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Charles Ogletree

 
Black Biography: Charles Ogletree, Jr.
 

lawyer

Personal Information

Born on December 31, 1952, in Merced, CA; son of Charles Sr. and Willie Mae (Reed) Ogletree; married Pamela Barnes, 1975; children: Charles J. III, Rashida Jamila
Education: Stanford University, BA, political science (with distinction), 1974; Stanford University, MA, political science, 1975; Harvard Law School, JD, 1978.
Memberships:
Selected: National Legal Aid and Defender Association (defender committee member); Southern Prisoners Defense Committee (chair, board of directors); Society of American Law Teachers (board member); National Mentor Program (member, advisory committee); Stanford University Board of Trustees; University of the District of Columbia Board of Trustees.

Career

District of Columbia Public Defender Service, Washington, DC, staff attorney, 1978-82, director of staff and training, 1982-83; American University, Washington, adjunct professor, 1982-84, deputy director, 1984-85; Antioch Law School, Washington, adjunct professor, 1983-84; Jessamy, Fort & Ogletree (law firm), Washington, partner, 1985-89, Jessamy, Fort & Botts, of counsel, 1989-; Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA, visiting professor, 1985-89, director, introduction to trial advocacy workshop, 1986, assistant professor, 1989-93; director, Criminal Justice Institute, 1990-; professor, 1993; director of clinical programs, 1996; Jesse Climenko Professor of Law, 1998; associate dean for the clinical programs, 2002; vice dean for the clinical programs, 2003; director, Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice, 2004.

Life's Work

Charles Ogletree, Jr., is considered one of the most tenacious and successful trial lawyers in the United States. The Harvard University professor is a passionate advocate of a defendant's right to a fair trial within the American justice system--a Constitutional right one might find it difficult to receive if a member of a minority group. For several years Ogletree worked in Washington, D.C.'s public defender's office, a difficult area of law which generally attracts only the most ideologically dedicated and stamina-imbued law school graduates. Those experiences were carried over to the Ivy League halls of Harvard Law School, where Ogletree has single-handedly made significant inroads into how students at the country's most prestigious legal training ground view both the African-American community and the criminal justice system.

Ogletree was born on December 31, 1952, to Charles Sr. and Willie Mae Ogletree, the first of their five children. He grew up in a rural northern California community called Merced, which had a small African-American population that lived south of its railroad tracks. His maternal grandparents, known as Big Daddy and Big Mama, were an important influence on the young Ogletree. With his grandfather he would fish for hours, and from Big Mama he learned how to cook and thus, learning self-sufficiency. Both grandparents he would later credit as having a profound influence on his demeanor and tactics as a trial lawyer. The marriage of Ogletree's parents, however, was plagued by periodic violence, and they eventually divorced, although they remained on good terms. A bright child who spent free hours in the public library and brought home good grades from school, his first brushes with the law--especially watching his father being taken away in cuffs after incidents of domestic violence at the Ogletree house--instilled in him a deep distrust of and feelings of powerlessness toward the law enforcement community.

The Ogletree family was part of the migrant worker community around Merced, and when Charles, Jr., became old enough he also began working in the fields, picking figs and other fruit. From this he learned a certain inner competitiveness--every day he would strive to pick more than he had the day before. As an adult, Ogletree compared his humble upbringing with that of his own children, raised in relatively affluent African-American middle-class surroundings: "In the normal course of their lives they meet professors, lawyers, doctors," he recalled for Sara Lawrence in Lightfoot in I've Known Rivers: Lives of Loss and Liberation. "Before I got to college I had never met any of these kinds of people." Another incident that occurred in his teens severely impacted Ogletree's views on law, order, and justice, especially for members of the African-American community. In high school he was part of a tight-knit group of young African-American males that were determined to stay out of trouble. All earned good grades, were involved in athletics, and respected Eugene Allen, considered the brightest of the clique. After Allen had a run-in with Merced's high school football coach--and incurred the wrath of the town's white community by dating the daughter of a white judge--Allen was accused of setting fire to the coach's residence. He was convicted and sent to a youth camp, where he was involved in a race riot and charged with the death of a white inmate. Sent to San Quentin for the crime, he was co-charged with killing a prison guard, although the decision was overturned and Allen was removed from Death Row. The sad story of one of his closest friends made Ogletree painfully aware of how difficult it was for young African-American males to receive fair treatment once inside the criminal justice system.

