|  Two panels of legal experts will examine the issue in "Personal 
			Liberty: A Discussion of Habeas Corpus from Joseph Smith to 
			Guantanamo." The session runs from 2:30 to 4:30 in Room 212 of the 
			Illinois Capitol, a hearing room that once housed the Illinois 
			Supreme Court. The event is free and open to the public, but advance 
			reservations are required. Visit
			
			http://tinyurl.com/HabeasCorpusTix. Sponsored by the Abraham 
			Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum and the Illinois Supreme 
			Court Historic Preservation Commission, the discussion will focus on 
			two different incidents in two different periods:  
				
				Attempts in the 
				1840s to have Joseph Smith, leader of what was then the new and 
				controversial Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 
				extradited from Illinois to Missouri on charges ranging from 
				treason to conspiring to murder the Missouri governor. 
				The continuing incarceration at 
				Guantanamo Bay of people suspected of connections to the al-Qaida 
				terrorist network. 
			
			 The issue of habeas corpus -- that is, having a judge determine 
			whether someone is being held legally -- was a major point of 
			contention in both cases. "From our inception as a constitutional republic, the framers 
			intended the courts and the great writ of habeas corpus to be the 
			people's ultimate shield against the executive's unrestrained use of 
			power to curtail liberty," said Judge Neil Cohen, co-chairman of the 
			event. Habeas corpus in the era of Joseph Smith will be examined by 
			Richard Turley, assistant historian for the LDS church; Jeffrey 
			Walker, editor of the Joseph Smith Papers; Leslie C. Griffin, 
			professor of law at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas; Lachlan 
			Mackay, board member of the Joseph Smith Sr. Family Association; Reg 
			Ankrom, an expert on Stephen Douglas; William Ray Price, former 
			justice of the Missouri Supreme Court; and Baker & McKenzie attorney 
			Thomas Campbell. Guantanamo and modern habeas corpus will be the subject of a 
			second panel, with Turley; Walker; Jeffrey Colman, partner at Jenner 
			& Block; Thomas Sullivan, partner at Jenner & Block; U.S. District 
			Judge Sue Myerscough of the Central District of Illinois; David 
			Owens from the University of Chicago Law School's Exoneration 
			Project; and Andrea D. Lyon, law professor at DePaul University.  
			
			 
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            "In the 19th century, a significant portion of the body politic 
			viewed some Mormon beliefs as morally evil as slavery. Mormonism in 
			the eyes of many was not a subject for bargaining," said the other 
			co-chairman, J. Steven Beckett, director of trial advocacy at the 
			University of Illinois College of Law. "It is precisely those who 
			hold unpopular beliefs -- whether religious or political -- that 
			require the utmost protection of the Constitution and the courts." 
			Both panels will be moderated by Gery Chico, a Chicago attorney who 
			served as Mayor Richard M. Daley's chief of staff and is now 
			chairman of the Illinois State Board of Education.  The April 4 round-table discussion is the first in a yearlong 
			series of events related to Joseph Smith's legal challenges. The 
			events are produced and sponsored by the Lincoln Presidential 
			Library and the Supreme Court Historic Preservation Commission.  On Sept. 24, a mock trial in Springfield will use modern 
			attorneys and judges to re-create the extradition proceedings 
			against Smith. A similar trial is scheduled for Oct. 14 in Chicago.
			 In addition, a historical re-enactment of life in Nauvoo, the 
			Illinois town founded by Smith and his followers, is scheduled for 
			Sept. 23. The mock trial of Joseph Smith follows similar events looking at 
			Mary Surratt's role in Abraham Lincoln's assassination and Mary 
			Lincoln's commitment to a sanitarium. Both of the earlier trials 
			were used to develop lessons for Illinois schoolchildren. 
			 "These trials are popular with our Illinois students," said 
			Chico, the panel moderator. "In their classes they can imagine 
			themselves before the bar as they learn from distinguished lawyers 
			and historians." Teachers attending the round-table discussion can receive 
			continuing professional development credit. Organizers have also 
			applied for minimum continuing legal education status. For more information, visit
			
			www.josephsmithcaptured.com. 
            [Text from
Abraham 
			Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum 
			file received from the
			Illinois Historic 
			Preservation Agency] |