Professor Carol Chomsky was quoted in an article in NetNewsLedger commenting on the trials of Dakota held after the U.S.-Dakota War in 1862. Thirty-eight Dakota men were hanged in Mankato, Minn. on December 26, 1862, after military commission trials conducted starting in late September that year. “The trials of the Dakota were conducted unfairly in a variety of ways. The evidence was sparse, the tribunal was biased, the defendants were unrepresented in unfamiliar proceedings conducted in a foreign language, and authority for convening the tribunal was lacking.
Law School Community Saddened by the Passing of Brennan Gaeth (’17)
Brennan Gaeth, a member of the Law School’s most recent J.D. class, died unexpectedly on Nov. 23 in Milwaukee. He moved to Kansas City, Mo., to take a position with the firm of Shook, Hardy & Bacon after graduation, and in October he was sworn in to the Minnesota bar. As a student, Gaeth was an engaged member of the Law School community who volunteered with the Asylum Law Project and served as a Robina Summer Fellow doing housing advocacy work with Southern Minnesota Regional Legal Services.
![Brennan Gaeth (’17)](/sites/law.umn.edu/files/styles/medium/public/brennan-gaeth17-news.jpg?itok=2DmuQEUn)
Law School Students Play Vital Role in Lawsuit Blocking Deportation of 92 Somalis
Students in the Law School’s James H. Binger Center for New Americans and recent Law School graduates played key roles in a class action litigation effort that won a court order on Tuesday, December 19, temporarily blocking the deportation of 92 Somali men and women. The lawsuit was filed by the Binger Center, University of Miami Law School, and other legal services organizations in U.S. District Court in Miami.
![James H. Binger Center for New Americans](/sites/law.umn.edu/files/styles/medium/public/binger-center-logo-news.jpg?itok=6agPOYVW)
Prof. Linus Chan Named a ‘Minnesota Lawyer’ Attorney of the Year
Professor Linus Chan, who teaches the Detainee Rights Clinic in the Law School’s James H. Binger Center for New Americans, has been selected by Minnesota Lawyer magazine as one of its 2017 Attorneys of the Year. Chan was honored in the “Partners” category, along with Twin Cities attorney Mai Neng Moua. The two were nominated by the Minnesota Asian Pacific American Bar Association (MNAPABA) for their work on the “Minnesota Eight” case.
![Linus Chan](/sites/law.umn.edu/files/styles/medium/public/2023-07/Linus%20Chan%20600.png?itok=ybKizuNG)
Chief Judge Edward J. Cleary (’77) Donates Papers from Landmark SCOTUS Case to Law Library
The Law Library and Riesenfeld Rare Books Center recently received an important archival donation from Chief Judge Edward J. Cleary (’77) of the Minnesota Court of Appeals. The donated material is related to R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul (1992), a key U.S. Supreme Court First Amendment case—indeed, the first hate speech case ever heard by the court. Cleary, who argued the case from the trial level to the Supreme Court, has generously gifted the library his copies of the petitions, transcripts, briefs, and correspondence related to the case, for the sake of future study.
![Chief Judge Edward J. Cleary (’77)](/sites/law.umn.edu/files/styles/medium/public/edward-cleary-news.jpg?itok=FvHujDs5)
Developments in Immigration Law
Law School Mourns the Passing of Former Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Lawrence Yetka (’48)
Lawrence Yetka (’48), who served for a decade in the Minnesota legislature and for nearly two decades on the state’s highest court, passed away Nov. 12 in his hometown of Cloquet, Minn. He was 93.
![Justice Lawrence Yetka ('48)](/sites/law.umn.edu/files/styles/medium/public/news-yetka.jpg?itok=nlwOluWj)
Amy Hang (’18) Wins Audit Case at U.S. Tax Court
Amy Hang (’18), a student attorney in the Law School’s Ronald M. Mankoff Tax Clinic, recently won a favorable ruling for clients before the U.S. Tax Court in St. Paul on an issue that usually favors the IRS.
![Amy Hang (’18)](/sites/law.umn.edu/files/styles/medium/public/amy-hang18-news.jpg?itok=6TWJ1Dn5)
“An Extraordinary Public Leader and Human Being”: Law School Mourns the Passing of Warren Spannaus (’63)
Warren Spannaus (’63), a former three-term Minnesota attorney general and candidate for governor, died suddenly on Monday in St. Louis Park, Minn. He was 86.
Former Vice President Walter Mondale (’56), who was both a mentor and colleague of Spannaus, told Minnesota Public Radio, “This guy deserves a very significant place in Minnesota history and the history of legal rights and justice. He was an extraordinary public leader and human being, and I would hope that Minnesotans would agree with me on that.”
![Warren Spannaus (’63)](/sites/law.umn.edu/files/styles/medium/public/warrenspannaus63-saw2013-news-1.jpg?itok=B4ANDluw)