Ogletree himself stayed out of trouble. In 1970, after high school, Ogletree enrolled in Stanford University outside San Francisco. His dormitory marked the first time he had ever had his own room. At college, Ogletree became dismayed by the elitism of the institution. Fortunately, he was also quite near the epicenter of the Black Power movement that had coalesced around San Francisco, the city of Oakland, and the University of California at Berkeley at that point in history. Ogletree became a campus radical, organizing an Afrocentric (though still integrated) dormitory, where he met his future wife, Pamela Barnes. He edited a campus Black Panther newspaper called The Real News and traveled to Africa and Cuba as part of student activist groups.

Ogletree's first intensive experience in the courtroom sparked his intent to pursue trial law as a career. He attended nearly every day of the trial of Black Power activist and Communist Angela Davis. Some of parts of the Davis trial were tedious, Ogletree recalled in I've Known Rivers, but "the process and strategies were fascinating. I sat there wondering how they were going to tie all this together." After graduating with a bachelor's degree in political science from Stanford in 1974, Ogletree stayed on a year to earn a master's degree. At the urging of his soon-to-be wife, he applied to Harvard Law School; the newlyweds moved to the Boston area upon his acceptance and enrollment in the fall of 1975. From the start, Ogletree recalled, he felt unease in the markedly different, monied East Coast enclave. Furthermore, the city was then in the middle of a vicious battle over busing that pitted its ethnic-American communities against the African-American populace. Academia itself was also especially tedious, and at one point he nearly quit the prestigious School of Law. "At Harvard the pressure was on, participation was mandatory, there was always a lot of competition and tension in the air," Ogletree recalled in I've Known Rivers. He survived by closely allying himself with other African-American students and continued his political activism, even becoming national president of the Black Law Students Association.

After receiving a juris doctor degree from Harvard in 1978, Ogletree was hired by the District of Columbia's Public Defender's Service, which provided free legal counsel to those accused of a crime who were unable to afford an attorney guaranteed them by the U.S. Constitution. With wife Pamela and son Charles III (a family made complete with the arrival of daughter Rashida in 1979), Ogletree moved to the nation's capital, also home to some of the most blighted and crime-ridden urban pockets in the country. He had originally thought that perhaps he had not gained very much from his experiences at Harvard, but later asserted that everything he learned came back in surprising ways as he began to argue cases before the bench--and win. Soon Ogletree had gained a reputation as a formidable courtroom presence, although it took him a while to understand that himself. Initially, he would attribute most victories to luck, but then, as he told Lawrence-Lightfoot in I've Known Rivers, "it was only after I kept on winning and began to gain a strong reputation among my peers...that I began to admit to myself that I had a special talent for this work."

Ogletree became known for a cool, collected courtroom demeanor, which he has said was inherited from his grandfather and their fishing expeditions together, during which the elder man would sit impassively for long stretches of time. Ogletree himself took up fishing in his thirties as a means of relaxation from his hectic schedule that not only included his grueling hours in the Public Defender's Service--where he was named director of staff training in 1982--but his teaching position at American University and later Antioch Law School, rounded out by his involvements in numerous professional organizations. After a time Ogletree left the Public Defender's Service, and between 1985 and 1989 Ogletree was a partner in the Washington law firm of Jessamy, Fort, & Ogletree while concurrently serving as a visiting professor at Harvard Law School.

In 1986 Ogletree became director of Harvard's introduction to trial advocacy workshops, a program he founded to inject a more clinical, hands-on approach into a curriculum known to be a bit too focused on the theory of law. Through the intensive workshops, students--even if they are not planning a career in trial law--will walk away with a sense that the law can be "an instrument for social and political change...a tool to empower the dispossessed and disenfranchised...and a means to make the privileged more respectful of differences," as Ogletree explained in I've Known Rivers. He also founded and became director of the School's Criminal Justice Institute in 1990, a broad program heavily involved with the poorer communities in Boston, and began a Saturday School so African-American students could learn from other professionals of their own heritage. The conferences are often sold out and well integrated.

