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William T Habern awarded HCCLA lifetime achievement award

BILL HABERN RECOGNIZED WITH LIFE TIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD
BY
HARRIS COUNTY CRIMINAL LAWYERS ASSOCIATION


Attorney Bill Habern was honored by the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association at their annual banquet with their 2011 Life Time Achievement Award.

Of his life’s work, Habern says, “If 40 years ago when I got my law license, someone had told me that I’d spend my career representing prison inmates and their families for a living, I’d have told them there were crazy. What our law firm does is a very important area of law that is rapidly expanding while at the same time getting more and more complicated. Despite that expansion, Texas is without a meaningful, full time organization that is active in its pursuit of prisoner’s civil rights. This is not the case in many other states. I am also concerned that I do not know of a single law school in Texas that offers a course directed at representing clients facing the collateral consequences of a felony conviction. This area of law deals with a lot more that just parole or a prisoner’s civil rights. It has to do with a whole new world of issues that must be faced by legislatures, the courts, the family, and the offender. Law schools today seldom prepare young lawyers to deal with the collateral circumstances of a felony conviction. It is mostly lessons of law that is learned on the job and in the streets.”

Law firm honored for civil rights work, 06/21/2012

The Huntsville Item, Huntsville, TX
June 21, 2012
Huntsville law firm honored for civil rights work
By Lisa Trow
Managing Editor
HUNTSVILLE

Two Houston lawyers associations have honored a Huntsville law firm for its civil rights work with an award named after a former Tuskeegee Airman who sued to desegregate a Houston cafeteria in 1950s after being forcibly removed from its lunch counter.

The Houston Lawyers Association and the Houston Lawyers Foundation in June honored Habern, O’Neil and Pawgan L.L.P. of Huntsville with the Matthew W. Plummer Sr. Justice Award in honor of the black Houstonian who challenged Jim Crow laws in Harris County and – eventually- won.
“The recipient of this award demonstrates commitment to securing equality for all people,” said Antoy Bell, president of the Houston Lawyers Association, in announcing its selection of the Huntsville-based law firm.

Plummer, the son of a former slave, was the first black investigator employed in the Harris County District Attorney’s Office. He attempted one day to have lunch in the cafeteria of the basement of the Harris County Courthouse with his friends. But despite the absence of a “whites only” sign, was denied service, according to Houston Lawyer, a journal of the Houston Bar Association. Nearly 20 years later, Gov. Mark White appointed Plummer to preside as judge over the 133rd District Court. Plummer and another surviving Tuskeegee Airman received the Congressional Gold Medal in recognition of their service to their country.

Attorneys with Habern, O’Neil, and Pawgan L.L.P. of Huntsville picked up their award earlier this month at the Houston Lawyers Association’s Annual Scholarship and Awards gala in Houston. This firm is the first full-time, full service corrections law firm – specializing in prison and parole issues as well as general criminal law- in the state of Texas, said Antoy Bell, president of the Houston Lawyers Association, the African America Bar Association of Houston.

“The recipient of this award demonstrates commitment to securing equality for all people,” Bell said. Bill Habern, one of the firm’s founding partners, served as one of the attorneys who successfully defended Texas prison inmate Eroy Brown- recently granted parole- accused of capital murder in the 1981 of slayings of a prison warden and farm manager at the Ellis Unit near Riverside. He also litigated a case known nationally as the “Ultimate Hunt” in which two prison inmates were injured when forced to serve as “dog bait” for Texas prison system chase dogs. That case netted $14,000 in damages to the two inmates. Habern’s work with the prison and parole system also has been honored by the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association, which last year gave him it’s Lifetime Achievement Award.

“If 40 years ago when I got my law license, someone had told me that I’d spend my career representing prison inmates and their families for a living, I’d have told them they were crazy,” Habern told the Harris County Criminal Lawyers Association. “What our law firm does is a very important area of law that is rapidly expanding while at the same time getting more and more complicated. Despite that expansion, Texas is without a meaningful, full-time organization that is active in its pursuit of prisoner’s civil rights. This is not the case in many other states.”

Habern said he is also concerned that there are no – if any – law schools in Texas that offer a course work directed at representing clients facing the consequences of a felony conviction.

“This area of law deals with a lot more that just parole or a prisoner’s civil rights. It has to do with a whole new world of issues that must be faced by legislatures, the courts, the family, and the offender,” he said. “Law schools today seldom prepare young lawyers to deal with the collateral circumstances of a felony conviction. It is mostly lessons of law that is learned on the job and in the streets.”

Law firm partners David P. O’Neil and Scott Pawgan are also heavily involved in civil rights litigation involving prison and parole issues. O’Neil, managing partner, serves as chairman of the Corrections Law Committee of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association and has testified before the Texas Legislature on criminal justice issues. Pawgan litigates cases involving rights to health care under threat by prisons, the parole board and other state agencies. He recently helped an inmate get probation so he could receive life-saving medical care, according to the Houston Lawyers Association. Habern told The Item was proud his firm earned an award named in honor of the late Judge Matthew W. Plummer Sr., who fought racial segregation in Harris County. “If I couldn’t be the one doing the things he (Plummer) was doing, I damn sure would have wanted to be his attorney,” Habern said.

