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Pace University Women's Justice Center Names
Family Law Expert Susan L. Pollet Executive Director
Attorney has worked in court
system,
served on multiple state-wide task-forces, published dozens of
articles
White Plains, N.Y., August 17, 2004 --
The Pace Women’s Justice Center at Pace University Law School
has appointed Susan L. Pollet, Esq., as Executive Director. Pollet is
an attorney known for her longstanding dedication to family law and
women’s issues, and for her extensive community service.
In the last decade the Pace WJC has emerged as a
national leader in first response legal services for battered women,
having pioneered 24/7 legal services so women can get help when they
need it most. Staff attorneys carry beepers so they can be reached
around the clock.
The Center also has
expanded into training in such areas as sexual assault, gender
violence, sex discrimination, stalking and teen dating violence. It
provides practical experience for Pace law students and educates high
school and middle school students as well as attorneys, judges, law
enforcement officials, advocates and medical professionals.
Gender and
cyberstalking. Pollet came to Pace after seven years as a court
attorney with the Westchester County Family Court, where she
negotiated thousands of cases and settled the vast majority of them,
as well as researching issues and drafting decisions. Before that,
during nine years in private practice in Westchester and Putnam
Counties, she concentrated on family law including child and adult
protective cases.
She recently was appointed to the statewide
Family Violence Task Force chaired by two Justices of the Appellate
Division, the State’s highest court, Anthony Cardona and Sondra
Miller, and to the Committee to Promote Gender Fairness in the Courts
of the state’s Ninth Judicial District.
Other public service has involved work on
virtually every committee of the Women’s Bar Association of New York
State and the Westchester Women’s Bar Association.
A prolific author, Pollet has published more than
25 articles in publications like the New York Law Journal and
the Family Law Review. Her recent subjects include mental
health courts, the continued exploitation of child labor, in vitro
fertilization and cyberstalking.
Pollet is a graduate of Cornell, where she
majored in consumer economics and public policy; She earned her law
degree from Emory University School of Law in Atlanta.
For six years she taught law to undergraduates
and paralegals as an adjunct professor at Mercy College. Her earlier
experience included appointments at the Albert Einstein College of
Medicine, the Long Island Lighting Company and Pitney Bowes Inc.
“Joy.” Pollet’s appointment was
announced by Janet Johnson, Pace Law School’s executive director of
academic programs. She said: “Susan’s abundant energy, great
enthusiasm, leadership experience, wide recognition in the legal
community, intellectual curiosity and passion for the work will be of
great service to the Center and its clients.”
Pollet said her new job is “a tremendous
honor,” adding: “The substantive work that is accomplished, and
the talented, creative and energetic staff I am working with will make
every day a joy for me. I look forward to continuing the Center's fine
traditions through direct legal service, educational programs and
scholarship, and to charting new directions to meet the times.”
In May Pollet received two awards -- the New
York State Women’s Bar Association Marilyn R. Menge Award for
“valuable and significant contributions,” and the Westchester
County Bar Institute’s Joseph F. Gagliardi Award for distinguished
service.
She has been a director of the Westchester
Children’s Association, the League of Women Voters of New Castle,
the Chappaqua Children’s Workshop and the Pleasantville Children’s
Center, and has served on the nominating committee of Temple Beth El
of Chappaqua.
Award-winning center. Part of the Pace
University School of Law, the WJC recently was given New York Governor
George Pataki’s 2003 Justice, Freedom and Courage Award to End
Domestic Violence.
Each year, the Center represents over 1,500
battered women and their children in family court. Since 1999, law
students have contributed over 10,000 hours of free legal assistance,
which have helped garner more than $2,000,000 in child support for
victims. WJC education programs often are conducted in partnership
with the White Plains Department of Public Safety and other
Westchester police departments.
Founded in 1976, Pace Law School is a New York Law School with a
suburban campus in White Plains, N.Y., 20 miles north of New York
City. Part of Pace University, the school offers the J.D. program for
full-time and part-time day and evening students. Its postgraduate
program includes the LL.M. and S.J.D. degrees in Environmental Law and
an LL.M. in Comparative Legal Studies. Pace has one of the nation's
top-rated Environmental Law programs and its Clinical Education
program also is nationally ranked, offering clinics in domestic
violence prosecution, environmental law, securities arbitration,
criminal justice and disability rights. www.law.pace.edu
Pace is a comprehensive, independent university with campuses in
New York City, Pleasantville and White Plains, N.Y., and a Hudson Valley
Center at Stewart International Airport in New Windsor, N.Y. More than
14,000 students are enrolled in undergraduate, graduate, and
professional degree programs in the Dyson College of Arts and
Sciences, Lubin School of Business, School of Computer Science and
Information Systems, School of Education, Lienhard School of Nursing
and Pace Law School. www.pace.edu
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