Ogletree also gained prominence in 1991 when he was asked by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to write up an investigation into the legal career of a former Equal Employment Opportunity Commission chief and African-American judge Clarence Thomas, a staunch Republican. The group thought they should cast their support of the presidential nominee for the Supreme Court on the basis of race, even though Thomas's legal rulings and writings consistently seemed to work against the civil rights principles upon which the NAACP had been founded. Ogletree drafted a 30-page report on Thomas that was instrumental in the NAACP's vote of no confidence for the nominee. He later became further embroiled in the battle against Thomas when charges of sexual harassment were leveled against the judge by a law professor and former EEOC subordinate named Anita Hill; Ogletree served as her attorney during the contentious Senate confirmation hearings in the fall of 1991.

The following year, Ogletree's career at Harvard--whose decision- makers had named him assistant professor in 1989--became the subject of controversy when a paper he had submitted to the school's Law Review Journal was called into question by some of the publication's staff. However, the prestigious university's dearth of tenured African-American professors as well as vicious rivalry between political camps among the student body seemed to be behind much of the flap. The Wall Street Journal as well as the New Republic covered the incident, but Ogletree was granted tenure and the Law Review editor censured. The fractious atmosphere that has replaced the elitism of Ogletree's student days at the school make him question his own reasons for staying on. "Am I doing right by my people working here at the university?" he wondered in I've Known Rivers. "This remains an open question."

Ogletree remained with Harvard, however. He became the Jesse Climenko professor of law in 1998, the vice dean for Clinical Programs at Harvard in 2003, and in 2004 he was appointed director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice. His work in the legal profession and advocacy for racial justice brought him a great deal of media attention. He became a sought-after expert, appearing as a guest commentator on the McNeil-Lehrer News Hour, Nightline, and This Week With David Brinkley. He also served as the co-chair of the Reparations Coordinating Committee, a group pursuing a lawsuit to win reparations for descendants of African slaves. The group of distinguished lawyers and other experts on the committee sought to reconcile the past wrongs brought by slavery. His legal work was recognized, and the National Law Journal named him one of the "100 Most Influential Lawyers in America" in 2002.

In addition to legal issues, Ogletree committed himself to other causes. Determined to improve the educational opportunities for minority and needy students, Ogletree established a college scholarship fund for students in Merced, California. He is also a founding member of the Benjamin Bannekrer Charter School in Cambridge, Massachusetts, which provides after-school programs to minority children.

Awards

Selected: Award of Merit, Public Defender Service Association, 1990; Personal Achievement Award, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Black Network, 1990; Nelson Mandela Service Award, National Black Law Students Association, 1991; National Bar Association, Presidential Award for The Renaissance Man of the Legal Profession, 1996; Washington Bar Association, Charles Hamilton Houston Medallion of Merit, 2001.

Works

Selected writings

    Books
    • Beyond the Rodney King Story: An Investigation of Police Conduct in Minority Communities, Northeastern University Press, 1995.
    • All Deliberate Speed: Reflections on the First Half-Century of Brown v. Board of Education, W.W. Norton and Company, 2004.

    Further Reading

    Books

    • Lawrence-Lightfoot, Sara. I've Known Rivers: Lives of Loss and Liberation, Addison-Wesley, 1994.
    Periodicals
    • Bay State Banner, April 28, 1994, p. 17.
    • Boston Globe, September 9, 2004.
    • Jet, June 28, 1993, p. 10.
    • New Republic, June 7, 1993, p. 11.
    • Wall Street Journal, December 4, 1992.

