGHLIGHTS
Syrian refugee children in Greece who benefited from a
nonprofit founded by a Hunton & Williams
Washington partner. Read more inside.
Photo credit: Hendrik de Kok
. A Victory for Texas Children
In 2015, truancy, or “failure to attend school,” was decriminalized in the state of Texas. For years, Texas truancy laws had
disproportionately targeted low-income minorities and special education students and created a “school-to-prison pipeline”
for disadvantaged youth.
She and Yolanda did their best in navigating the system,
but facing numerous court dates and fines, they were
overwhelmed by the process. The pressure mounted as
Raquel was told that if she or her mother did not pay the
court costs, Raquel would have to pay in jail time once
she was 17.
Texas Appleseed, a legal advocacy nonprofit, found in
its research that 80 percent of the 115,000 children
prosecuted in 2013 for criminal truancy in Texas were
from low-income families. The Texas courts, meanwhile,
assessed more than $16 million in court costs and fines
to the disadvantaged youth that same year.
The research
also showed that the system disproportionately targeted
minorities and special education students and found that
children who spent time in the courtroom were ultimately
more likely to drop out of school.
Raquel and Yolanda Fontenot | Photo credit: Allison V. Smith
Raquel Fontenot, a high school sophomore in Seagoville,
Texas, sat handcuffed in a criminal courtroom facing jail
time and fines her family could not afford. Raquel had been
charged with criminal truancy, or “failure to attend school,”
a policy which made unexcused absences an adult crime
in Texas.
Raquel — living with her mother, three siblings, grandfather
and four dogs in their trailer home — suffered from
depression and anxiety.
Those issues, coupled with
attention deficit and mood disorders, kept her from
wanting to leave the living room she shares with her sister
as a bedroom. On certain days she would tell her mother,
Yolanda, that she knew she was going to get in trouble at
school so Yolanda would let her stay home.
In 2015, Texas and Wyoming were the only two states
punishing truancy in criminal courts, a practice that allowed
children as young as 12 to face fines, and ultimately jail
time, for adult crimes. Dallas County had even created
special statutory “Truancy Courts” to handle the cases,
prosecuted by attorneys in the Dallas County DA’s office.
But there were no assigned public defenders; minors had
the right to legal counsel, but only if they could afford to
hire private attorneys.
And, depending on the judge, parents
were often not allowed to speak on their child’s behalf.
Raquel was first charged with criminal truancy when she
was 14. She remembers sitting before a judge in an adult
courtroom and looking to her mother for answers to the
judge’s questions. But Yolanda couldn’t answer for her.
During one of her court dates, Raquel was approached
by a lawyer with Texas Appleseed who was seeking to
help students in the criminal truancy court system.
Texas
Appleseed, familiar with the Hunton & Williams pro bono
program through its board member and Hunton & Williams
Austin partner Ed Fernandes, asked a team of Hunton Dallas
lawyers — Joel Sharp, Kevin Brooks and Grayson Linyard —
to represent Raquel and her sister Luranetta in their cases
on a pro bono basis. The Hunton team, concerned that the
Texas criminal truancy system was unconstitutional in its
application because it burdened thousands of children by
giving them a criminal record to begin adulthood, accepted
the case and quickly got to work.
The efforts of Texas Appleseed and Hunton &
Williams Dallas lawyers helped lead to reform
to decriminalize truancy, fixing a broken system
that targeted minority and low-income youth.
The Hunton & Williams team gave Raquel and Luranetta
something most kids in the system never received: real trials
with engaged counsel advocating for them. The Hunton
lawyers filed briefs, made evidentiary objections and crossexamined the government’s witnesses — demanding the
students’ rights at every turn.
Among other things, Hunton’s
. team argued that the school district and DA’s office failed to
properly consider that Raquel was missing school because
she was not receiving the special education she needed for
her mental illness. The school district, and the system, were
failing her. After separate trials, both Raquel and Luranetta
were found “not guilty” and their cases were dismissed.
After one of the trials, one of the courtroom bailiffs said that,
in many years of service, she had never seen an actual trial
in that court.
