Roy Lucas, Lead Silveira Attorney, Dies at 61.


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KMKeller
November 7, 2003, 03:12 PM
Roy Lucas was a brilliant constitutional attorney who was leading the charge to SCOTUS with Silveira V Lockyer.

Note: Below link requires login.


http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/07/national/07LUCA.html (http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/07/national/07LUCA.html)


Roy Lucas, 61, Legal Theorist Who Helped Shape Roe Suit, Dies
By IAN URBINA

Published: November 7, 2003


Roy Lucas, a lawyer who helped fashion the "right to privacy" legal argument used in Roe v. Wade, the landmark Supreme Court ruling that legalized abortion in the United States, died on Monday in Prague. He was 61 and lived in Washington.

The cause was a heart attack, said his sister, Mary E. Lucas. She said her brother was in the Czech Republic doing research.

From 1966 to 1973, Mr. Lucas helped shape the legal battle for abortion rights. He was the first person to articulate fully how the Supreme Court's 1965 Griswold decision, which created constitutional privacy protection for married couples' use of birth control, could be legally expanded into a constitutional protection for a woman's right to an abortion, historians say.

Mr. Lucas was a third-year law student at New York University when he made that pivotal argument in a research paper for a class on litigation. The paper was published in the June 1968 issue of the North Carolina Law Review and began circulating widely. Soon after, Mr. Lucas established the James Madison Constitutional Law Institute, a public interest legal organization based in Manhattan, to advance abortion rights.

In September 1969, he filed the first abortion rights lawsuit in New York. For the next four years, he was directly involved in almost all abortion rights suits filed across the country.

Roe v. Wade was filed in 1970, and Mr. Lucas had hoped to argue the case before the Supreme Court. But the informal committee of lawyers who were handling the case decided instead to give the assignment to another lawyer on the team, Sarah Weddington of Texas.

Mr. Lucas continued to argue abortion rights cases after Roe, but remained deeply disappointed at having been passed over as lead counsel before the Supreme Court, said David Garrow, a legal historian at Emory University and the author of "Liberty and Sexuality: The Right to Privacy and the Making of Roe v. Wade" (University of California Press, 1998).

In 1986, Mr. Lucas pulled back from his legal work, which had helped precipitate two divorces, Ms. Lucas, his sister, said. Instead of engaging in nonstop advocacy, she said, he bought a Volkswagen van and began traveling the country to pursue his love of oil painting. Accompanied only by a pet collie, Michelangelo, Mr. Lucas traveled from Maine to Hawaii, painting mostly landscapes and occasionally writing freelance magazine articles on painting techniques. He rarely stayed in one location long. For extra money, he taught law classes at local universities. He also did occasional pro bono legal work.

In 1997, Mr. Lucas was given a diagnosis of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. While undergoing chemotherapy, radiation and a bone marrow transplant, he lived in San Antonio. By 1998 the cancer was in full remission, and he moved to Washington.

Spurgeon LeRoy Lucas Jr. was born on Nov. 27, 1941, in Columbia, S.C. His father worked for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company and his mother was a housewife. He majored in chemical engineering while earning his bachelor's degree at the University of South Carolina.

His sister, Ms. Lucas, of San Antonio, survives him.

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foghornl
November 7, 2003, 03:24 PM
A very sad day for us.

Anyone capable of replacing Mr. Lucas?

Gray Peterson
November 7, 2003, 03:26 PM
Roy Lucas was the only one who went through the archives and actually researched the stuff with Miller and such. I can only imagine what kind of help he could have given us if it was considered for cert. Now we may never know.

I just hope that the Supreme Court will take this case. Let Silveira be his twilight case...

KMKeller
November 7, 2003, 03:26 PM
Anyone capable of replacing Mr. Lucas?
Don't know yet. This has caught pretty much everyone by surprise. I'm sure there will be a regrouping shortly to determine what steps need to be taken.

Frohickey
November 7, 2003, 03:33 PM
Okay... why is my conspiracy theory spidey sense going off?

:uhoh:

Kharn
November 7, 2003, 03:40 PM
:( Thank you, sir, for your efforts and work.

If the decision (should there be one) is a win for the other side, the conspiracy guys will be coming out of the woodwork for the next 20 years. Hopefully (if the case is heard), the Supremes schedule it such that a replacement can be brought up to speed.

Kharn

2dogs
November 7, 2003, 04:19 PM
This is a great loss.

:(

Um, some stuff the commie Times left out:


http://keepandbeararms.com/Lucas/roy.asp

pytron
November 7, 2003, 04:39 PM
I cannot express my shock and dismay from learning of his death. He will be sorely missed.

WAGCEVP
November 7, 2003, 05:01 PM
God Speed , , Mr. Lucas and THANK YOU!

Telperion
November 7, 2003, 05:11 PM
This is sad news for all of us. How much of Lucas' research is complete and did he start writing a brief (in expectation that the Court would hear the case)? I hope he left enough behind for others to continue his work.

:(

Jim March
November 7, 2003, 09:39 PM
Roy Lucas wasn't the lead attorney in Silveira. Gary Gorski is. John Brophy is second seat; Roy was brought in to provide supplemental research.

In that role, he was invaluable but...he basically *finished* that process.

So the case isn't hurt that badly.

We've lost his final strategy notes going into court if cert is heard. However, if cert is granted, it won't be Gary and John kissing butt to anybody, it'll be people lining up to help because like it or not, this is gonna be THE ONE.

:)

For the record, I believe 100% that Roy was *correct* about the "right to privacy" that the court found in Roe vs. Wade. The BoR was never meant to be a complete listing of our civil rights; in the listing of civil rights the court in Dred Scott (1856) listed as NOT applying to blacks was a "right to travel" that is found nowhere in the BoR or Constitution. Numerous sources refer to Americans having "the traditional rights of free Englishmen" PLUS items listed in the BoR and Const.

In short: we've lost a warrior for freedom, but the fight can go on.

I hope Silveira does become his final tribute.

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