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Thomas Brejcha
President and Chief Counsel
Tom Brejcha brings over 35 years of
legal experience to his work as president
and chief counsel of the Thomas More Society,
and has been fighting court battles for pro-lifers
for over 21 years.
Tom
grew up in Chicago's South Shore neighborhood,
graduating from Mt. Carmel H.S. and then
from the University of Notre Dame, where
he drafted the school's first honor code
and won a President's Medallion from
Fr. Hesburgh. He was a Root-Tilden Scholar
and Executive Board Editor of the Law
Review at New York University Law School
. Serving as an Army Captain in Vietnam
from 1969-70, Tom won a Bronze Star and
Army Commendation Medal. After studying
on the G.I. Bill at the Sorbonne in Paris,
Tom joined a Chicago law firm led by Barnabas
F. Sears, who was then Special Prosecutor
investigating police shootings of Black
Panther leaders. Tom went on to become
a successful business litigator in antitrust,
securities, and labor cases—including
two cases that reached the Supreme Court.
Since
1986 Tom has served as lead defense counsel
for Joseph Scheidler and three other
defendants in the landmark federal “RICO” lawsuit, N.O.W. v. Scheidler.
This national class action suit was filed
by the National Organization for Women
(“N.O.W.”) and the nation's many abortion
providers, who tried to apply federal antitrust,
racketeering (“RICO”), and extortion laws
against peaceable, nonviolent pro-life
activism. The case grew into a sprawling,
epic-scale marathon that went before the
U.S. Supreme Court three times. The high
Court ruled 8–1 for the pro-lifers in 2003,
then had to hear the case a third time,
finally rejecting all claims 8–0, in February
2006.
Under
Tom's leadership, Thomas More Society
has been involved in many other pivotal
pro-life cases, representing the Catholic
Conference and other groups in prompting
the Illinois Supreme Court to revive
the parental notice law, defending an
ACLU appeal of the use of the wrongful
death law to redress the loss of frozen
embryos by an in vitro lab, appealing a
$20,000 fine against a “conscientious objector” pharmacist
in Wisconsin, winning the right to show
The Nativity Story and erect an Easter
cross on Daley Plaza, and both suing for
and defending pro-lifers in Rockford, Davenport,
Bridgeview, Mundelein, Granite City, South
Bend, Miami, Birmingham, Syracuse, Los
Angeles, Columbus, Twin Cities, Sioux Falls,
Detroit, and elsewhere, as well as filing amicus briefs
defending marriage for the national office
of the Knights of Columbus in Iowa, Connecticut
and California. During 2006–07, the Society
has scored major wins in First Amendment
cases before the Minnesota Supreme Court
(7–0) and in federal district court in
Chicago for “choose life” specialty license
plates in Illinois. The Society is engaged
in four lawsuits opposing Planned Parenthood's
new facility in Aurora, Illinois. |
Denise
Mackura
Executive Director and Legal Counsel
Denise
Mackura has a long history of service
to the pro-life community. She served
as both the Director and General Counsel
for the well-respected Ohio Right to
Life and the Life Legal Defense Fund,
and her work includes spearheading a
strategy that led to the closing of nine
abortion facilities in Ohio and brought
about a 12% decline in the number of
abortions in the state.
Mackura began serving
in the new position of Executive Director
at Thomas More Society Jan. 1, 2008. The
new position allows the Thomas More Society
to expand its services to the pro-life
community.
Mackura
served on the boards of the Chicago
Volunteer Legal Services, the National
Lawyers Association, St. Joseph School
in Chicago and as a member of the Illinois
State Bar Association's Individual Rights & Civil
Liberties Section Counsel. In addition
to serving as legal counsel to the Ohio
House Reference Committee, her professional
experience includes teaching government,
political science and other courses at
several colleges, practicing at a private
law firm, directing government relations
programs for non-profit associations,
and establishing a free legal clinic
on the near West side of Chicago. Mackura
served for three years as senior legislative
counsel for Americans United for Life,
a non-profit pro-life public interest
law firm and educational organization
based in Chicago. She is currently the
Chair of the Life Issues Section of the
National Lawyers Association.
Mackura has had commentary
published in several major newspapers,
and her picture has appeared in Newsweek as a member of the Planned Parenthood
v. Casey legal team. She has also
appeared on Good Morning America and many
local TV and radio programs in Ohio.
She has been involved
in the pro-life movement since 1971. She
received her juris doctor degree in 1977
from Cleveland State-Cleveland Marshall
College of Law and is licensed to practice
law in Ohio and Illinois.
