August 22, 2017

ABA calls for bar admission of illegal aliens to practice law – 2016 Georgia bill to bar illegal aliens from practicing law never allowed a committee hearing

Posted by D.A. King at 8:23 pm - Email the author   Print This Post Print This Post  

 

Dustin Inman Society

 

–> FYI: A 2016 bill (SB6, committee substitute) was introduced in the Republican-ruled Georgia senate (thank you, Senator Josh McKoon) to formally bar illegal aliens from practicing law in Georgia – it was never allowed a hearing.

“Seven states including California, Florida and New York have already begun admitting undocumented immigrants to the state bar. The ABA resolution will serve as a guideline for other states to follow.”

 

The National Jurist
August 21, 2017

ABA calls for bar admission of undocumented law grads

“Suspended, expelled or disciplined? No. Criminal history? No. Fired from a job for dishonesty? No.

Status of U.S. Citizenship . . .

These are questions that most bar candidates encounter on their character and fitness application. How a candidate answers the last question could prevent them from being admitted to the practice of law, depending on which state bar they apply to.

For law student Thomas Kim, who wants to practice law in the state of Oregon, his presence in the U.S. as an undocumented immigrant will bar him from admission. But a recent resolution, championed by Kim and passed by the American Bar Association, may soon change that.

At the ABA’s annual meeting in New York, the ABA House of Delegates approved a resolution that urges Congress to allow state courts to permit undocumented immigrants seeking legal status to obtain a law license.

“This resolution on which my team and I worked diligently lets undocumented students, as well as documented students, know that America is still a land of opportunity,” Kim said. “Passing of this resolution reminds me that I can continue to make substantive, positive impact in my community and in this country.”

Kim was born in Korea and entered the U.S. legally with his family as a teenager. He was captain of his cross-country team, a speaker at his high school graduation and was the first in his family to attend college. Then, in 2011, he discovered that his family’s green card application had been denied.

Although he was no longer eligible for federal financial aid, Kim worked his way through college and set his sights on becoming a lawyer to help other immigrant families. Kim received a full-tuition scholarship to Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University, where he is a rising third-year student.

Not all delegates supported the resolution. Jack Long of the State Bar of Georgia argued that undocumented immigrants were in violation of the law, similar to other bar applicants who receive a DUI while applying to the bar. Long also expressed concern that law graduates with undocumented status are barred from certain employment opportunities…” Read the rest HERE.

Bonus reading: Illegal alien lawyer hires illegal aliens lawyer in California.