Bill Habern was inducted into the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association’s Hall Of Fame

Bill Habern was inducted into the Criminal Defense Lawyers Association’s Hall Of Fame on Friday June 17th, 2016.

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Bill Habern, the attorney who established the first full-time, full-service corrections law firm in Texas, is heading to the hall of fame.

Habern, who opened his own law office in Huntsville in 1975, will be inducted into the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association’s Hall of Fame on Friday in San Antonio. The induction ceremony is part of the 29th Annual Rusty Duncan Advanced Criminal Law Course, named for the late Judge M. P. “Rusty” Duncan of the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. The course runs through Saturday at the Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center in San Antonio.

Habern is a criminal lawyer specializing in parole, prison and post-conviction issues. He has written and lectured extensively on those topics. Habern was among the first group of lawyers employed as a public defender in a fledgling program in which attorneys represent indigent inmates in Texas prisons.

Habern received his undergraduate degree from Midwestern State University and his law degree from the Texas Tech School of Law. He is currently “of counsel” to the firm of Habern, O’Neil & Pawgan, LLP.

Habern has published more than 20 articles and seminar papers involving topics of parole, prison and sentencing. He has been a regular lecturer at over 100 seminars, and has served as an expert witness in both state and federal issues dealing with prison civil rights, parole issues and attorney ethics matters.

The Rusty Duncan Advanced Criminal Law Course is the premier seminar for the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association and is generally acknowledged as the top criminal law course in the nation, with more than 800 criminal defense practitioners from around the state in attendance.

The TCDLA is the largest statewide association of criminal defense lawyers in the country, as well as being the oldest — now celebrating 45 years defending individual freedoms.

Habern’s full-service corrections law firm specialized in sentencing, prison, parole and post-conviction issues. He became a licensed attorney after graduation from the Texas Tech Law School in 1972. He was among the first group of lawyers employed as public defenders in a then new public defender program representing indigent inmates at the Texas prison. He remained in that program for approximately two years.

In 1975, Habern opened a law office in Huntsville, where he had a general law practice with emphasis on prison and criminal law. He continued to practice in Huntsville until 1979 when he was appointed executive director of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Project, which is the continuing educational arm of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association (TCDLA).

In his early years, Habern served as lead counsel in civil rights actions against the Texas prison, the Texas Parole Board, and against educational institutions. His litigation included the nationally publicized “Ultimate Hunt” case, which resulted in a damage award for two prison inmates who were seriously injured when forced to act as “dog bait” for the training of Texas prison chase hounds used to track inmates that escape.

Habern also filed a civil rights action against the Texas Parole institutions for returning a certain class of parolees back to prison without giving them a due process hearing as required by the constitution. The filing of this civil rights action caused the parole agency to amend its procedure and hearings were re-instituted. Habern challenged the parole board’s policy of temporarily terminating parental rights of a parolee convicted of a sex offense who was no threat to his own children without first granting them a due process hearing. The parole board settled the case rather than deal with what the court might have ordered, and the client was awarded fully unfettered access to his parental rights.

In 2012, Habern received what he considers one of his most cherished honors. Each year the Houston Lawyers Association presents the Matthew Plummer Justice Award to a lawyer or law firm who has demonstrated a commitment to equal justice for all people. Plummer was a lawyer and civil rights activist during the early 1950s in Harris County. He later became well-known as Mohammad Ali’s lawyer during Ali’s famous draft resistance case tried in federal court in Houston. He was the first black district judge appointed to sit in Harris County.

The Plummer award was the result of civil rights litigation instituted by Habern and co-counsel and friend Richard Gladden, who filed in a series of cases challenging the policy of the Texas Parole Board which had caused the imposing sex offender conditions on parolees who had never in their criminal history suffered a sex conviction. This stigmatization was being done without benefit of the constitutionally required due process hearing required by the federal courts. The outcome of this litigation caused the removal of the stigma of sex offender conditions from hundreds of inmates who should have never been stigmatized by the label “sex offender” in the first place.

From 2013, Habern has continually been named as one of the 5 percent of Texas lawyers identified as a Texas Super lawyer. This list is published annually in the Texas Monthly magazine.

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Matthew W. Plummer, Sr. Justice Award from the Houston Lawyers Association given to Habern, O’Neil & Pawgan firm

HLA_Gala_33Bill Habern received an award given to the firm of Habern, O’Neil and Pawgan at the Houston Lawyers Association Scholarship and Award Gala called the “Matthew W. Plummer, Sr. Justice Award” on Saturday, June 9th 2012 from the Houston Lawyers Association. The recipient of this award demonstrates commitment for securing equality for all people.

Read more in the article by the Huntsville Item.