|  Joseph Smith, founder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day 
			Saints, commonly known as Mormons, will be the focal point of three 
			days of programs sponsored by the Illinois Supreme Court Historic 
			Preservation Commission and the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library 
			and Museum, a division of the Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. 
			The two Illinois institutions are producing a rehearing and a panel 
			discussion to educate the public on the use of habeas corpus, a writ 
			carried over from English law that determines whether an individual 
			is being detained legally. Smith used the writ in the 1800s to stop efforts by Missouri 
			officials to extradite him from Illinois for events arising from the 
			Missouri War of 1838. On Sept. 24, the presidential museum will be the site for a 
			re-enactment of the three Smith habeas corpus hearings. The script 
			draws on Mormons' experiences in the early 19th century. Logan 
			Auditorium at the University of Chicago will be the site of an 
			encore presentation Oct. 14. 
			 At each venue, the re-enactment will be followed by a panel 
			discussion on the use of habeas corpus over the last two centuries, 
			from Smith to Abraham Lincoln to Guantanamo Bay. President Lincoln 
			suspended the right of habeas corpus during the Civil War. Members 
			of the panel will be U.S. District Court Judge Sue Myerscough of the 
			Central District of Illinois; Michael Scodro, solicitor general for 
			the state of Illinois; Jeffrey Colman, partner at Jenner & Block in 
			Chicago, who has worked on behalf of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay; 
			and Jeffrey N. Walker of the Joseph Smith Papers, Salt Lake City, 
			Utah.  
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			 In addition to the rehearings and panel discussions, on Sept. 23, 
			experts will lead tours of the Nauvoo historic sites in central 
			Illinois near Quincy, one of the key settlements in the early years 
			of the Mormon faith. That evening, Dallin Oaks will speak at the LDS 
			Center in Nauvoo. Oaks is former dean of the University of Chicago 
			Law School, a former Utah Supreme Court justice and current member 
			of the Quorum of the Twelve of the Church of Jesus Christ of 
			Latter-day Saints. The Illinois Supreme Court Historic Preservation Commission and 
			the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum have assembled a 
			statewide group of lawyers and judges, led by Illinois Supreme Court 
			Justices Rita Garman and Anne Burke, to bring greater awareness of 
			historic legal events in Illinois and the lessons that can be 
			learned from them. Last year this group explored involuntary 
			commitment through a re-enactment of the case of Mary Lincoln, wife 
			of Abraham Lincoln, who was involuntarily committed by her son in 
			1875. Previously, the group explored the trial of Mary Surratt, who 
			was convicted of conspiring in the Lincoln assassination and who 
			became the first woman executed by the federal government. Tickets will be available after July 15. For details on the 
			events, visit 
			www.josephsmithcaptured.com. For more information, contact John Lupton, executive director of 
			the Illinois Supreme Court Historic Preservation Commission, at 
			217-670-0890, ext. 1, or
			
			John.lupton@illinoiscourthistory.org.  
            [Text from file received from the 
			Illinois Historic Preservation Agency]
 
            
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