
Why
Do Boston Lawyers Help Only Single Women?
A
Response to Joan Lukey, President of Boston Bar Association

It's
Official: Lexington Is a 'No Hate' Town
Why
Feminists Like Single Mothers Best, Why They Want More of Them
By
Atty. J. Edward Pawlick
July 2001
During
emails with Joan Lukey, President of the Boston Bar Association,
she asked why I am so critical of the poverty lawyers that she
funds with our tax dollars. She asked the following:
"Did
you consider yourself to be 'tolerant' of those in need of
assistance, in your criticism of the BBA's plea for greater
funding for the delivery of legal services for the poor?"
I've
no doubt that Atty. Lukey would shed tears, as I did last month,
if she could hear the struggles of Heidi Howard's children as
she strives to keep her family together in the face of
unethical, illegal attacks from the DSS that are never-ending.
But
Lukey will provide no lawyers or other help for Heidi Howard
with the tax dollars which we have entrusted to her. Why? How
can Lukey be so hard-hearted? Isn't that what those lawyers are
for - to protect us when state bureaucrats are breaking the law
in their torture of a citizen? (And my use of the word
"torture" is not overstated in this case.)
Doesn't
she know what is going on in the courts or doesn't she care?
The
answer is that Atty. Lukey's help in such disputes is extended
only to single women. It never goes to women who are still with
their husbands. And it never goes to any man.
How
can this be? Why won't she give help to the man, Ken Newell,
whose family has been severely damaged by the Boston Bar lawyers
. . .
.
. . or to David Luisi, whose children have been hounded and
destroyed (no exaggeration) by the poverty lawyers from Hale and
Dorr (of which Lukey is a Senior Partner) . . .
.
. . or to Harry Stewart, another man who finally triumphed over
five lawyers from the prestigious firm of Foley, Hoag and Eliot
by defending himself without a lawyer (but only after he had
spent six months in jail on false charges).
We
don't have space to name all the good people that the Boston Bar
refuses to help because they don't fall into the status of
"politically correct."
It's
too bad that there is no lawyer anywhere in Massachusetts who
has the time, the desire and the money to challenge this
feminist, legal aid system which is so grossly unfair in its
application.
Every
citizen should criticize the Boston Bar system which selectively
helps only a limited group of "the poor."
We
have advised Atty. Lukey that we will print in full any response
she has to this article.
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