The Southern Legal Resource Center, Inc. (SLRC) is a
South Carolina non-profit public law
Public law is the part of law that governs relations between legal persons and a government, between different institutions within a state, between different branches of governments, as well as relationships between persons that are of direct ...
corporation
which offers legal support to defend what they see as
First Amendment violations, violation of
civil rights, or “
discrimination
Discrimination is the act of making unjustified distinctions between people based on the groups, classes, or other categories to which they belong or are perceived to belong. People may be discriminated on the basis of race, gender, age, relig ...
against advocates of southern heritage”.
History
The SLRC was founded in 1995 by a group of four attorneys: Carl A. Barrington (deceased), Kirk David Lyons, Larry Norman, and Lourie A. Salley III. Lyons was appointed Chief Trial Counsel, a position he still holds, and Salley became the firm's first board chairman. The organization is a registered South Carolina corporation with its executive offices in
Black Mountain
Black Mountain may refer to:
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* Black Mountain (Australian Capital Territory), a mountain in Canberra
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* Black Mountain, Queensland, a loca ...
,
North Carolina.
In 1996, the SLRC successfully defended the "Blacksburg (SC) 7" and in 1999 sued a Greenville, South Carolina, private academy on behalf of Dr. Winston McCuen, a teacher at the school who had been fired for refusing to remove a Confederate flag that was part of a classroom historical display, and for refusing to salute the US in protest.
In 2004 the SLRC hired advertising executive and Southern activist Roger McCredie as its full-time executive director. Under McCredie the organization doubled the size of its board of directors, increased its advertising program and undertook an ambitious five-year growth and development plan.
SLRC advocacy
The SLRC, was the first law firm to promote a legal theory developed by Lyons that combined First Amendment protection with an interpretation of the "National Origin" provision of the
Civil Rights Act of 1964
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 () is a landmark civil rights and United States labor law, labor law in the United States that outlaws discrimination based on Race (human categorization), race, Person of color, color, religion, sex, and nationa ...
that would afford federal legal protection for what Lyons termed "
Confederate Southern Americans." Using this interpretation of Civil Rights law, the SLRC undertook cases on behalf of
Federal Aviation Administration workers in Florida, utility company employees in South Carolina, workers at a DuPont plant in Virginia (the "DuPont Seven"), and Cherokee students in Alabama. Federal judges have shown almost universal hostility to legal protection for "Confederate Southern Americans," but Lyons and the SLRC still advocate for clients claiming an increase in the number of job-related persecution of "Confederate Southern Americans" and a paucity of legal protection in the workplace save for cases that come under the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Lyons has noted that "
Republican judges are adamantly opposed to any extension of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and
Democratic
Democrat, Democrats, or Democratic may refer to:
Politics
*A proponent of democracy, or democratic government; a form of government involving rule by the people.
*A member of a Democratic Party:
**Democratic Party (United States) (D)
**Democratic ...
Judges are hostile to almost all things Confederate."
The SLRC has supported the rights of students to use and display Confederate symbols. Its most significant victory was Castorina v. Madison County Schools, in which the
United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in 2001 overturned a federal district court's ruling in favor of a Kentucky school board's ban on student displays of Confederate symbols, and remanded the case for further proceedings. In 2006 the Castorina decision led to an out-of-court award of damages for Jacqueline Duty, an SLRC client who had sued her own school board after she was barred from attending her high school prom in a
Confederate flag-patterned evening gown.
Criticism
The SLRC has drawn fire from the
Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), which has frequently attacked the SLRC by citing Lyons' pre-SLRC defense of some controversial right-wing figures such as
Aryan Nations
Aryan Nations is a North American antisemitic, neo-Nazi, white supremacist organization that was originally based in Kootenai County, Idaho, about miles (4.4 km) north of the city of Hayden Lake. Richard Girnt Butler founded the group i ...
members,
White Aryan Resistance founder
Tom Metzger and Lyons' 1990 marriage to the sister of jailed
Order
Order, ORDER or Orders may refer to:
* Categorization, the process in which ideas and objects are recognized, differentiated, and understood
* Heterarchy, a system of organization wherein the elements have the potential to be ranked a number of d ...
defendant David Tate. The SPLC also criticized Lyons tie to
Deborah Davila's
FBI espionage case.
In addition the SPLC has called Southern Legal's fundraising practices "deceitful" citing, for example, "the SLRC Web site detailed two disputes under a headline that read 'Cases Pending,' implying that the SLRC represented the parties involved. In both cases, the plaintiff's families say Lyons actually did very little for them."
["Cashing in on the Confederacy". Southern Poverty Law Center. Spring 2003. . Retrieved 2007-08-17]
In 1997 Kirk Lyons and SLRC director Neill Payne befriended
Asheville NAACP
The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) is a civil rights organization in the United States, formed in 1909 as an interracial endeavor to advance justice for African Americans by a group including W. E.&nb ...
president
H. K. Edgerton
Harold Kenneth Edgerton (born February 18, 1948) is an American neoconfederate activist, known for his advocacy of Southern heritage and the Confederate flag. An African-American member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, Edgerton formerly serve ...
. In response, the NAACP deprived Edgerton of his presidency. Edgerton became a "born-again Confederate" and for a time served as an SLRC director and chairman of the SLRC's board of advisors.
"Confederate Southern Americans"
The SLRC has called on "Confederate Southern Americans" to identify as a separate race on the
2010 United States Census
The United States census of 2010 was the twenty-third United States national census. National Census Day, the reference day used for the census, was April 1, 2010. The census was taken via mail-in citizen self-reporting, with enumerators servin ...
form.
References
External links
Official website"In the Lyons Den: Despite his extremism, Kirk Lyons, a white supremacist lawyer whose clients have been a 'Who's Who' of the radical right, is becoming the attorney for the neo-Confederate movement" SPLC, Summer 2000
"Cashing in on the Confederacy: A North Carolina legal group calls itself the leading advocate for 'Confederate Americans.' Its dismal record suggests otherwise"by Heidi Beirich and Mark Potok,
SPLC, Spring 2003
Kentucky Division SCV webpage on Confederate Gown lawsuit{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080723140440/http://spofga.org/flag/2004/dec/prom_dress_lawsuit.phtml , date=2008-07-23 (with photographs)
Culture of the Southern United States
Politics of the Southern United States
Legal advocacy organizations in the United States
Anti-discrimination law in the United States
Foundations based in the United States
Discrimination in the United States
Heritage organizations
Neo-Confederate organizations