Attorneys William Most and David Lanser have been selected to the 2020 Louisiana Rising Stars list. Each year, no more than 2.5 percent of the lawyers in the state are selected by the research team at Super Lawyers to receive this honor. Together, William and David comprise half of the 2020 Rising Stars Civil Rights section.
Golden Meadow police chief resigns after lawsuit by Law Office of William Most
The Law Office of William Most sued Golden Meadow police chief Reggie Pitre for excessive force, manufacturing of false evidence, and First Amendment retaliation. The lawsuit involved Chief Pitre’s violence against two Louisiana citizens, and his false story that was later contradicted by video footage.
In October 2019, our law office confirmed that Mr. Pitre had perjured himself regarding the incident. Within days, the City of Golden Meadow resolved the lawsuit with our clients. In early January, Chief Pitre resigned. Read more here.
$125,000 Settlement Obtained for Victims of Police Misconduct.
This month, the Law Office of William Most obtained a $125,000 settlement to resolve a lawsuit against an out-of-control chief of police who assaulted our clients and violated their First Amendment rights.
Attorney William Most commented: “We hope this sends a message to officers across the country: if you assault the citizens you are sworn to protect and lie about it, you will pay."
Law Office of William Most sues Rapides Parish Sheriff's office for illegal termination of deputy.
Deputy Jerry McKinney worked at the Rapides Parish Sheriff's Office for twenty years. After he had a stroke, he was transferred to working twelve-hour shifts. As an accommodation, he asked to work eight-hour shifts. The sheriff's office response? "Your job description is working a 12 hour shift with offenders and if you cannot do this, my suggestion is to retire."
When McKinney declined to retire, the Sheriff fired him - five days before Christmas.
The Law Office of William Most, along with the firm of Lasky Murphy, is representing Deputy McKinney in a lawsuit against the Sheriff’s Office for wrongful termination and violation of his rights under the Americans With Disabilities Act. Read more about it here: https://www.kalb.com/content/news/Former-RPSO-deputy-files-lawsuit-with-sheriffs-office-563223991.html
Media Describes Us as a "Prominent Civil Rights Watchdog"
In a recent story, Louisiana’s Bayou Brief described attorney William Most as follows:
Most is the owner of a small public interest law firm in New Orleans and has quickly established himself as a prominent civil rights watchdog in a state in which there is never a short supply of work. During the past four years, he has been involved in several high-profile cases, including representing Glenn Ford in two civil cases following his release from Angola.
Read the whole story - including the disclosure of Baton Rouge Police emails using the N-word - here: https://www.bayoubrief.com/2019/09/10/baton-rouge-police-officers-disciplined-after-records-request-reveals-racist-e-mails/
Newsweek Features the Work of the Law Office of William Most
In a recent story, Newsweek featured the work of the Law Office of William Most. The magazine wrote:
A public records request has revealed 10 pages of emails in which Baton Rouge, Louisiana police officers used racist language, including the n-word, to describe constituents and their colleagues.
The records, made public Tuesday by the office of New Orleans attorney William Most, who filed the records request in conjunction with Harvard Law School, revealed two instances in which officers used the unprintable epithet back in 2014 and 2015.
Read the full story at: https://www.newsweek.com/louisiana-baton-rouge-police-racist-emails-1458644
William Most and David Lanser Selected to 2020 Louisiana Rising Stars List
Attorneys William Most and David Lanser have been selected to the 2020 Louisiana Rising Stars list. Each year, no more than 2.5 percent of the lawyers in the state are selected by the research team at Super Lawyers to receive this honor. Super Lawyers, a Thomson Reuters business, is a rating service of outstanding lawyers from more than 70 practice areas who have attained a high degree of peer recognition and professional achievement.
The annual selections are made using a patented multiphase process that includes a statewide survey of lawyers, an independent research evaluation of candidates and peer reviews by practice area. The result is a credible, comprehensive and diverse listing of exceptional attorneys. For more information about Super Lawyers, visit SuperLawyers.com.
Police Officer Threatens "Citations" When Filmed by Citizen
A Golden Meadow police officer threatened to “issue citations” to one of the Law Office of William Most’s clients because he was filming the encounter. This is wrong: every person in Louisiana has a right to record their interactions with police.