In 2015, because of the efforts of Texas Appleseed, state
lawmakers and private lawyers, including the Hunton &
Williams Dallas team, reform was passed that decriminalized
truancy in Texas and made “failure to attend school” a
civil rather than criminal offense. Schools now have the
responsibility to handle this issue — a step forward in fixing a
broken system.
Raquel is now back at Seagoville High School receiving the
necessary special education to keep her in school.
Her
teachers are working with her to make sure she manages
her anxiety and she is performing well in her classes.
Yolanda is now seeing positive changes in her daughter’s
attitude toward school. She is relieved that Raquel and
Luranetta will no longer have to face the litany of court dates
and fines that once held them back. The Hunton & Williams
Dallas lawyers are honored to have helped lessen the
burdens for the Fontenot family and other Texas children.
Responding to an SOS with Sea of Solidarity
After experiencing the Syrian refugee crisis firsthand, a Hunton & Williams partner returns from a
father/son vacation with a plan to help thousands fleeing persecution.
While visiting the Greek island of Lesvos in October
2015, Adam Rosser, a partner in the Hunton & Williams
Washington, D.C.
office, and his father were unexpectedly
caught up in rescue efforts for Syrian refugees. Hundreds
of refugees were arriving at a beach on Lesvos daily in life
rafts and weather-beaten rowboats. Recognizing the lack of
government and charity assistance, Adam and his father,
with several other volunteers, approached the boats and
carried refugees to the shore.
Many of the refugees were
families with young children, arriving hungry and vulnerable,
some with hypothermia and other medical conditions.
After witnessing the crisis firsthand, Adam felt that he
could not ignore refugees fleeing under such dangerous
circumstances. From his law office in Washington, DC, Adam
connected with a Lesvos volunteer living in San Francisco
and another concerned person in Dublin, Ireland. The group
recognized the need for basic comforts such as food, dry
clothes, thermal blankets and medical services at refugee
camps in Greece.
They turned to a team of Hunton &
Williams lawyers — Bill Gray in Richmond, Heather Eastep
in McLean and Samantha Bollers in Washington — to
help incorporate and obtain 501(c)(3) status for “Sea of
Solidarity,” a nonprofit that would raise and direct funds to
existing volunteer groups on the ground.
In mid-November 2015, after cofounding Sea of Solidarity,
Adam returned to Greece for three weeks to continue
to volunteer and find local vendors and other nonprofits
who were committed to helping the refugees on a longterm basis. With the support of hundreds of donors, Sea
of Solidarity has funded more than a thousand sleeping
bags, a thousand baby bottles, tens of thousands of hot
meals and thousands of pounds of fresh fruit, thousands of
pairs of wool socks, hundreds of pairs of shoes, hundreds
of gallons of fuel for rescue boats and all funding for two
schools in Turkey that serve dozens of Syrian children,
and much more. Adam is now organizing and funding a
project for volunteer lawyers to assist the 50,000+ asylum
seekers throughout Greece.
Over the past six months, Sea
Adam Rosser
Over the past six months, Sea
of Solidarity has raised and
spent over $130,000, with less
than 1 percent of revenues spent
on administrative costs.
. of Solidarity has raised and spent over $130,000, with less
than 1 percent of revenues spent on administrative costs.
The crisis is monumental but the efforts of compassionate
individuals can provide aid and relief to people who are
vulnerable and displaced.
Because of Adam’s efforts, tens of thousands of refugees
are receiving comfort in the form of food and clothing and
other critical needs, all of which was made possible through
the nonprofit that Hunton & Williams lawyers helped form.
Combating Slumlords in California
The surging cost of housing in metropolitan areas is also giving rise to the power of slumlords. A team of Hunton & Williams
lawyers sought to level the playing field for low-income tenants who were given uninhabitable housing in Hollywood.
Los Angeles is home to the least affordable rental market
in the country and to one of the largest gaps in income
equality. These disparities have lead to an increase in illegal
housing practices by landlords who can take advantage of
low-income tenants who may not have other safe
and affordable housing options. Hunton & Williams Los
Angeles lawyers, in partnership with the Inner City Law
Center, represented 18 young and impoverished artists
and students in a lawsuit filed against their landlord — a
notorious Los Angeles slumlord — after they had suffered
through years of filthy and dangerous living conditions in
their rundown Hollywood apartment complex.