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    Wikipedia: Charles Ogletree
     
    Charles J. Ogletree, Jr.
    Born December 31, 1952(1952-12-31)
    Merced, California
    Nationality  United States
    Ethnicity African American
    Education A.B., M.A., J.D. 1978
    Alma mater Stanford University, Harvard Law School
    Occupation Professor of law
    Employer Harvard Law School
    Title Jesse Climenko Professor
    Spouse(s) Pamela Barnes, 1975
    Children Charles III (about 1975), Rashida (1979)
    Parents Charles Sr. and Willie Mae (Reed) Ogletree
    Website
    http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/ogletree.html
    Notes

    Charles J. Ogletree (born December 31, 1952 in Merced, California) is Jesse Climenko Professor at Harvard Law School, the founder of the school's Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice, and the author of numerous books on legal topics.

    Contents

    Education

    Ogletree was born to farm workers in central California.

    He earned his B.A. (1974, with distinction) and M.A. (1975) both in political science from Stanford University and his J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1978.

    Career

    Lawyer and professor

    District of Columbia Public Defender Service, Washington, D.C., staff attorney, then training director, trial chief, and deputy director, until 1985
    Jessamy, Fort & Ogletree, Washington, DC, partner, beginning 1985
    former counsel to Jordan, Keys & Jessamy, Washington, DC
    University of Oregon Law School, former Wayne Morse Chair of Law and Politics
    Stanford University, former scholar-in-residence
    Harvard University, Cambridge, MA,
    professor at Harvard Law School, 1992--
    currently Jesse Climenko Professor of Law and vice dean for clinical programs
    Cochair of Reparations Coordinating Committee

    Media appearances and contributions

    Moderator of television programs, including

    State of the Black Union
    Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community
    (with others) Ethics in America[3]
    Hard Drugs, Hard Choices, Liberty and Limits: Whose Law, Whose Order?[3]
    Credibility in the Newsroom
    Race to Execution, 2006
    Our Genes, about 2003[3]
    Beyond Black and White[3]
    Liberty & Limits: Whose Law, Whose Order?[3]
    That Delicate Balance II: Our Bill of Rights[3]
    Other PBS broadcasts.[3][4]

    Guest on radio & television programs, including

    Nightline[3]
    This Week with David Brinkley
    McNeil-Lehrer News Hour
    Crossfire
    Today Show
    Good Morning America
    Larry King Live
    Cochran and Company
    Burden of Proof
    Tavis Smiley
    Frontline
    America's Black Forum
    Meet the Press[3]
    NBC news radio, legal commentator on O. J. Simpson murder case

    Contributor to periodicals, including

    New Crisis
    Public Utilities Fortnightly
    Harvard Law Review

    Community and professional affairs

    Stanford University (member, board of trustees)
    Stanford Fund (former national chairman)
    University of the District of Columbia (chairman, board of trustees)
    B.E.L.L. Foundation (chairman of the board)
    Benjamin Banneker Charter School, Cambridge, Massachusetts, (founding member and trustee)
    Merced, California, public schools (founder of scholarships)
    National Leadership 500 (participant in seminars)
    National Mentor Program (member, advisory committee)
    Society of American Law Teachers (board member);
    National Legal Aid and Defender Association (defender committee member)
    Southern Prisoners Defense Committee (chair, board of directors)
    Black Law Students Association (former national president)

    Stature and public life

    Ogletree taught both Barack and Michelle Obama at Harvard; he has remained close to Mr. Obama throughout his political career.[5]

    Professor Ogletree has written opinion pieces on the state of race in the United States for major publications.[6] Ogletree also served as the moderator for a panel discussion on civil rights in baseball on March 28, 2008 that accompanied the second annual MLB civil rights exhibition game the following day between the New York Mets and the Chicago White Sox.[7] He appeared briefly on the joint Daily Show-Colbert Report election night coverage of the 2008 presidential election, making a few remarks about his personal knowledge of the Obamas.

