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- 2009.03.31: Plan to Reopen UC EAP in Israel
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- Education and the Constitutional Rights of Children, in Thinking, Childhood and Education 6-16 (edited by Matthew Lipman, Dubuque, IA: Kendall/Hunt, 1993) (OCR)
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- 1990.02.21: Oral History Interview with Miguel F. Garcia II (California State Archives, State Government Oral History Program) [Pitchess Case]
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- 1987.05.01: Bessie Letwin — 1898-1987
- 1987.04.30: Leon Letwin Affirmative Action Memo to Faculty
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- 1986: Teaching First-Year Students – The Inevitability of a Political Agenda, 10 Nova Law Journal 645-46 – OCR
- 1985.06.00: Leon Letwin: Compassionate Scholar (UCLA Law School Magazine)
- 1985.05.03: UC Faculty Demand Divestment from Apartheid South Africa
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- 1985.04.00: Impeaching Defendants with Their Prior Convictions: Reconsidering the Dangerous Propensities of Character Evidence after People v. Castro (18 U.C. Davis L. Rev. 681)
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- 1984-1985 – Impeaching Defendants with Their Prior Convictions: Reconsidering the Dangerous Propensities of Character Evidence after People v. Castro, 18 UC Davis Law Review 681-719 (OCR)
- 1983.10.09: The Way We Train Lawyers Is a Crime Against Society (Washington Post)
- 1983 Fall Leon Letwin, Law 145 (Civil Procedure) Student Evaluations
- 1983.04.12: Leon Letwin Comments on the First Year Grading Proposal.OCR
- 1983.03.27: Rent Group Mailings Blasted as False (L.A. Times)
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- 1983.01.14: Nomination of Professor Leon Letwin for 1982 Distinguished Teaching Award by the School of Law
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Monthly Archives: September 2015
Image2015.09.10: Leon Letwin dies at 85; UCLA law professor, activist and Angela Davis defender (L.A. Times)
Los Angeles Times, September 10, 2015
Leon Letwin dies at 85; UCLA law professor, activist and Angela Davis defender
Although Letwin later backed away from the party, he spent the rest of his life fighting for social justice. In the courts, the longtime UCLA law professor helped win important cases involving the rights of criminal defendants and high school journalists. On campus he helped defend Angela Davis when she was under attack for her militant views.
He also spearheaded affirmative action in law school admissions, years before most public universities embraced diversity as a goal.
“He thought we should make a difference. Many of us weren’t sure about that,” Henry W. McGee Jr., a former longtime UCLA law professor and one of the first African Americans to win tenure at the university, said of the activism that set Letwin apart from colleagues.
Letwin, who died this summer at the age of 85 in State College, Pa., after a long illness, joined UCLA in the early 1960s. With the civil rights movement heating up, he began to press the university to help prepare minority students for law school.
He became the founding director of the Legal Education Opportunity Program of Southern California, which sought to increase the enrollment of blacks and Mexican Americans at UCLA, USC and Loyola law schools. Letwin launched the program in the summer of 1968 with 40 students who took classes on criminal, constitutional and tort law and interacted with judges, police officers, prosecutors and other lawyers.
“It was truly a radical move,” said Los Angeles Deputy Dist. Atty. Miguel Espinoza, who is writing a book on the effort. “Within a year or two of his hiring, he laid the groundwork for one of the earliest and most expansive affirmative action programs in the nation.”
In operation for a decade, it exposed hundreds of students to the legal profession, including Peter P. Espinoza, a 1980 UCLA law school graduate (and father of Miguel) who later served as supervising judge of Los Angeles County’s criminal courts.
“Leon’s a hero to me because of the impact he had on the law school and the legal profession in general,” Espinoza said in an interview last week.
At Letwin’s memorial service in late August following his July 13 death, Espinoza said he counted about 25 judges and a number of public officials who were admitted to law school after participating in the program.
An expert on evidence law, Letwin also played a major role in Pitchess vs. Superior Court, a 1974 case that established the right of defendants accused of resisting arrest to obtain records relating to complaints of excessive force by a peace officer. The request for such information is now known as a Pitchess motion.
Letwin was born on Dec. 29, 1929 in Milwaukee, where his parents, Bessie and Lazar, settled after fleeing anti-Semitic persecution during the Russian Revolution. As a youth he subscribed to the Communist Party’s Sunday Worker newspaper, the act that drew the attention of the FBI.
At 15, Letwin entered the University of Chicago. He was interested in studying the brain but changed course as the McCarthy-era hunt for Communists and other subversives commenced. “There was a dearth of lawyers defending people who came under McCarthy’s attacks,” Alita Letwin, his wife of 63 years, recalled Monday. “That was the major reason Leon went into law. He felt it was a duty.”
Letwin spent a few years in private practice in Milwaukee, leaving in 1964 to teach at UCLA. He quickly leaped into a number of controversial fights, including defending Davis, a philosophy professor, Communist and member of the Black Panther Party, when Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan advocated her dismissal. Letwin argued in a letter to university officials that firing a faculty member with “divergent views” would make a mockery of academic integrity. With colleague Richard Wasserstrom, he also helped strike down a loyalty oath requirement. Davis was fired in 1970.
A few years later Letwin was one of three attorneys who represented leaders of the Red Tide, a student underground paper, in a case that ultimately went to the state Supreme Court.
Founded in the Letwins’ garage in West Los Angeles by a group of students from nearby University High School, the paper featured radical views on the Vietnam War, abortion and other issues. School authorities barred its distribution on campus, alleging that one of its articles libeled a district employee. In 1976 the court agreed with the students that the school’s efforts to ban the paper amounted to prior censorship.
One of the paper’s leaders was Letwin’s son, Michael, now a public defender in New York.
“The idea we grew up with was you should stand up for what you believe in,” Michael Letwin said. “He would do battle for us with school administration…. That made a huge difference to us.”
Besides his wife and son Michael, Letwin, who retired from UCLA in 1994, is also survived by sons Daniel and David, and five grandchildren.
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