The tenants of the Hollywood Dream Suites sought legal
recourse after growing tired of seeing roaches in their
kitchens.
Many had sewage overflowing from their sinks and
bathtubs, unhealthy levels of mold growing on their walls
and plaster dropping from their ceilings and crumbling onto
their floors. Some took cold showers when they did not have
heat in their apartments or bathed using buckets of water
heated on their stove. Some also had broken locks on their
doors amidst a gross lack of security and in a neighborhood
known for dangerous transients.
On top of these deplorable
conditions, the landlord also violated the tenants’ privacy
by entering their units while they were not home, taking
their belongings and confiscating letters from the housing
department notifying the tenants of their rights. It is no
surprise that many of the residents in the Hollywood Dream
Suites became sick and suffered severe distress while
enduring these dilapidated conditions.
The Inner City Law Center in Los Angeles has developed
a large practice combating slumlords over the last three
decades. The ICLC staff of 40 spends thousands of hours
each year combating homelessness, habitability violations
and illegal housing practices that victimize low-income
tenants.
Because of ICLC’s reputation in the LA community,
the 18 tenants of the Hollywood Dream Suites reached out
to ICLC to help them obtain relief from their substandard
housing. Then, seeking the assistance and substantial
resources of a private law firm for this case, ICLC turned
to Hunton & Williams to partner with them to manage the
highly contentious litigation.
The team of Los Angeles attorneys, paralegals and staff
members, led by second year associate Paul Moura,
aggressively prosecuted the case, devoting more than
1,000 hours to litigating the case through fact and expert
discovery, including more than 30 depositions. After
heated litigation continued up until what was sure to be a
lengthy trial, the landlord defendants ultimately agreed to a
settlement with the Hunton & Williams and ICLC team — just
hours before trial was set to begin — providing a favorable
result for the tenants.
The clients were immensely thankful
and some have become inspired to do more to advance
housing rights for other tenants in their community.
100%
of full-time lawyers dedicated
time to pro bono projects for
the seventh consecutive year
. Neighborhood Offices
Church Hill Office (Richmond, Virginia) (2,402 hours, 53 lawyers)
To assist in this endeavor of supporting local legal aid
organizations in each of our office locations, Hunton &
Williams opened its first “neighborhood” office in the Church
Hill neighborhood of Richmond, Virginia, solely dedicated to
legal aid overflow or persons falling just above the federal
poverty guidelines. To date, more than 800 different Hunton
& Williams lawyers and staff have served, in the Church Hill
office, more than 5,000 low-income clients who otherwise
would have been unable to afford legal services. The office
supports low-income residents with guardianships and family
and real estate law. Sandy Reynolds has coordinated the
office’s efforts since its opening.
Carla Laroche, the Richmond
pro bono fellow, spends 100 percent of her time on pro bono
projects through Central Virginia Legal Aid and the office’s
referrals. During the fiscal year of 2016, Hunton & Williams
lawyers dedicated 2,402 hours to pro bono clients in the
firm’s Church Hill office, helping low-income residents with
uncontested divorces and guardianship, custody, immigration,
domestic violence and landlord/tenant matters.
Charlottesville Neighborhood Office (Charlottesville, Virginia) (2,205 hours, 23 lawyers)
In 2005, Hunton & Williams opened a pro bono office on the
campus of the Legal Aid Justice Center in Charlottesville.
Housed at the historic “Rock House,” the partnership teams
Hunton & Williams lawyers with University of Virginia School
of Law students to handle protective order and child custody
cases for victims of domestic violence. The office also
accepts housing cases from the Legal Aid Justice Center
and is supporting a major case through the UVA Law School
Innocence Project.
Support and assistance with cases is
provided by a full-time pro bono Hunton & Williams associate,
Geri Greenspan, in Charlottesville. During the fiscal year of
2016, Hunton & Williams lawyers dedicated 2,205 hours to
more than 75 pro bono clients in the Charlottesville office.
