Evidence, Civil Procedure, and Civil Rights all seemed like separate subjects until the Civil Rights & Justice Clinic put the pieces of the puzzle together. Professor Owens provides a rigorous syllabus that includes practical litigation skills building and meaningful client interaction. Because of this clinic, I am ready to be a civil rights attorney.
— Marcena Day 鈥22
麻豆社区 the Civil Rights and Justice Clinic
The Civil Rights and Justice Clinic (CRJC) aims to be a national leader in focusing on issues of constitutional rights, race and criminal justice. These issues are acutely present in both post-conviction and civil litigation concerning wrongful convictions, and in the myriad ways in which policing 鈥 through 鈥渆veryday鈥 interactions, uses of force and in responses to public pressure 鈥 impacts our communities.
The mission of the clinic is simple: to address the violation of people鈥檚 rights, to confront racial and social inequity, and to pursue measures of accountability and reform that will prevent and deter wrongs in the future. To do so, the CRJC is focused on representing people, and classes of people, who have been harmed by police or other public officials in civil rights actions pursuant to聽42 U.S.C. 搂 1983. This work includes representation of plaintiffs at all stages of litigation at all levels of review. The CRJC also represents clients in state compensation proceedings for those who are innocent, like the Wrongly Convicted Person's Act, RCW 4.100 et seq., in Washington State. In addition, and in support of client work, the聽CRJC聽engages in research and advocacy to address systemic issues, including most significantly by filing聽补尘颈肠耻蝉听briefs on聽important issues in state and federal courts.
Projects
Students will actively participate in all aspects of civil and criminal litigation, both in Washington State Courts and in federal courts throughout the country. For wrongfully convicted clients, as they have done with the Innocence clinic in the past, this representation shall include conducting investigations, drafting motions seeking forensic/DNA testing, seeking new trials, client counseling, and conducting oral advocacy and witness examination at hearings. In 搂1983 suits, students will participate in all aspects of litigation, including drafting pleadings and motions, participating in discovery, depositions, motion practice, evidentiary hearings, trials, and appeals (including, where feasible and permitted direct advocacy to courts). Students will also be given the opportunity to conduct research and investigate policy and transparency issues that address broader reform efforts, particularly concerning police accountability, race, reconciliation, and restorative justice.
David Owens, an attorney for Lobato who runs the University of Washington’s Civil Rights and Justice Clinic, said if Metro is allowed to intervene in Rudin’s case, it could obstruct similar cases in the future. “The effect would be to make it harder for an innocent person to get a certificate of innocence and to probably slow down the process of their getting one,” he said.
Dec 15, 2024 | Source: Washington Post
David B. Owens and students from the Civil Rights and Justice Clinic helped secure a $34 million wrongful conviction verdict in Nevada. Two now-retired detectives must also pay out $10,000 each for their roles in fabricating evidence in the case, the jury decided.
Dec 15, 2024 | Source: New York Times
David B. Owens and students from the Civil Rights and Justice Clinic helped secure a $34 million wrongful conviction verdict in Nevada. Kirstin Blaise Lobato sued the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department and two detectives after she spent nearly 16 years in prison for a murder she did not commit.