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Justice Is Not An Empty Word
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Legal Services Reaches Through Barrier of Poverty to Aid
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Clients
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Shirley Downing
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Saturday, November 9, 2002
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Thelma James was a prime candidate for a real estate ripoff: She
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is 68, has precious little money and can't read or write.
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"I won't lie to you. I was so-o-o excited," the widow and former
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duplex dweller said of the purchase of her first home, a sagging
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frame structure on Snowden. "I was glad to get me a house."
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When James realized she had been swindled she turned to Memphis
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Area Legal Services, which represented her in a lawsuit. Now,
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James's monthly house notes have dropped from $796 - more than
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twice her monthly income - to an affordable $247. Some of the
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people who took advantage of her through a questionable loan
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program were sent to jail.
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"I don't know what I would have done without Legal Services,"
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said James. "They solved a lot of my problems."
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James is one of more than 3,000 clients served last year by
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MALS, which provides assistance for civil matters, such as domestic
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abuse and family-related problems, Social Security and Supplemental
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Security Income, veterans, housing and consumer fraud cases.
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Like James, most clients are elderly or female. Some are
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handicapped. Some need medical care or veteran's benefits. Some are
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trying to escape eviction or an abusive marriage. And 87 percent
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live at or below poverty level.
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Shelby County Mayor A C Wharton recently said Legal Services is
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important for those who, because of poverty or other struggles in
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life, think justice is an empty word. "They must be given reason to
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believe that the law is for them too," said Wharton, a former
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executive director of MALS.
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But MALS faces a funding crunch next year, brought on by a
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$200,000 shortfall from three revenue sources. Even though more
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than 150,000 people in Shelby, Fayette, Tipton and Lauderdale
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counties qualify for public legal aid, the latest census shows a
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loss of 10,166 poverty-level clients in the area. The population
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shift translates into a loss of $163,000 by the parent Legal
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Services Corp., combined with the loss of $35,000 in
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court-generated fees from two other programs.
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Lawyers and judges are trying to raise money for the agency that
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many say has worked magic with little more than gumption,
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hardscrabble dollars and a rambling, second-floor warren of rooms
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across the street from City Hall.
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Several law firms have donated about $25,000 and the Community
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Foundation of Greater Memphis recently pledged $75,000 over three
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years.
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MALS was formed here more than 30 years ago. Today, 14 staff
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attorneys, 26 office workers and 21 University of Memphis third-
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year law students work out of rented offices in the old Claridge
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Hotel building at 109 N. Main.
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Offices are spartan. There are no lush rugs or stylish
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furniture. The large table in the conference room is simple
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varnished wood. Offices are small and mostly plain, except for the
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eclectic mix of pop art, African statuary and neon that adorns
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litigation director Webb Brewer's space.
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Brewer, who has been at the agency 20 years, said there is a
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need for lawyers of all stripes to help with the problems of the
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poor.
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"The private bar could meet more of the need through pro bono
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work, but there are still cases that involve the systemic problems
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for low-income people that we would need to do," said Brewer.
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"The legal system marketplace just doesn't serve low-income
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people too well, except in fee-generat-ing type cases," Brewer
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said. "If a poor person gets run over by a bus, an attorney might
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take that case because they might be able to recover part of the
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damage award as attorney fees. But so many of the cases we handle
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have to do with basic rights and a decent life. There is just no
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profit motive."
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Larry Pivnick, law professor at the University of Memphis Law
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School and director of political programs at MALS, said Legal
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Services is a great learning laboratory for law students.
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"There are thousands and thousands of people who have problems
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that never get an opportunity to appear in court," Pivnick said.
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"Some people may not be particularly articulate. Courts have rules
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that clients don't always understand."
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Brewer said a major focus of the agency's work involves
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housing.
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"Although a lot of our work is grant-driven, we find that the
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lack of safe and decent affordable housing and the prevalence of
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predatory lending are the biggest problems in our client
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population," Brewer said, referring to clients such as James.
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James spoke with a reporter during a recent visit at MALS
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offices. Other clients there that day included a 42-year-old woman
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who needed help getting child support payments from her former
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lover, a married preacher who had fathered a child with her during
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a six-year affair.
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Down the hall was longtime community activist Georgia King, 62,
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talking to a lawyer about her pending eviction from a high-rise
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efficiency apartment. King said she is accused of having too much
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clutter.
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"I was homeless when I went there, and everything I got,
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somebody had give to me," she said, noting she is trying to sift
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through things. "If they had give me a one-bedroom I would have
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room for everything. "
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King has high praise for Legal Services. "They help you in a lot
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of different areas," she said.
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Dana Brandon, 43, turned to MALS for help finding a school and
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treatment program for her 9-year-old son after it became clear the
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child would not fit into any of the city school system's special
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education programs.
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Brandon could not hire a private attorney because she has to
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stay home to tend her son, who is often violent and who requires
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constant supervision. "I think they have been very helpful," she
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said.
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Andre Turner, an ex-Marine, turned to Legal Services when he was
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fired from his job for missing too much work. Turner's 12-year-old
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son needs a kidney transplant and Turner said he had to miss work
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to take him to numerous doctor and dialysis visits.
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When he was fired, Turner's son lost his insurance and his place
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in line for the transplant.
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"I felt like my rights were violated," Turner said, noting that
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though the case is still pending, Legal Services was able to get
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the insurance reinstated. The transplant is now closer to
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reality.
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The hardest part of losing his job, Turner said, was answering
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his son. "He still asks me if he is going to die, and if I'm still
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going to give him my kidney."
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