Let's Make Justice Real Together
The District has some of the highest rates of economic and racial inequality in the country. Black residents experience poverty at four-times the rate of white residents, and unemployment at nearly seven-times the rate of white residents. That inequality extends to the courtroom. In the high-volume courts in the District, upwards of 80% of litigants lack legal representation, including 88% of tenants in the Landlord and Tenant Branch and 88% of petitioners in the Domestic Violence Division
Legal Aid helps close the access to justice gap by assisting District residents in a wide range of civil legal matters related to housing, domestic violence, family law, access to public benefits, immigration, criminal records, debt collection, and more. Most of their clients are Black and brown, with a large percentage living in Wards 7 and 8, where racial and economic inequality is most pronounced. Legal Aid helps some 3,000 clients annually, providing full representation in about one-third of those cases, while working to reform the systems that cause so many of our neighbors to end up in court in the first place. Still, every day, because of a lack of resources, Legal Aid must make difficult decisions every day about who they can help and who they cannot.
That's why we, as a firm, are coming together to support DC Legal Aid and the Making Justice Real Campaign. This year:
- Every $428 we raise staffs a Legal Aid attorney for a day
- Every $2,140 we raise staffs a Legal Aid attorney for a week
Please help us meet our team goal for this year's Making Justice Real Campaign. We can make sure that our neighbors in DC get the legal help they need, when they need it.
$65,595.04
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$70,000.00
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An Immigrant's Story of Courage and Resilience
Making Justice Real: Faces of Justice
Making Justice Real: Faces of Justice
Making Justice Real: Faces of Justice
Making Justice Real: Faces of Justice
Our Supporters
- Lauren Walas August 2023
- Anonymous August 2023
- Lindsey Nelson August 2023
- Michael Gurdak August 2023 $51.45
- Anonymous August 2023 $25.72
- Elizabeth Fassih August 2023 $30.87
- Megan Ball August 2023
- Nathaniel Ward August 2023 $1,320.21
- Lori Hellkamp August 2023
- Anonymous August 2023
- Dean Griffith August 2023 $102.90
- Shirlethia Franklin August 2023 $517.59
- Timothy Finn August 2023 $2,000.00
- kevin holewinski August 2023 $503.00
- Kevin Comeau August 2023 $517.59
- Daniella Einik August 2023
- Debra Belott August 2023 $503.00
- Laura Pruitt August 2023
- craig waldman Great work August 2023 $2,500.00
- Miguel Eaton August 2023 $440.41
- Joan McKown July 2023 $10,290.00
- Toby Singer August 2023 $10,000.00
- Jones Day August 2023 $7,000.00
- John Majoras July 2023 $5,000.00
- Jacqueline Holmes August 2023 $3,087.00
- Mary Ellen Powers In memory of Barbara McDowell August 2023 $2,572.50
- craig waldman Great work August 2023 $2,500.00
- Laura Laemmle-Weidenfeld July 2023 $2,202.06
- Timothy Finn August 2023 $2,000.00
- William Laxton August 2023 $1,800.75
- Nathaniel Ward August 2023 $1,320.21
- Shirlethia Franklin August 2023 $517.59
- Kevin Comeau August 2023 $517.59
- kevin holewinski August 2023 $503.00
- Debra Belott August 2023 $503.00
- Amie Breslow July 2023 $503.00
- Miguel Eaton August 2023 $440.41
- Shelbie Rose July 2023 $362.21
- Daria Bejan July 2023 $352.00
- Olamide Orebamjo July 2023 $205.80