Stephen B. Bright (born 1948) is an American lawyer known for representing people facing the death penalty, advocating for the right to counsel for poor people accused of crimes, and challenging inhumane practices and conditions in prisons and jails.[1] He has taught at Yale Law School since 1993 and has been teaching at the Georgetown Law Center since 2017 (it is his third visit to Georgetown). In 2016, he ended almost 35 years at the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta, first as director from 1982 to 2005, and then as president and senior counsel from 2006 to 2016.[citation needed]
Early life and education
Bright grew up on a family farm in Boyle County, Kentucky. As a student at Boyle County High School, he was a journalist, writing stories for The Advocate-Messenger. He began his undergraduate studies at the University of Kentucky (UK) in Lexington in fall 1965. He became involved with student government, switched his major from journalism to political science, and was elected student body president in 1970.[2] Entering that office in a turbulent time of student demonstrations against the Vietnam War, the outspoken and controversial Bright earned a reputation as UK's "first liberal activist student president."[3] He received his B.A. and J.D. degrees from the University of Kentucky.
Legal career
Bright served as a legal services attorney with the Appalachian Research & Defense Fund from 1975 to 1976, a public defender with the Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia from 1976 to 1979, and director of a law school clinical program in Washington, D.C., from 1979 to 1982.
The Fulton County Daily Report named Bright as 'Agitator (and Newsmaker) of the Year'[5] in 2003 for his contribution to bringing about creation of a public defender system in Georgia by bringing lawsuits and issuing reports that led to the state legislature's passage of the Georgia Indigent Defense Act.[6]
Bright has argued before the Supreme Court in the cases of McWilliams v. Dunn (2017), Foster v. Chatman (2016), Snyder v. Louisiana (2008), and Amadeo v. Zant (1988).[7] The Supreme Court ruled in favor of his clients in each case, finding racial discrimination in jury selection in the cases of Foster, Snyder and Amadeo, and the denial of funds for an crucial expert witness that denied McWilliams a fair trial.
Representation in other media
His work and the work of the Center have been the subject of a documentary film, Fighting for Life in the Death Belt[8]
Two books about their work are Proximity to Death by William S. McFeely (Norton, 1999) and Finding Life on Death Row by Katya Lezin (Northeastern University Press, 1999).
Honors
National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers' Lifetime Achievement Award in 2008
Inducted into the University of Kentucky College of Law Hall of Fame.
He has received honorary degrees from Georgetown, Emory, Northeastern, Louisville and Quinnipiac universities, the University of Kentucky, Centre College, Berea College, the University of Central England, and the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, and other awards.
Notes
^American Bar Association, awarded him its Thurgood Marshall Award, History of Award and Past Recipients [1][permanent dead link]
^Bill Peterson, "Straight Radical," The Courier-Journal and Times Magazine, 15 November 1970, pp. 10-15, 49.
^Joe Ward, "Steve's still stormy," The Courier-Journal, 11 April 1971, pp. B1, B11.