    Awards

    National Conference on Black Lawyers People's Lawyer of the Year Award
    Man of Vision Award, Museum of Afro-American History (Boston, MA)
    Albert Sacks-Paul A. Freund Award for Teaching Excellence, Harvard Law School, 1993
    Ellis Island Medal of Honor, 1995
    Ruffin-Fenwick Trailblazer Award
    International House of Blues Foundation Martin Luther King, Jr., Drum Major Award
    Justice Louis Brandeis Medal for Public Service
    21st Century Achievement Award, Urban League of Eastern Massachusetts
    named among National Law Journal list of America's 100 Most Influential Lawyers, 2000[8]
    Equal Justice Award, National Bar Association
    Charles Hamilton Houston Medallion of Merit, Washington Bar Association, 2001
    named among Savoy magazine list of 100 Most Influential Blacks in America, 2003[8]
    honorary doctorates of law from North Carolina Central University, New England School of Law, Tougaloo College, Amherst College, Wilberforce University, and University of Miami School of Law
    Award of Merit, Public Defender Service Association, 1990
    Personal Achievement Award, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the Black Network, 1990
    Nelson Mandela Service Award, National Black Law Students Association, 1991
    National Bar Association, Presidential Award for The Renaissance Man of the Legal Profession, 1996
    Washington Bar Association, Charles Hamilton Houston Medallion of Merit, 2001

    Plagiarism

    In 2004 Harvard disciplined Ogletree for plagiarizing six paragraphs from Yale scholar Jack Balkin's book, What Brown v. Board of Education Should Have Said in his own book, All Deliberate Speed: Reflections on the First Half-Century of Brown v. Board of Education.[9] Ogletree apologized, saying that he "made a serious mistake during the editorial process of completing this book, and delegated too much responsibility to others during the final editing process.” Former Harvard President Derek C. Bok concluded, "There was no deliberate wrongdoing at all...He marshaled his assistants and parceled out the work and in the process some quotation marks got lost.”[8][10]

