Marsha Levick is a lawyer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. She is a co-founder and Chief Legal Officer of the Juvenile Law Center[1] and recognized as a leading expert in juvenile justice.[2][3][4]
Career
Marsha Levick finished the Friends Select School, Pennsylvania[3] and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and Temple University Law School.[1]
She and three other Temple University Law graduates founded the Juvenile Law Center in 1975.[3][5]
She had led the Juvenile Law Center litigation before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court related Kids for cash scandal in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.[2][1]
She co-authored child advocates' amicus briefs for a number of cases before the Supreme Court: Roper v. Simmons, Graham v. Florida, J. D. B. v. North Carolina, and Miller v. Alabama and served as a co-counsel in Montgomery v. Louisiana.[1]
She is an adjunct professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and Temple University Beasley School of Law.[6]
Personal
Her father was an oncologist and her mother was a psychologist who founded the first graduate-level art therapy program in the country at Hahnemann University Hospital.[3]
Levick is married to Tom Innis, a Philadelphia public defender and they have two daughters.[3]
Notable cases
- Pennsylvania Kids for cash scandal: Levick represented juveniles in two of several class action suits.[7][8]
Awards
- 2015: The Philadelphia Award; Quotation: "Mrs Levick's career-long commitment to advancing and safeguarding the rights of Philadelphia's youth has changed the face of juvenile justice not just in Philadelphia, but across the nation"[2]
- Awards from professional associations:[1]
- Temple University’s Women's Law Caucus Professional Achievement Award (2006)
- Pennsylvania Bar Association Child Advocate of the Year Award (2008)
- Foundation for the Improvement of Justice Award (2009)
- Pennsylvania Prison Society Award for Meritorious Service (2009)[9]
- Philadelphia Bar Association's Andrew Hamilton Award (2009)[9]
- American Association for Justice Leonard Weinglass Award (2010)
- American Bar Association Livingston Hall Award (2010)
- Rutgers-Camden Black Law Student Association Champion of Justice Award (2010)
- Clifford Scott Green Bill of Rights Award, Federal Bar Association, Philadelphia Criminal Justice Section (2010) (co-recipient)
- Philadelphia Bar Association, Criminal Justice Section Thurgood Marshall Award (2011) (Co-recipient)
- Other awards:[1]
- Philadelphia Inquirer Citizen of the Year (2009) (co-recipient)
- The Legal Intelligencer, Women of Distinction (2010)
- Good Shepherd Mediation Program Shepherd of Peace Award (2010)
- Friends Select School, Distinguished Alumnae Award (2011)
- Arlen Specter Award, The Legal Intelligencer (2013)
- American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP) Catcher in the Rye Award (2017)
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 MARSHA LEVICK, ESQ.
- 1 2 3 "Marsha Levick", The Philadelphia Award
- 1 2 3 4 5 Samantha Melamed, "How Marsha Levick changed the face of juvenile justice", Philadelphia Inquirer, January 27, 2016
- ↑ "Marsha Levick: Demand a Seat at the Table"
- ↑ Robert Schwartz, "Gault ripple effect: the founding of Juvenile Law Center", in: Rights, Race, and Reform. 50 Years of Child Advocacy in the Juvenile Justice System, 2018, ISBN 1351602543 — describes the history of the Juvenile Law Center
- ↑ Marsha Levick Adjunct Professor of Law
- ↑ Lorna Graham, Presumption of Guilt. How the Kids for Cash Scandal Trampled Justice, ISBN 194818141X
- ↑ Randall G. Shelden, Emily I. Troshynski, Delinquency and Juvenile Justice in American Society, 2019, ISBN 1478639865
- 1 2 "Marsha Levick, Co-Founder of the Juvenile Law Center, to Receive Prestigious Andrew Hamilton Award from the Public Interest Section of the Philadelphia Bar Association at Annual Awards Ceremony and Reception, Dec. 2"
Further reading
- Kathi Milliken-Boyd, James Windell, Sentencing Youth to Life in Prison: Justice Denied, 2022, ISBN 1000530337
- The book describes, in part, impact of Marsha Levick to put forth the U.S. Supreme court ruling against the juvenile life without parole sentences