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Peter Breen
Legal
Counsel
Peter
Breen brings over ten years of experience in the private, political, and non-profit sectors to the Thomas More Society. After earning his bachelors in Electrical Engineering from Vanderbilt University in three years, he attended the University
of Notre Dame Law School on scholarship. While an undergraduate, he served as State Chairman of the College Republicans of Tennessee and was a nationally-ranked debater. In law
school, Peter led the Notre Dame Knights of
Columbus, and he remains active with the council today as President
of its Board of Trustees. Peter also serves as a founding Director of the recently-formed Students for Life of Illinois, a statewide network of collegiate pro-life groups.
After graduation from Notre Dame, Peter worked in Chicago as an intellectual property lawyer. He then moved from private practice to serve on the field staff of the Republican National Committee, followed by an appointment to the staff of the 55th Presidential
Inaugural Committee in Washington, DC. From 2005 through 2007, Peter founded and directed two crisis
pregnancy centers in the Western suburbs of Chicago, along with organizing and directing a network of churches across Northern Illinois to support pregnant women in need.
At the invitation of Tom Brejcha, Peter joined the Thomas More Society in 2008. He focuses his practice on litigation to preserve and protect the First Amendment rights of pregnancy center staff and persons praying and counseling at abortion facilities, along with educating policymakers on life-related legislative issues.
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Special Counsel
Paul Benjamin Linton
Paul
Linton, the Thomas More Society's 2007
Chancellor's Award recipient, is a constitutional
scholar retained as special counsel for
the Society for numerous important projects.
Graduating in history (B.A., honors,
1974) and law (J.D.) from Loyola University,
Chicago, Paul was a prosecutor and appellate
law clerk before joining Americans United
for Life, serving as its general counsel.
He has drafted numerous amicus curiae
briefs for the Thomas More Society, including
briefs on the partial-birth abortion
appeals to the U.S. Supreme Court, protecting
the Texas fetal homicide law, and defending
traditional marriage in several states
on behalf of the national office of the
Knights of Columbus. Among other projects,
Paul is currently writing a comprehensive
analysis of each state constitution as
relating to abortion and state law interpreting
these provisions, in preparation for the
state legal battles which will ensue once
Roe is overturned. Paul has published a
host of law review articles regarding abortion
and is sought-after as a trusted and exceptionally
learned counselor by legislators, attorneys
general and litigants with constitutional
or abortion-related issues at stake. |
Alan E. Untereiner
Retained
as special counsel for the Thomas More
Society, Alan is a partner in the Washington,
D.C. law firm, Robbins, Russell, Englert,
Orseck & Untereiner.
Alan received his A.B. degree in Social
Studies, magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa,
from Harvard College in 1984, and his J.D.
from Yale Law School, where he was Notes
Editor of the Yale Law Journal. Alan's
insight inspired the Supreme Court to grant
our petitions for discretionary review
in the second and third N.O.W. v. Scheidler
appeals. He led the crafting of two Supreme
Court briefs and argued Scheidler III before
the Court. He is undefeated (3–0) as a
Supreme Court advocate. He has authored
scores of petitions and briefs in the high
Court for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
and other prestigious business clients. |
Roy T. Englert, Jr.
Also
retained as special counsel for the Thomas
More Society, Roy too is a partner in
Robbins, Russell. He received an A.B.
in mathematics from Princeton in 3 years,
and a J.D., cum laude, from Harvard Law
School (1981), serving as Executive Editor
of the Harvard Law Review. Roy worked
in the Office of the U.S. Solicitor General
from 1986–89. He has argued 15 cases in
the Supreme Court and won all but two (one
loss, one split decision). He argued and
won Scheidler II by an 8–1 margin (Feb
2003). |
Jason R. Craddock
After
earning a history degree at the University
of Virginia and his law degree at the
University of Iowa, Jason R. Craddock
has been practicing law for ten years,
most of which have been devoted to litigating
pro-life, pro-Christian and pro-family
values cases. In 2001, he began representing
pro-life activists in numerous Constitutional
and tort cases, at both the trial and
appellate levels. Since 2006, Jason has
served as co-counsel on many cases for
the Thomas More Society, ranging from
cases involving the abortion facility
in Granite City, Illinois, to the current
battle against the new Planned Parenthood “Mega
Mill” in Aurora. He has served on the
boards of several pro-life organizations,
including Springfield Right to Life and
a Virginia shelter for women and girls
experiencing crisis pregnancies. He currently
sits on the board of directors for PASS
pregnancy centers in Chicago's south suburbs.
Jason has a solo law practice in Chicago
's south suburbs, where he lives with his
wife Joy, and their four children. |
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