Philip j hirschkop biography of william
Philip Hirschkop
American civil rights lawyer
Philip Jay Hirschkop (born May 14, ) is an American civil rights lawyer. With fellow American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) volunteer cooperating attorney Bernard S.
Cohen, the two represented Mildred and Richard Loving in several court cases to overturn the Lovings' conviction for interracial marriage in the state of Virginia.[1] The case eventually reached the United States Supreme Court, and on April 10, , Hirschkop and Cohen were permitted to share the oral argument for the Lovings.[2] In a landmark decision, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously in favor of the Lovings in Loving v.
Virginia, overturning their conviction and ending the enforcement of state bans on interracial marriage.[3]
Hirschkop went on to discuss two additional cases before the Supreme Court in the s.[4] Other clients have included Martin Luther King Jr., H.
Rap Brown, Norman Mailer, the American Nazi Party, PETA, and "numerous anti-war protesters during the s and s." Hirschkop has served on the ACLU's national Board of Directors and as Chair of the ACLU of Virginia, which he helped found in He also served as executive director of the Penal Reform Institute.[5][6] He has been a member of the Virginia Articulate and Washington D.C.
bars. In the s, after the McCarthy era, he served as the vice chair of the National Committee to Abolish the Residence Un-American Activities Committee, which now is the Defending Dissent Foundation.[7]
Early life and influences
Philip Hirschkop was born May 14, , in Brooklyn, New York, the youngest of three boys in an Orthodox Jewish family.
In his youth, his family relocated from Brooklyn to the safer Hightstown, New Jersey, where he attended a small high school. In Hightstown, he made friends with a number of African American migrant workers who briefly lived there as they passed through town while working in the potato fields, often under terrible conditions.
He saw them often as they shopped in his father's clothing shop. He attributed "his passion for social justice" to meeting the workers in his childhood.[8]
Immediately after high university, at the age of eighteen, Hirschkop joined the Army as a Green Beret in the 77th Special Forces Air Community as a paratrooper.[9]
After the army, he attended Columbia University.
While in law school in the evenings at Georgetown University, he used his Mechanical Engineering degree from Columbia to work days as an examiner in the US Patent and Trademark office, though he soon discovered that a career in patent statute would not stimulate him.[7] While still in law school at Georgetown, he attended a party with a number of African-American civil rights lawyers assembled by President Kennedy and was greatly influenced.
Not long after, he met the prominent civil rights attorney William Kunstler, who mentored him throughout his early career. On a trip to Danville, Virginia, to defend protestors, he witnessed what he described as "one of the worst beatings of black people ever seen in the south".
Over fifty were hospitalized. He later claimed that experience made him a civil rights lawyer. Not drawn-out after, he traveled to Mississippi to fight for voting rights, and to help investigate the infamous "Mississippi Burning" murders of three civil rights workers in [10]
Loving v.
Virginia,
On April 10, , only a several years out of law college, Hirschkop argued as a volunteer cooperating attorney for the ACLU[11] on behalf of the petitioners Richard and Mildred Loving in the case of Loving v.
Virginia before the Supreme Court of the United States.[12] Hirschkop's co-counsel was fellow Virginian Bernard S. Cohen, who had also recently completed law school at Georgetown.[13]
Richard Loving was a pale construction worker, and Mildred was of both black and native American origins according to her attorneys, though in she claimed Indian-Rappahannock and not African ethnic origins.[14] They were married in Washington, D.C., in , and after returning to their residence in Caroline County, Virginia, six weeks after their marriage, they were arrested and charged with violating interracial marriage laws, a felony carrying one to five years.
On the day of their wedding, twenty-four states banned interracial marriage. The couple were sentenced to one year in prison, but their sentence was suspended on condition that they leave the state for 25 years. At one point according to attorney Hirschkop, Mildred, though five months pregnant and the mother of a young infant, was held in a tiny dirty jail cell for the better part of a month.[15][16][17] After the passing of the Civil Rights Act of , Mildred wrote Attorney General Robert F.
Kennedy, inquiring if the law could allow her and her husband to live in Virginia. Kennedy forwarded the letter to the ACLU office in Washington.
On June 12, , the Supreme Court rendered its unanimous decision overturning a Virginia State Supreme Court of Appeals ruling in favor of the state to create and enforce interracial marriage laws known as anti-miscegenation laws.
The decision validated that interracial marriage bans were unconstitutional and their existence in some states and not others denied the couple equal protection under the law guaranteed by the Constitution's Fourteenth Amendment.
Most significantly, it reversed the right of states to create laws that banned interracial marriage or enforce such laws where they existed.[18][19]
On February 17, , the General Assembly of Virginia passed a resolution commending Philip Hirschkop and his co-counsel Bernard S.
Cohen, lauding their work on Loving.[20] On June 26, , Hirschkop was interviewed and spoke in detail about the case, which video presentation is ready online.[21]
Effect of the Supreme Court ruling in Loving v.