    Works

    • When Law Fails (Charles J. Ogletree & Austin Sarat eds., NYU Press forthcoming 2009).
    • From Lynch Mobs to the Killing State: Race and the Death Penalty in America (ed. with Austin Sarat, New York University Press 2006)
    • All Deliberate Speed: Reflections on the First Half-Century of Brown v. Board of Education (W.W. Norton & Company 2004)
    • Brown at 50: The Unfinished Legacy (ed. with Deborah L. Rhode, American Bar Association 2004)
    • Beyond the Rodney King Story: An Investigation of Police Conduct in Minority Communities, (ed. with others, Northeastern University Press Boston, Massachusetts 1995)
    • Contributor to books, including
    Faith of Our Fathers: African-American Men Reflect on Fatherhood
    Reason and Passion: Justice Brennan's Enduring Influence
    Lift Every Voice and Sing, 2001
    The Rehnquist Court: Judicial Activism on the Right, 2002.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Rehnquist Revolution in Criminal Procedure" in The Rehnquist Court (Herman Schwartz ed., Hill and Wang Publishing, 2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Challenge of Race and Education" in How to Make Black America Better (Smiley ed., 2001).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Privileges and Immunities for Basketball Stars and Other Sport Heroes?" in Basketball Jones (Boyd & Shropshire eds., 2000).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Tireless Warrior for Racial Justice" in Reason (Rosenkranz & Schwartz eds., 1998).
    • Articles
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Commentary: All Deliberate Speed: Reflections on the First Half-Century of Brown vs. Board of Education," 66 Montana Law Review 283 (2005).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "All Deliberate Speed?: Brown's Past and Brown's Future," 107 West Virginia Law Review 625 (2005).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Current Reparations Debate," 5 University of California Davis Law Review 36 (2003).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Does America Owe Us? (Point-Counterpoint with E.R. Shipp, on the Topic of Reparations)," Essence Magazine, February 2003.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Case for Reparations," USA Weekend Magazine, February 2003.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Repairing the Past: New Efforts in the Reparations Debate in America," 2 Harvard Civil Rights- Civil Liberties Law Review 38 (2003).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Reparations for the Children of Slaves: Litigating the Issues," 2 University of Menphis Law Review 33 (2003).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Right's and Wrongs of e-Privacy," Optimize Magazine, March 2002.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "From Pretoria to Philadelphia: Judge Higginbotham's Racial Justice Jurisprudence on South Africa and the United States," 20 Yale Law and Policy Review 383 (2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Challenge of Providing Legal Representation in the United States, South Africa and China," 7 Washington University Journal of Law and Policy 47 (2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Judicial Activism or Judicial Necessity: D.C. Court's Criminal Justice Legacy," 90 Georgetown Law Journal 685 (2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Black Man's Burden: Race and the Death Penalty in America," 81 Oregon Law Review 15 (2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "A Diverse Workforce in the 21st Century: Harvard's Challenge," Harvard Community Resource, Spring 2002.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Fighting a Just War Without an Unjust Loss of Freedom," Africana.com, October 11, 2001.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Unequal Justice for Al Sharpton," Africana.com, August 21, 2001.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "A. Leon Higginbotham, Jr.: A Reciprocal Legacy of Scholarship and Advocacy," 53 Rutgers Law Review 665 (2001).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "An Ode to St. Peter: Professor Peter M. Cicchino," 50 American University Law Review 591 (2001).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "America's Schizophrenic Immigration Policy: Race, Class, and Reason," 41 Boston College Law Review 755 (2000).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "A Tribute to Gary Bellow: The Visionary Clinical Scholar," 114 Harvard Law Review 420 (2000).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "A. Leon Higginbotham's Civil Rights Legacy," 34 Harvard Civil-Rights Civil Liberties Law Review 1 (1999).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Personal and Professional Integrity in the Legal Profession: Lessons from President Clinton and Kenneth Starr," 56 Washington & Lee Law Review 851 (1999).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Matthew O. Tobriner Memorial Lecture: The Burdens and Benefits of Race in America," 25 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 219 (1998).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The President's Role in Bridging America's Racial Divide," 15 Thomas M. Cooley Law Review 11 (1998).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Conference on Critical Race Theory: When the Rainbow Is Not Enough," 31 New England Law Review 705 (1997).
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Race Relations and Conflicts in the United States The Limits of Hate Speech: Does Race Matter?" 32 Gonzaga Law Review 491 (1997).
    • Articles in a Newspaper
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Court Should Stand By Bake Ruling," Boston Globe, April 1, 2003, Op-Ed.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Future of Admissions and Race," Boston Globe, May 20, 2002, Op-Ed.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Litigating the Legacy of Slavery," New York Times, March 31, 2002, Op-Ed.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The U.S. Needn't Shrink from Durban," Los Angeles Times, August 29, 2001, Op-Ed.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Real David Brock," Boston Globe, June 30, 2001, Op-Ed.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "The Court's Tarnished Reputation," Boston Globe, December 12, 2000, Op-Ed.
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Why Has the G.O.P. Kept Blacks Off Federal Courts?" New York Times, August 18, 2000, Op-Ed.
    • Reports or Studies
    Ogletree, Charles J. "Judicial Excellence, Judicial Diversity: The African American Federal Judges Report" (2003).
    • Presentations
    Ogletree, Charles J. A Call to Arms: Responding to W.E.B. DuBois's Challenge to Wilberforce, Wilberforce University Founder's Day Luncheon (February 11, 2003).
    Ogletree, Charles J. Grinnell College Special Convocation Address (January 22, 2003).
    Ogletree, Charles J. Remembering Dr. King's Legacy: Promoting Diversity and Promoting Patriotism, King County Bar Association MLK Luncheon (January 17, 2003).
    Ogletree, Charles J. Baum Lecture, University of Illinois Urbana-Champagne (November 2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. University of California-Davis Barrett Lecture: The Current Reparations Debate, University of California-Davis Law School (October 22, 2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. Why Reparations? Why Now?, Buck Franklin Memorial Lecture and Conference on Reparations, University of Tulsa College of Law, Oklahoma (September 25, 2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. Northeastern University Valerie Gordon Human Rights Lecture, Northeastern University School of Law (April 2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. Sobota Lecture, Albany School of Law (Spring 2002).
    Ogletree, Charles J. Mangels Lecturship, University of Washington Graduate School (Spring 2002).

