Marsha Levick

Marsha Levick is a lawyer from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. She is a co-founder and Chief Legal Officer of the Juvenile Law Center[1] and recognized as a leading expert in juvenile justice.[2][3]

She finished the Friends Select School, Pennsylvania[3] and graduated from the University of Pennsylvania and Temple University Law School.[1]

She and three other Temple University Law graduates founded the Juvenile Law Center in 1975.[3]

She had led the Juvenile Law Center litigation before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court related Kids for cash scandal in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania.[2][1]

She co-authored child advocates' amicus briefs for a number of cases before the Supreme Court: Roper v. Simmons, Graham v. Florida, J. D. B. v. North Carolina, and Miller v. Alabama and served as a co-councel in Montgomery v. Louisiana.[1]

She is an adjunct professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School and Temple University Beasley School of Law.[4]

Personal

Her father was an oncologist and her mother was a psychologist who founded the first graduate-level art therapy program in the country at Hahnemann University Hospital.[3]

Levick is married to Tom Innis, a Philadelphia public defender and they have two daughters.[3]

Awards

  • 2015: The Philadelphia Award; Quotation: "Mrs Levick's career-long commitment to advancing and safeguarding the rights of Philadelphia's youth has changed the face of juvenile justice not just in Philadelphia, but across the nation"[2]
  • Awards from professional associations:[1]
    • Temple University’s Women's Law Caucus Professional Achievement Award (2006)
    • Pennsylvania Bar Association Child Advocate of the Year Award (2008)
    • Foundation for the Improvement of Justice Award (2009)
    • Pennsylvania Prison Society Award for Meritorious Service (2009)[5]
    • Philadelphia Bar Association's Andrew Hamilton Award (2009)[5]
    • American Association for Justice Leonard Weinglass Award (2010)
    • American Bar Association Livingston Hall Award (2010)
    • Rutgers-Camden Black Law Student Association Champion of Justice Award (2010)
    • Clifford Scott Green Bill of Rights Award, Federal Bar Association, Philadelphia Criminal Justice Section (2010) (co-recipient)
    • Philadelphia Bar Association, Criminal Justice Section Thurgood Marshall Award (2011) (Co-recipient)
  • Other awards:[1]
    • Philadelphia Inquirer Citizen of the Year (2009) (co-recipient)
    • The Legal Intelligencer, Women of Distinction (2010)
    • Good Shepherd Mediation Program Shepherd of Peace Award (2010)
    • Friends Select School, Distinguished Alumnae Award (2011)
    • Arlen Specter Award, The Legal Intelligencer (2013)
    • American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP) Catcher in the Rye Award (2017)

References

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