Legal Service Providers We Assist on a Pro Bono Basis Include:
AIDS Service Center in New York | Alliance for Children’s Rights in Los Angeles | Atlanta Legal Aid Society | Atlanta Volunteer Lawyers Foundation | Bet Tzedek
in Los Angeles | CAIR Coalition | Catholic Charities Immigration Legal Services | Catholic Charities of Dallas | Central Dallas Ministries | Central Virginia
Legal Aid Society | Central Virginia Victim/Witness Organizations | Children’s Law Center in Washington | City Bar Justice Center in New York | City Square in
Dallas | Coast Guard Referral Program | Commonwealth Catholic Charities | Community Tax Law Project | Council for Children’s Rights in Charlotte | Cuban
American Bar Association Pro Bono Project | Dallas Bar Association Legal Line | DC Bar Pro Bono Program | Dekalb County Child Advocacy Center | Disability
Rights Legal Center in Los Angeles | Drive to Work in Richmond | Fairfax Bar Association Attorney of the Day Program | Federal Drug Court Program | Fulton
County Juvenile Court | Georgia Appleseed | Georgia Justice Project | Georgia Lawyers for the Arts | Greater Richmond Bar Foundation | Hague Abduction
Convention International Child Abduction Cases | Her Justice in New York | Housing Crisis Center Dallas | Housing Opportunities Made Equal | Houston
Volunteer Lawyers | Inner City Law Center in Los Angeles | International Refugee Assistance Project | Kids in Need of Defense (KIND) | Lawyers Alliance of
New York | Legal Aid Justice Center in Central Virginia | Legal Aid of Los Angeles Foundation | Legal Aid of North Carolina | Legal Aid of Northwest Texas/
DVAP | Legal Aid Society of New York | Legal Counsel for the Elderly in Washington | Legal Information Network for Cancer in Richmond | Legal Services
Corporation | Legal Services of Greater Miami | Legal Services of Northern Virginia | Legal Services of Southern Piedmont in Charlotte | Mecklenburg
County Teen Court | Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project | Mosaic Family Services in Dallas | National Center for Refugee & Immigrant Children | National Law
Center for Homelessness and Poverty | National Veterans Legal Services Program | New York Legal Assistance Group | Pro Bono Partnership Atlanta | Pro
Bono Partnership New York | Reporters Committee for Freedom for the Press | Richmond Behavioral Health Authority | Sanctuary for Families in New York
Search for Common Ground | Shelter for Help in Emergency in Central Virginia | Southern Center for Human Rights | St. Vincent de Paul in Dallas | Student
Press Law Center | Tahirih Justice Center | Texas Appleseed | Texas C-Bar | U.S.
Courts Pro Bono Referral Programs | University of Virginia School of Law
Innocence Project | U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants | Virginia Hispanic Chamber Legal Clinic | Virginia Poverty Law Center | Volunteer Income
Tax Assistance Program | Volunteer Lawyers for the Arts - New York | Volunteer Legal Services of Central Texas | Volunteers of Legal Service in New York
Washington Lawyers Committee | Whitman Walker Legal Clinic in Washington
Hunton & Williams dedicated 250 hours or more to the organizations in bold
. In 2015, Hunton & Williams lawyers and staff dedicated more than 25,000 hours to the legal needs of low-income individuals.
The issues our clients faced were broad ranging. Below is a snapshot of the hours dedicated to different areas of law:
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15,904
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40,236
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globally to pro bono service
For more information about the Hunton & Williams pro bono program, please contact:
George H. Hettrick, pro bono leadership committee chair, at 804.788.8324 or ghettrick@hunton.com.
©2016 Hunton & Williams LLP. These materials have been prepared for informational purposes only and are not legal advice.
This information is not intended to create an attorneyclient or similar relationship. Please do not send us confidential information. Past successes cannot be an assurance of future success.
Whether you need legal services and which
lawyer you select are important decisions that should not be based solely upon these materials. Contact: Walfrido J. Martinez, Managing Partner, Hunton & Williams LLP, 2200
Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20037, 202.955.1500.
.