    References

    1. ^ Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2009. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2009. http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC Document Number: H1000171721. Fee (via Fairfax County Public Library). Revised 05/24/2007. Retrieved 2009-01-06.
    2. ^ "Charles Ogletree, Jr." Contemporary Black Biography. Vol. 47. Thomson Gale, 2005. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Gale, 2009. http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC Document Number: K1606002934. Fee (Fairfax County Public Library). Revised 01/01/2005. Retrieved 6 January 2009.
    3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Our Genes / Our Choices . Genes On Trial . Meet The Participants". Public Broadcasting Service. about January 2003. http://www.pbs.org/inthebalance/archives/ourgenes/genes_on_trial/genes_meet_ogletree.html. Retrieved on 2009-01-05. "Charles J. Ogletree, a former public defender, is the Jesse Climenko Professor at Harvard Law School. He has appeared as a commentator on such programs as Nightline and Meet the Press. A prominent legal theorist, he has made a reputation in taking a hard look at complex constitutional issues of law and in criminal justice issues. He has worked with the Fred Friendly Seminars for many years and was the moderator for Beyond Black and White: Affirmative Action in America; Liberty & Limits: Whose Law, Whose Order?; Ethics in America; Hard Drugs, Hard Choices; and That Delicate Balance II: Our Bill of Rights." 
    4. ^ "NBA Live!". http://www.melanet.com/nbalive/ogletree.html. Retrieved on 2006-09-03. 
    5. ^ Interview with Ogletree on his relationship with the Obamas in the Harvard Law Record
    6. ^ Ogletree, Charles (2002-08-18). "The Case for Reparations". USA Weekend. http://www.usaweekend.com/02_issues/020818/020818reparations.html. Retrieved on 2006-09-03. 
    7. ^ Chicago White Sox, Major League Baseball, New York Mets - CBSSports.com
    8. ^ a b c Marks, Stephen (2004-09-13). "Ogletree Faces Discipline for Copying Text". The Harvard Crimson. http://www.thecrimson.com/article.aspx?ref=503341. Retrieved on 2006-09-03. 
    9. ^ Rimer, Sara (November 24, 2004). "When Plagiarism's Shadow Falls on Admired Scholars". New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/24/nyregion/24harvard.html?pagewanted=all&position=. Retrieved on 2009-01-05. 
    10. ^ Bombardieri, Marcella; David Mehegan (September 9, 2004). "Ogletree admits lifted passages; Harvard professor cites editing mistake". Boston Globe. http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2004/09/09/ogletree_admits_lifted_passages/. Retrieved on 2009-01-05. "Ogletree said he will be subject to disciplinary action from Harvard, but refused to say what the discipline would be...it is not the policy of the school to comment on disciplinary action." 

    Further reading

    • Charles Ogletree (Harvard faculty biography) retrieved May 24, 2006.
    • Booklist, April 1, 2004, Vernon Ford, review of All Deliberate Speed: Reflections on the First Half-Century of "Brown v. Board of Education," p. 1336.
    • Choice, May, 1995, D.O. Friedrichs, review of Beyond the Rodney King Story: An Investigation of Police Conduct in Minority Communities, p. 1510.
    • Kliatt, March, 2006, Patricia Moore, review of All Deliberate Speed, p. 40.
    • Massachusetts Law Review, fall, 2004, Brownlow M. Speer, review of All Deliberate Speed, p. 103.
    • New Crisis, May-June, 2002, Todd Steven Burroughs, "Charles Ogletree on Reparations," p. 9.
    • New Republic, June 7, 1993, Ruth Shalit, "Hate Story: Racial Strife at Law School," p. 11.
    • New York Review of Books, September 23, 2004, Kathleen Sullivan, review of All Deliberate Speed, p. 47.
    • Publishers Weekly, October 31, 1994, review of Beyond the Rodney King Story, p. 49; March 22, 2004, review of All Deliberate Speed, p. 77.
    • Lawrence-Lightfoot, Sara. I've Known Rivers: Lives of Loss and Liberation, Addison-Wesley, 1994.
    • Bay State Banner, April 28, 1994, p. 17.
    • Boston Globe, September 9, 2004.
    • Jet, June 28, 1993, p. 10.
    • Wall Street Journal, December 4, 1992.

     
     

     

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