A Brief History of the Detroit NLG

Detroit attorneys were among the founding members of the
National Lawyers Guild in 1937. Two of these attorneys,
Maurice Sugar and Ernest Goodman, began a firm that was
active in defending unions such as the United Auto
Workers and representing the oppressed (particularly by
the police) Black community. Theirs was the first racially
integrated law firm in the country, and included as partners
civil rights leaders and activists such as George Crockett,
Jr., Bob Millender and Claudia Morcom.

The hysteria whipped up by McCarthyism in the
1950s dealt a heavy blow - bitter political fights
brewed and the membership was devastated and only
a small handful of lawyers joined the Detroit Chapter
over the next several years.

In 1961, the Chapter was revitalized. During Guild
Convention in Detroit, Len Holt, a remarkable civil rights
lawyer from Virginia, appealed for the Guild to send lawyers
to assist the growing civil rights struggle in the South.
Hundreds of Guild lawyers – many from Detroit - went
South in 1964 for Freedom Summer. This organizing effort
energized and strengthened the Detroit Chapter, which
grew rapidly through the 1960s with the emergence of the
civil rights, Black power, anti-war youth and revolutionary
union movements, culminating in the rebellion of 1967.

After 1967 two young lawyers electrified the chapter and the
community – Ken Cockrel and Justin Ravitz. Working with
many other Guild lawyers, they revolutionized the jury
pools and openly exposed racism on the bench. Major trials
dramatized racism and police brutality – New Bethel
Church, the Detroit Panther 15, the DPD’s STRESS unit and
the Wayne County Jail conditions case. Thousands of
anti-Viet Nam war demonstrators were represented by the
mass defense office.

During the historic Attica defense effort, Detroit organized
many lawyers who went to Buffalo, New York to represent
the indicted Attica Brothers. Bernard Stroble (Shango),
represented by Ernest Goodman and Haywood Burns, was
the lead defendant and test case, and the victory in his case
broke the back of the misbegotten Attica prosecutions.

In the 1980s, Guild attorneys opened up Michigan prisons
to scrutiny. Recently a Guild team led by Deb LaBelle won
an impressive ($15 million) verdict against the Department
of Corrections.

Later in the 1980s, Guild Lawyers fought for the right to
engage in civil disobedience. Hundreds were arrested
outside of cruise missile manufacturer Williams
International and dozens went to jail for civil contempt.

In 1995 during the Newspaper Guild strike against the News
and The Free Press, many Guild attorneys worked with
labor lawyers and activists to defend over 1,000 strikers
who were charged with crimes and subjected to substantial
violence. Tens of thousands of progressive unionists and
others came out, over a period of months, and the Guild
was their law firm. Significantly the wonderful current work
of the Sugar Law Center continues the very fight for
workers rights that characterized the work of Maurice
Sugar when the Guild was founded in 1937.