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Legal Defense Fund Speakers Bureau
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For specific inquiries on available dates, honorarium costs, and to book Speakers for specific events, contact the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund via e-mail at info@celdf.org.
Below is a list of Legal Defense Fund staff who are available to talk to your group.
Richard Grossman nationally known writer, lecturer and historian in search of our hidden history. After graduating from Columbia University in 1965, Richard served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the Philippines. Over the next 20 years, he worked in multiple states with anti-poverty, educational, environmental, labor, community and other civic groups, including Environmentalists For Full Employment (EFFE) in Washington, D.C. In the late 1980s, he helped create "Stop The Poisoning" Schools at the Highlander Center in Tennessee, to serve communities invaded by corporate and government toxic chemicals. In 1993, Richard co-authored the best selling pamphlet Taking Care of Business: Citizenship and the Charter of Incorporation. The enthusiastic response to this publication led Richard to co-found the Program on Corporations, Law & Democracy (POCLAD), with which he was affiliated until early 2005. The author of numerous articles, essays, pamphlets and screeds, Richard co-authored the books Energy, Jobs & the Economy (1978); Fear at Work: Job Blackmail, Labor & the Environment (1982); and Defying Corporations, Defining Democracy: A book of History and Strategy (2001). His work reveals the usurpation of majority governing authority by powerful minorities hiding behind corporations, and it has enriched the curriculum of the Daniel Pennock Democracy Schools. The story of how the courts wrapped corporations in our Constitution, creating a legal shield behind which minorities assault communities unharassed, is the story of the rise of the Corporate State in America, but it is intertwined with the story of how people have struggled for centuries to create majority rule and rights for all. Richard Grossman is the preeminent teller of that tale. Richard is the Legal Defense Fund's Director of Education, Training and Development.
Thomas Linzey is a cum laude graduate of Widener University School of Law in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and is a three time recipient of the Schools' Public Interest Law Award, a 2003 recipient of the Law School's Young Alumni Award, a 2003 finalist for the Ford Foundation’s Leadership for a Changing World Award, and a 2004 recipient of the Pennsylvania Farmers Union’s Golden Triangle Legislative Award. He has served as an independent candidate for Attorney General, receiving over 65,000 votes statewide, and is the co-founder of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, a nonprofit law firm that provides free and affordable legal services to community groups and over three hundred local governments. Tom is admitted to practice in federal and state courts, including the Third Circuit, Fourth Circuit, Eighth Circuit, and Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals; and the U.S. Supreme Court. He serves as coordinator of the Franklin County Coalition - a county-based association of twenty-one community groups and over thirty locally owned businesses; and for a Caucus of local governmental officials in Pennsylvania. He currently serves on the Board of Directors of several nonprofit organizations in Virginia and Pennsylvania, is a frequent lecturer to groups and municipal governments across the United States, and recently delivered speeches to the Bioneers Conference in California and the National Network of Grantmakers conference in Miami. He is a co-founder, with Richard Grossman, of the Daniel Pennock Democracy School - now taught at fifteen locations across the United States - which assists groups and communities to reframe seemingly “single” environmental issues into ones focused on eliminating the ability of corporate “rights” to trump the rights of communities. Thomas is the Executive Director for the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF).

Stacey Schmader is a graduate of Shippensburg University with a degree in Biology. After college, she was employed as a bank manager at Citizens National Bank, where her duties included loan processing, investing, scheduling, and mortgage closings. She is co-Founder of the Legal Defense Fund, with Thomas Linzey, and currently serves as the Secretary and Treasurer for the Legal Defense Fund.
In 1999, Stacey was hired by the Legal Defense Fund as the Fund's Program Development Director, where her duties include editing the Fund's quarterly newsletter, payroll, fundraising, and consulting with grassroots community organizations on scientific issues. In 2003, Stacey was selected to serve as a Director on the Board of the Cumberland Valley Chapter of the Pennsylvania Farmers Union. She currently serves as the President of that Board.
Stacey has also served as a Director on the Board of the American Independent Business Alliance (AMIBA) and as President of the South Central Farmers Market Association. AMIBA is a national organization with a mission to help communities around the country maintain their unique character by supporting community-based businesses and the South Central Farmers Market Association is a Pennsylvania organization dedicated to preserving the family farm by assisting with direct marketing opportunities.