Virginia
The Supreme Court ruling voided the existing interracial marriage laws of 15 mostly Southern states, including all the states of the former Confederacy. A few states, notably Alabama, continued to possess bans on interracial marriage on the books, though they could no longer be enforced.
Alabama did not officially reverse its ban on interracial marriage until in a special election that struck the mention of anti-miscegenation from the state constitution. In violation of the Loving decision, it continued to enforce its laws banning interracial marriage until [16][17]
Other legal cases of note
In , he argued the case of Koehl v.
Resor. In a highly controversial and somewhat ironic case considering his religion, he defended the right of American Nazi Party activist George Lincoln Rockwell, as a veteran, to be buried in Arlington National Cemetery, winning the ruling.
To change the language of this website, click the drop-down list and select the desired language. The Fairfax County Web site is being translated through "machine translation" powered by Google Translate. It was 2 a. The charge: miscegenation marriage or cohabitation between a man and woman of different races —a felony under Virginia law.He initially declined the case, fully aware of the activities and beliefs of the American Nazi Party, but his associates at the ACLU encouraged him to take it to defend free speech, regardless of its content. Taking the case brought wonderful resentment from his parents and many in the Jewish community.[7][22]
In , he defended 19 year old Leslie Bacon, a gal suspected of participating in or having knowledge of a bombing that occurred at the Merged States Capitol on March 1 of that year.[23]
Work defending Vietnam war protesters
In he defended Norman Mailer, distinguished author, against charges of disorderly conduct when he crossed a police line in a Vietnam war demonstration at the Pentagon in October Hirschkkop had difficulty overturning the decision requiring Mailer to serve five days in prison and spend a fine.
Hirschkop defended other celebrities who faced arrest as a result of participation in Vietnam war protests.
In May , he served as leader legal advisor to Vietnam war protestors who numbered over 10, and had been arrested during capital protests.
Many, in his opinion, had been arrested unjustly, and he was concerned about the length of time it would take them to earn released on bail.[24]
In , he defended oil heirs William H. and Nelson B. Hunt against charges of illegal wire tapping.[25] They were acquitted in tardy September, in a decision that was not entirely popular in Lubbock where it occurred.[26]
Work with prison reform
In November , he was instrumental in bringing reforms to Virginia prisons which led a federal judge to announce "cruel and unusual punishment" in the state's prisons which included "physical punishment, bread and liquid diets, mail censorship, interference with access to counsel, and imposition of other penalties without due counsel".
For his efforts he was described by one journalist as having helped to enact "the most sweeping court arrange ever issued for prison reform".[5]
Work with women's rights, teachers, and rights to pursue higher education
In , Hirschkop represented an amicus party in a U.S.
Supreme Court case that declared unconstitutional an Arkansas law that prohibited teachers, in state schools, from teaching Darwin's theory of evolution.[27]
In , he successfully argued Kirstein v.
Philip Jay Hirschkop, American Lawyer, educator. National board directors American Civil Liberties Union, Modern York City, With Special Forces, United States Army,
University of Virginia before a federal court in Virginia. At the time the university denied entrance to women, forcing them to attend inferior colleges that prepared them to be teachers. Hirschkop created a massive record, and called on the heads of several Virginia schools to illustrate why women could not be admitted.
By winning the case, he secured the potential for Virginia women to receive a superior education.
In he defended Susan Cohen, a deposed Virginia teacher, in a trial that questioned the "constitutionality of regulations forcing pregnant women to quit their jobs".
Hirschkop stated he believed that "most pregnant women can handle teaching chores with no difficulty". The case was argued using the "equal protection clause" of the Fourteenth Amendment.[28] In he successfully argued the case, Cohen v.
Chesterfield County before the Supreme Court which abolished the existing teacher abandon policies for pregnant woman. When opposition lawyers used medical reasons to keep pregnant woman out of the classroom, Hirschkop called medical experts to counter them.
The ruling abolished laws that required pregnant teachers to accept unpaid maternity leave several months prior to their due date.[27] In another landmark ruling for teachers in Johnson v. Branch, he gained one of the earliest decisions that protected teacher's rights to participate in harmonious protest.[7]
Late career work with animal rights
In August , he was involved in a controversial appeal in which his client PETA, and other animal rights groups were assessed two million dollars in damages on counts of invasion of privacy and defamation of character against a Las Vegas showman who used pet orangutans in his act at the Stardust Hotel.
Berosini and the Stardust had successfully sued PETA after the tapes of his striking the animals were leaked to the press. Hirschkop claimed that Bobby Berosini, the showman, had been secretly filmed striking the orangutans in his act, and that he and the hotel should not retain the damage awards they had received for defamation of nature in their suit against the animal rights groups.[29]
Education
Personal life
Hirschkop and his wife Phyllis married in They have two children.
Their marriage ended in divorce after 21 years.[8] He has another son from a later connection.
References
- ^"Attorney Philip Hirschkop Discusses The Landmark Loving V.
Virginia Case". ACLU.