Watch the video at: https://www.dailycomet.com/news/20190809/man-videos-encounter-with-local-cop-here-are-both-sides-of-story
Law Office of William Most Achieves Sweeping Changes of Facebook's Ad Platform to Prevent Discrimination
Two and a half years ago, the Law Office of William Most filed a class-action lawsuit against Facebook. Today it settled. Facebook will be making broad changes to mitigate discrimination on its ad platform. According to the New York Times:
The changes to Facebook's advertising methods —which generate most of the company's enormous profits — are unprecedented. The social network says it will no longer allow housing, employment or credit ads that target people by age, gender or zip code. Facebook will also limit other targeting options so these ads don't exclude people on the basis of race, ethnicity and other legally protected categories in the U.S., including national origin and sexual orientation.
"That seems obvious," says Times-Picayune Editorial Board.
In a Sunday editorial, the Times-Picayune Editorial Board endorsed the Law Office of William Most’s work on overdetention, writing that:
Once you’ve served the time in prison ordered by a court, you should be released. That seems obvious. . . . [But] Louisiana isn’t abiding by that standard – and it’s not even close. . . The state of Louisiana needs to abide by the law, stop wasting taxpayer money and fix this problem.
Law Office of William Most's overdetention work subject of Times-Picayune expose.
The Law Office of William Most is fighting against an epidemic of overdetention in Louisiana, as documented today by the Times-Picayune. As the reporters recognized, “Louisiana’s prison system and local jails, including the Orleans Justice Center, routinely keep people locked up for weeks, months, some even years, after they are supposed to be released, according to a 2017 state auditor’s report, defense attorneys and former inmates. “
Our office has filed five lawsuits against the Department of Corrections and the Orleans Sheriff for holding people past their legal release dates. We have two primary goals: (1) obtain compensation for our clients and (2) help to fix a broken system.
Law Office of William Most Wins Jury Verdict in Federal Lawsuit.
This week, the Law Office of William Most teamed up with the firm Lasky Murphy to successfully try a case to verdict in the Eastern District of Louisiana. The case, Vivian Patz v. Sureway Supermarket, involved violations of the Pregnancy Discrimination Act, the Americans With Disabilities Act, the Fair Housing Act, and state landlord-tenant laws.
After three days of evidence, the jury deliberated and decided in favor of our clients, Vivian and Michael Patz. Our clients were awarded a sum of money, and the judge entered judgment in their favor. The trial was a team effort of all the lawyers at both firms - Amanda Hass, David Lanser, Kerry Murphy, Katie Lasky, and William Most. All of us congratulate Vivian and Michael on their victory!
Video Catches Police Violence; Law Office of William Most Seeks Accountability
WAFB featured a story about “video surveillance that shows a south Louisiana police chief punching a man outside of a bar, then throwing a woman to the ground” - and then trying to cover it up. The Law Office of William Most is seeking accountability on behalf of the victims of this police violence.
‘Will I Get Out Today?’ →
“At least hundreds— and probably thousands—of Louisiana citizens have been held past their release date in recent years,” Most said.
Read the full expose about Louisiana’s pattern of holding people past their release date, and about the work the Law Office of William Most is doing to stop it:
Federal Judge Rejects New Orleans Sheriff and DOC's Attempt to Throw Out Overdetention Lawsuit
Attorney William Most was quoted in today's Times-Picayune: "Mr. Grant is fighting to hold the Sheriff and the DOC accountable for imprisoning hundreds or thousands of people past the end of their court-ordered sentences. Judge Brown's decision ensures that Mr. Grant will have his day in court."
Background: On June 27, 2016, while trying to obtain a driver’s license Rodney Grant was arrested in Orleans Parish on a expired, fifteen-year-old charge. Three days later, he plead guilty. Judge Buras sentenced him to a one year sentence, with credit for time served for the seven years he had spent in prison for a different issue. Because his one year sentence was immediately complete, he should have walked free.
But Mr. Grant was not released. The Orleans Sheriff has a policy of holding inmates indefinitely until they receive word from the DOC - even when they know someone should be free. The Sheriff knew Rodney Grant should be free because he received an email from his lawyer that Mr. Grant "really shouldn’t have to actually serve any time once DOC processes it.”
The Sheriff held Mr. Grant until July 12, 2016, when he handed him over to the DOC. Once the DOC took custody of him, they should have immediately released Mr. Grant. Instead, they sent him to a private prison in Tallulah, Louisiana.