Mari Margil is our first Associate
Director. She opened our West Coast office in Portland, Oregon, in 2007. Mari
was trained as a lecturer at our 2007 Training for Lecturers and is now
teaching Democracy Schools across the country. She most recently worked with
Corporate Ethics International conducting corporate accountability campaigns.
Ben Price is a graduate of West Chester State University, Pennsylvania. He has been an activist for Campaign Finance Reform, Electoral Reform, and Fair Trade issues, and past president of the Pennsylvania Consumer Action Network. He served as contributing editor for the monthly newsletter “Groundswell” (1995 – 1999) and in 1997 began writing about the distorting effects of corporations on democracy. After attending the Legal Defense Fund’s Democracy School in 2003, Ben attended “Guiding the Conductors” classes to prepare to teach the history, law and lore of corporations. He is now a certified lecturer for the Democracy Schools. Ben accepted the position of Project Director in the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund's Corporations and Democracy Program in 2005. As Project Director, Ben organizes and educates community groups to challenge corporate usurpations of people's rights and governing authority. He also recruits local governments to join the Quality of Life and Local Control Caucus of Township Supervisors – an association of rural Township governments in Pennsylvania working to protect local governance and community authority over quality of life issues.
Eme Lybarger is a community organizer and Democracy School lecturer for CELDF, initiating the Democracy School model for organizing in Ohio in the fall of 2005. She has a master’s degree in Intercultural Communications from the Modern Language and Linguistics department of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. She also completed a year of doctoral studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz. At both universities, Eme researched language, power, and violence, and spent 8 months in Latin America furthering her studies. Prior to joining CELDF, Eme worked for or was affiliated with Nationwide Insurance Company for fourteen years. During that time she fulfilled numerous roles, including project management, training and development, and facilitation. She has volunteered as a court mediator in Virginia and in a variety of other programs and organizations in Ohio.
Shireen
Parsons is a graduate of the
University of
Maryland ,
College of
Education . After raising her two
children while working as a preschool teacher and technical writer, she moved to
Southwest Virginia ’s New
River Valley in
1990, where she served as an information officer at Virginia Tech’s
Water
Resources Research
Center and, later, as a news
bureau writer at Radford
University . As an activist, she was
chair of the Sierra Club’s New River Valley Chapter, a founding board
member of Appalachian Voices, and has served on the steering committee for
Virginia Forest Watch since its founding. She was assistant editor and a
contributing writer for the regional newspaper Appalachian Voice, and researched,
wrote, and produced Virginia Mountain
Treasures – The Unprotected Wildlands of the Jefferson National Forest for
the Wilderness Society. As a grant-funded grassroots organizer, she worked with
communities threatened by woodchip mills, and served as an appointed member of
the Governor’s Commission for the Study of the Effects of Chip Mills in
Virginia . Her commentaries on
environmental and social justice issues have been published in local, regional,
and national media.
Shireen
is CELDF's community organizer in Virginia.
Gail Darrell began her education career in 1971, while attending
teacher’s college in Plymouth, NH, as a volunteer for the
Pemigewassett Community Head Start Program, tutoring children with
autism. Gail home schooled all of her four children through the
eighth grade level while working alongside her husband of 33 years as a
homesteader, gardener, poet and artist - embellishing many of the hand
made and restored musical instruments which he produces at his home
shop. From 1996 - 1998, she was assistant to chef Sonia Bowden of the
Caribbean Oasis, a local eatery and employed at the Granite State
Health Food Store in Concord. In 1999, she was assistant teacher at the
Montessori Children’s Center in Concord, N.H. When her residence was
threatened by the practice of spreading sludge and septage on nearby
fields and woodlands, she became involved in local affairs. In 2002,
Gail tesified at Senate hearings at the state level to discourage the
incineration of Construction and Demolition debris (C&D). As a
result of the networking of individuals who had brought information
forward, N.H. Governor John Lynch signed a ban on the incineration of
C&D in 2007. In 2005, Barnstead voters wanted an ordinance which
protected the town from water withdrawal. Gail spearheaded the motion
which led to Barnstead’s adoption of a rights - based ordinance against
corporate water withdrawals. The Alliance for Democracy hired Gail to
work on their Water For Life Campaign in the summer of 2006. She now
works as a community organizer for the Alliance and the Community
Environmental Legal Defense Fund and resides on a small farm in
Barnstead, N.H.
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