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The Legal Elite

The Legal Elite 2006: Legal Services / Pro Bono
Henry W. McLaughlin III
Central Virginia Legal Aid Society
Richmond

LEGAL ELITE PROFILES
LEGAL ELITE LISTS
READER REACTION

by Jessica Sabbath
Virginia Business
December 2006

Henry W. McLaughlin III's job is to represent the underdog, but that hasn't kept him from taking on the powerful.

McLaughlin, the executive director of Central Virginia Legal Aid Society Inc., sued the U.S. Department of Justice and the Department of Housing and Urban Development in 1990 on behalf of the Richmond Tenants Organization, a group representing the city's public housing residents. The federal agencies planned to evict without notice public housing residents who were suspected of illegal drug use before going through any legal process. "This happened in Ann Arbor, Mich., and people were being thrown out in their nightclothes," says McLaughlin.

McLaughlin spotted the issue because of his relationship with the tenants' organization and initiated the fight against the federal agencies, arguing that it was unconstitutional to evict people before any criminal activity had been proven. "He just never flinched," recalls Virginia first lady Anne Holton, who worked at the society for more than 10 years before becoming a juvenile court judge. "There were definitely others in different localities that were reluctant to take it on. But it was important for our clients, and we were in the right legally, and he didn't worry about the political repercussions."

McLaughlin allowed Holton, one of his junior attorneys, to lead the case, which later was joined by national housing groups. The plaintiffs eventually won a nationwide permanent injunction against the evictions. "It was a definitely a David and Goliath type case," says Holton.

McLaughlin has dedicated most of his professional career to helping Central Virginia's poorest residents navigate the legal system. Since joining legal aid nearly 30 years ago, McLaughlin has represented low-income and elderly residents in civil matters including foreclosures, evictions, domestic violence, discrimination and denial of public assistance.

The eight lawyers and support staff of Central Virginia Legal Aid work in offices in Richmond, Charlottesville and Petersburg. The society receives pro-bono and financial gifts from local lawyers and receives government funding. But money is always tight and the demand unending. In the year ending Sept. 30, the society handled 4,020 cases, helping 8,615 people.

The 66-year-old lawyer downplays any suggestion that he made a financial sacrifice by choosing a career in legal aid. "When it's something people care about most, they have the most trouble articulating it," says McLaughlin.

Others, however, are willing to tout his abilities and devotion. "He's the kind of lawyer who could have worked for any law firm in Virginia and has the credentials and ability to be highly paid," says Tom Slater Jr., a lawyer at Hunton & Williams in Richmond who sits on the society's board. "He's woefully underpaid, but he does God's work to make sure that people who can't afford legal services are represented."

McLaughlin's weakness as a reporter led him to become a lawyer. After graduating from Princeton University with a degree in English, he worked in the Farmville bureau of the Richmond Times-Dispatch. He says his struggle with Attention Deficit Disorder and a few mishaps - including speaking up at a local supervisors' meeting - caused him to look to law as a career.

He graduated from the University of Virginia School of Law in 1966 and returned to Halifax County to practice law with his dad. Five years later, he moved to Richmond because of family responsibilities, but continued to commute more than two hours to Halifax. Eventually, a job opened at the Neighborhood Legal Aid Society in Richmond in 1978, and McLaughlin applied.

McLaughlin became co-executive director of the Central Virginia Legal Aid Society in 1982 when his organization merged with another legal aid group. "I knew very quickly that I wanted to be in legal aid," McLaughlin says. "I knew it was my intention to stay."

Legal aid requires practice in many areas of law, and McLaughlin admits he's often reading and asking lawyers for advice in areas he's unfamiliar with. "It's the nature of legal aid," he says. "You're not in a position to specialize as much as would be ideal."

At least one thing's remained constant. "In legal aid you represent the underdog, and that's always appealed to me," says McLaughlin.

 

 

 


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