When Judge Buras found out that Mr. Grant had not been released, she took action. On July 15, 2016, she called Sheriff Gusman and the private prison warden to ask why Mr. Grant had not been released. On July 18, 2016, she entirely vacated Mr. Grant's sentence. On July 25, 2016, Judge Buras called and emailed the DOC again.
But it wasn't until July 27, 2016, that the DOC finally released Mr. Grant and gave him a bus ticket back to New Orleans. All in all, Mr. Grant had been overdetained by 27 days.
The law is clear: the Fifth Circuit has held that "There is a Clearly Established Right to Timely Release from Prison." And courts have consistently held that once a prisoner's sentence is complete, he or she must be released within a reasonable time that cannot exceed two days.
The DOC and the Orleans Parish Sheriff, however, consistently hold people past their prison sentence. The problem is so bad that Attorney General Landry wrote in an op-ed that there “is a layer of incompetence so deep that the Corrections Department doesn’t know where a prisoner is on any given day of the week or when he should actually be released from prison.”
Accordingly, Mr. Grant filed a lawsuit against the Orleans Sheriff and members of the Department of Corrections. On August 15, 2018, Judge Brown denied defendants' requests to dismiss the case. The case will proceed against both the Sheriff and the DOC.
Charges Ruled Out Against Arrested Protesters, Journalists
As described in the New York Times, the East Baton Rouge District Attorney has refused to bring charges against all of the Law Office of William Most's clients: two journalists and thirteen peaceful protesters wrongfully arrested during the July 2016 Alton Sterling protests.
Read more at: https://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2018/07/13/us/ap-us-police-shooting-louisiana.html
Law Office of William Most Sues Walmart for Pregnancy Discrimination
The Law Office of William Most is proud to represent Juanita Fischer in her fight to hold Walmart accountable for pregnancy discrimination.
In August 2014, Juanita was hired to work in the deli department of a Lake Charles Walmart. She was a model employee: from August 2014 to August 2015, she was never disciplined for her job performance or attendance. Instead, she received positive reviews and a merit raise. Juanita loved her job.
A year after she was hired, Juanita learned she was pregnant. A few days after she told her managers, Juanita received her first-ever disciplinary action. She was reprimanded for failing to take out the trash, a mistake she and other employees had made in the past without discipline.
After experiencing pregnancy complications, she asked Walmart for accommodations – to be transferred from the deli to another department, or to not have to close the deli alone, or to merely have access to a stool for some tasks. Walmart denied every single request. When Juanita had to take time off for medical-related pregnancy reasons, Walmart punished her.
In January 2016, while closing the deli alone (a task she had specifically requested to be excused from) Juanita slipped and hit her pregnant stomach on the sink. She was in pain and terrified of a miscarriage, but finished her shift before going to the emergency room because she was afraid she would be fired for taking more time away from work.
Two days later – even though she hadn’t taken any shifts off – Walmart fired her. A week after Walmart fired her, they approved her request for family/medical leave. She went back to her manager, hoping this meant she could have her job back. Her manager told her to reapply “after you have your baby.”
Because of all this, Juanita has filed a lawsuit to hold Walmart accountable for violations of federal and state law. More detail can be found here.
Law Office Featured on WAFB for Fighting Police Misconduct
The Law Office of William Most is very proud to have represented Officer Samantha Mincey. Her refusal to stay silent in the face of injustice took down a crooked police department in Louisiana: officer fired, assistant chief fired, and chief resigned.
Read more at: http://www.wafb.com/clip/14357437/the-investigators-forced-out
'A Veteran in Crisis'
The Law Office of William Most was proud to work and march with the family of deceased veteran Preston Thornton. Read Ian Frisch's compelling story of his life and death here: https://www.playboy.com/read/a-veteran-in-crisis.
Law Office of William Most Files Amicus Brief in Voting Rights Case
On February 21, 2018, William Most joined with the Law Office of Eric Alan Isaacson and fourteen historians from around the country and world to file an amicus brief in the Louisiana voting rights case Voice of the Ex-Offender v. State of Louisiana. The goal of the lawsuit is to restore the vote for more than 71,000 Louisiana citizens on probation and parole.
Read more about the lawsuit here, or read the historians' amicus brief itself here.