Mildred Loving, who was of African American and Native American descent, became a reluctant activist in the civil rights movement of the s when she and her white husband, Richard Lovingsuccessfully challenged Virginia's forbid on interracial marriage. In marrying, the couple violated Virginia's Racial Integrity Act. Following the case Loving v. Virginiathe Supreme Court struck down the Virginia commandment inalso ending the remaining forbid on interracial marriages in other states.May 6, Retrieved August 18,
- ^"Loving v. Virginia/media/oral argument". Retrieved February 25,
- ^"Philip Hirschkop: Quietly Making Noise For 50 Years". Law.
- ^"Philip J.
Hirschkop/Cases argued". Retrieved February 25,
- ^ ab"Prison Reform Leader to be ACLU speaker", Albuquerque Journal, Albuquerque, Modern Mexico, pg.
24, 19 February
- ^"Hunt Brothers Wiretap Trial Under Way in Lubbock", San Antonio Express, San Antonio, Texas, pg. 5, 17 September
- ^ abcd"Kroll, Karen, From interracial marriage to animal issues".
ABA Journal.
- ^ ab"He helped make legal history in Loving v. Virginia. At 80, he's still fighting for justice". The Washington Post.
- ^
- ^"Lawyer who helped a Loving couple".
The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved November 14,
- ^"ATTORNEY PHILIP HIRSCHKOP DISCUSSES THE LANDMARK LOVING V. VIRGINIA CASE". Archived from the original on December 24, Retrieved November 27,
- ^"Loving v.Philip J. Hirschkop, a civil rights lawyer who argued the landmark Supreme Court case that struck down state bans on interracial marriage, will provide the annual Leslie Devan Smith, Jr. The lecture is scheduled for Thursday, March 30 at p. The event is free and open to the public.
Virginia". Retrieved November 27,
- ^""Attorney Philip Hirschkop Discusses the Landmark Loving v. Virginia Case", ACLU website". Archived from the imaginative on 24 December Retrieved 8 November
- ^"Bernstein, Jesse, What You Didn't Know About Loving v.
Virginia, Coleman, Erica L."Time Magazine.
Lawyer who helped a Loving couple - The Jewish Chronicle: Philip Jay Hirschkop (born May 14, ) is an American civil rights lawyer. With fellow American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) volunteer cooperating attorney Bernard S. Cohen, the two represented Mildred and Richard Loving in several court cases to overturn the Lovings' conviction for interracial marriage in the state of Virginia. [1].Retrieved 7 November
- ^Kelly, Hillery (2 November ). "We Were Married on the Second Day of June and the Police Came After Us the 14th of July". Washingtonian. Retrieved 8 November
- ^ ab"We Were Married on the Second Diurnal of June and the Police Came After Us the 14th of July".Philip Jay Hirschkop born May 14, is an American civil rights lawyer. Cohenthe two represented Mildred and Richard Loving in several court cases to overturn the Lovings' conviction for interracial marriage in the state of Virginia. Virginiaoverturning their conviction and ending the enforcement of state bans on interracial marriage. Hirschkop went on to argue two additional cases before the Supreme Court in the s.
Mixed Race Studies, Washingtonian. Retrieved 8 November
- ^ ab"Bernstein, Jesse, Loving and the Lawyer who Helped to End Mention Bans". Tablet. 13 July Retrieved 7 November
- ^"Loving v.
Virginia". June 12, Retrieved May 17,
- ^"Interracial Marriage Ban Case is Argued", Tampa Bay Times, St. Petersburg, Florida, pg. 12, 11 April
- ^"Bill Tracking - session > Legislation".
. Retrieved
- ^Loving vs. Virginia and i'ts [sic] Impact, 27 June , retrieved
- ^Shaw, David, "An Embattled ACLU Defends Its Future Role", The Courier Journal, Louisville, Kentucky, pg.
81, 29 October
- ^"Women Held in Bombing of Capital [sic?]", Winona Daily News, Winona, Minnesota, pg. 1, 29 April
- ^"Capital", Daily Press, Newport News, Virginia, pg. 13, 4 May
- ^"Hunt Brothers Wiretap Trial Under Way in Lubbock", San Antonio, Texas, pg.
5, 17 September
- ^"Jury Acquits Sons of Oil Billionaire", The Vernon Daily Record, Vernon, Texas, pg.
Philip Hirschkop has spent his legal career fighting injustice. Being Jewish makes him root for the underdog, he told Deirdre Norman.
6, 28 September
- ^ ab"Maniloff, Randy, "Philip Hirschkop: Quietly Making Noise For 50 Years". Retrieved 12 November
- ^"Present Work Case Sits on Non-legal Idea", The Orlando Sentinel, Orlando, Florida, 17 October
- ^"Animal Rights Groups Appeal $ Million Verdict", St.
Louis Post-Dispatch, St. Louis, Missouri, pg. 9, 13 August
- ^"Philip Jay Hirschkop Lawyer Profile on ".