Hoffman, Everett C.

Date:
2011-03-18
Length:
84 minutes
Interviewer:
Pace, Mary
Transcription available:
no
Series:
ACLU of Kentucky (2011)
Series ID:
2011_037
Interview Number(s):
2011_37_2
Summary:
Everett Hoffman, a lawyer and former executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Kentucky, discusses his career and the organization's work. Born in New Orleans and raised in various parts of the U.S., Hoffman returned to Louisville, Kentucky, for his first lawyer position with the Legal Aid Society in 1983. He joined the ACLU during law school and became its executive director in 1992. Hoffman discusses the ACLU's work on social justice issues, including police misconduct, the death penalty, and reproductive freedom. He also talks about the organization's defense of free speech, even for groups like the KKK, and its efforts to reflect Kentucky's diversity. Hoffman left the ACLU in 1999.
Topic(s):
American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky, Ku Klux Klan (1915-), Civil rights lawyers, Reproductive rights