NAWL Joins FVAP in Lee v. Tan Supporting Survivors

Isabell Retamoza • March 18, 2024

In December 2021, NAWL joined the Family Violence Appelate Project ("FVAP") in supporting a survivor of domestic violence in defending against an appeal brought by her abuser.  In this case, both parties requested domestic violence restraining orders against each other.  The trial court properly followed Family Code section 6305 in determining the survivor was not a primary aggressor and was acting in self-defense, while the abuser was not, and issued only one restraining order, protecting the survivor against the abuser.  The abuser is not appealing the restraining order against him, but he is appealing the court's refusal to issue a restraining order on the survivor.  Basically, the abuser is arguing the restraining orders should be mutual, which, if granted, would put the survivor at risk.


FVAP, along with Katten Muchin Rosenmann LLP, are supporting the survivor's defense of this unwarranted appeal by filing an amicus brief.

April 30, 2026
Yesterday, the United States Supreme Court issued its decision in Louisiana v. Callais , ruling 6–3 that Louisiana’s congressional map creating a second majority-Black district is an unconstitutional racial gerrymander. In reaching that decision, the Court narrowed how Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act may be used to remedy racial vote dilution, despite prior findings that Louisiana’s earlier maps likely infringed on the voting rights of Black residents. This decision marks a serious setback for voting rights and democratic participation. For nearly six decades, the Voting Rights Act has served as a cornerstone of our legal system’s effort to confront and remedy structural discrimination in the electoral process. By restricting the tools available to address unequal representation, the Court’s ruling makes it harder to correct long standing disparities in who has a voice in our elections. In a dissent read aloud from the bench, Justice Elena Kagan cautioned that the Court’s decision undermines one of the last effective tools for protecting fair representation. Describing the ruling’s impact on the Voting Rights Act, she wrote that Section 2 is now “all but a dead letter,” unable to fulfill its core purpose. She highlighted that a democracy cannot function as promised when the law prevents meaningful remedies for electoral systems that lock some communities out of political power. NAWL is committed to a democracy that works for everyone, supported by a legal system that recognizes discrimination and acts to correct it. As lawyers, judges, advocates, and scholars, we understand that voting rights are foundational to all other rights. NAWL will continue to engage its members on the implications of this decision through education and dialogue. We invite NAWL members to continue this important conversation by attending our session “ Louisiana v. Callais : Voting Rights and the Future of Our Democracy” at NAWL’s 2026 Annual Meeting in Chicago on July 22–23 . Hear from Jessica Ellsworth (Partner and Co-Chair, Supreme Court and Appellate Practice at Hogan Lovells), Samuel Spital (Associate Director-Counsel at the Legal Defense Fund), Franita Tolson (Dean of USC Gould School of Law), and Wendy Weiser (Vice President, Democracy at Brennan Center for Justice). Our expert panel will examine the implications of this decision and its future impact on voting rights and the rule of law.
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