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Jewish Lawyer Helps Get Acquittal for Nazi in Detroit Suburb

April 8, 1965
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An American Nazi Party member accused of libeling Negroes by distributing hate leaflets in the Detroit area won a court dismissal with the help of two attorneys, one a Jew and one a Negro.

Russell Roberts, 64, of Farmington, was accompanied by three storm troopers from the Nazi group’s headquarters in Arlington, Va., when he appeared in Farmington Municipal Court. Maurice Kelman, a Jew, and Charles Quick, a Negro, attorneys for the American Civil Liberties Union, served as “friends of the court.” They helped win the case for the Nazi by contending that Michigan criminal libel laws do not apply to groups, as with the Negro race. Mr. Kelman Justified the ACLU intervention by asserting that his organization opposed group libel actions, but said that he found the hate leaflets “obnoxious and hateful.”

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