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X-WR-CALNAME:National Association for Public Defense
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://publicdefenders.us
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for National Association for Public Defense
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251201T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251201T140000
DTSTAMP:20260507T112201
CREATED:20250718T225333Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251105T193217Z
UID:10000413-1764594000-1764597600@publicdefenders.us
SUMMARY:Forensic Neuroscience: A Call on Criminal Justice\, Forensic Mental Health
DESCRIPTION:Forensic Neuroscience: A Call on Criminal Justice\, Forensic Mental Health\, and Legal Professionals to Become Informed \nAt the nexus of neuroscience\, criminology\, psychology\, and the law\, forensic neuroscience is the innovative subfield focused on better understanding the role of neural mechanisms (e.g.\, brain structure and function) in problematic and antisocial behaviors. Specifically\, professionals working in this interdisciplinary field apply knowledge and methodologies from neuroscience and related disciplines to elucidate the causes of criminality and other concerning behaviors as well as to better understand the complexities of complex human behavior\, head injury\, memory\, deception\, and much more. Work in this field has important implications for criminal justice\, forensic mental health\, and legal decisions related to competency\, culpability\, sentencing\, supervision\, management\, and prevention. Further\, forensic neuroscience can help inform intake\, screening and assessment\, risk management\, individualized care planning\, treatment decisions\, and rehabilitation strategies. Developed for professionals working in criminal justice\, forensic mental health\, and legal settings\, this innovative training provides attendees with: (a) a working knowledge of forensic neuroscience research and (b) a framework for applying a forensic neuroscience-informed lens and perspective to the intake\, interviewing\, screening\, and treatment of forensic-based and justice-involved clients. This training is particularly relevant to professionals working with high-risk populations\, including:\n\n\nCriminal and civil defendants\n\n\nClients supervised under community supervision (i.e.\, probation and parole)\n\n\nClients in court-ordered treatment and civil commitment\n\n\nJuvenile justice-involved populations\n\n\nClients with dark personality traits (e.g.\, psychopathy and callous-unemotional traits)\n\n\nClients with substance use disorders\n\n\nSpecific offender subtypes (e.g.\, sexual offending\, domestic violence\, firesetting\, or repeated DUIs)\n\n\nTreatment-resistant clients\n\n\nJerrod Brown\, Ph.D.\, M.A.\, M.S.\, M.S.\, M.S.\, is a professor\, trainer\, researcher\, and consultant with multiple years of experience teaching collegiate courses. Jerrod is also the founder and CEO of the American Institute for the Advancement of Forensic Studies (AIAFS). Jerrod has also provided consultation services to a number of caregivers\, professionals\, and organizations pertaining to topics related to autism spectrum disorder (ASD)\, fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD)\, confabulation\, suggestibility\, trauma and other life adversities\, alexithymia\, executive dysfunction\, criminal recidivism\, traumatic brain injury (TBI)\, and youth fire setting. Jerrod has completed four separate master’s degree programs and holds graduate certificates in Medical Biochemistry\, Exercise Prescription\, Neuroscience and the Law\, Neuropsychology\, Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)\, Dyslexia\, Other Health Disabilities (OHD)\, and Traumatic-Brain Injuries (TBI). In 2021\, Jerrod completed a post-doctoral certificate in Leadership and Organizational Strategy from Walden University and a Professional Certificate in Forensic Psychology from San Diego State University Global Campus. In 2023\, Jerrod completed a diabetes care and education certificate from Central Arizona College. Currently\, Jerrod is pursuing his fifth master’s degree in Applied Clinical Nutrition from Northeast College of Health Sciences. Jerrod has also conducted over 300 workshops\, webinars\, and on-demand trainings for various organizations and professional and student audiences. Jerrod has published several articles and book chapters\, and recently\, co-edited the book Forensic Mental Health: A Source Guide for Professionals (Brown & Weinkauf\, 2018) with ErvWeinkauf. Jerrod has also been quoted in various magazines\, newspapers\, and other professional outlets. Jerrod is also regularly featured on several national and international podcast programs.
URL:https://publicdefenders.us/event/forensic-neuroscience-a-call-on-criminal-justice-forensic-mental-health/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://publicdefenders.us/app/uploads/2025/07/Forensic-neuroscience-Webinar.png
LOCATION:https://publicdefenders.us/event/forensic-neuroscience-a-call-on-criminal-justice-forensic-mental-health/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251210T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251210T163000
DTSTAMP:20260507T112201
CREATED:20251108T171706Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251210T201740Z
UID:10000468-1765378800-1765384200@publicdefenders.us
SUMMARY:Fearless Advocacy: Representing Non-Citizens in CRIMINAL Court
DESCRIPTION:NOTE: NAPD membership is NOT required to attend. To create a free account to purchase a ticket please go to: https://publicdefenders.us/create-account/ \nThe ongoing attacks on the rule of law and threat of criminal charges against defense lawyers fulfilling their ethical and constitutional duties to represent their noncitizen clients are intended to chill zealous representation. This webinar will educate attorneys about where the legal boundaries lie and how to navigate challenging situations\, empowering you to continue your advocacy with confidence. Our expert panelists will explore real-world scenarios and offer practical guidance on how to protect yourself while zealously representing your noncitizen clients. \nKara Hartzler is a senior appellate attorney at the Federal Defenders of San Diego\, Inc.  Prior to joining the Federal Defenders\, she served as the Legal Director and Criminal Immigration Consultant at the Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project in Arizona. She has written numerous books and articles on the intersection between criminal and immigration law; served as an adjunct immigration professor; litigated hundreds of immigration and criminal appeals before the Ninth Circuit; and testified in front of the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Immigration on the detention and deportation of citizens and other due process violations in the immigration system. \nStephanie Alvarez-Jones\, Southeast Regional Attorney\, National Immigration Project \nJennifer Friedman\, Deputy Public Defender\, San Francisco Public Defender\, Immigration Defense Unit \nJordan Pollock is currently the Specialized Unit Chief at the Dallas County Public Defender’s Office\, supervising the Appellate\, Actual Innocence\, Capital Punishment and Immigration units. Before taking on this role\, Ms. Pollock was an Immigration Specialist and Supervisor of the\nImmigration Unit of the Dallas Public Defender’s office\, where she has worked since 2014. Among other duties\, Ms. Pollock advises both public defenders and appointed attorneys of the immigration consequences of the criminal charges against non-citizen clients. Ms. Pollock also\nserves as an adjunct professor at Texas A&amp;M Law School\, where she teaches a course in “crimmigration\,” and is vice chair of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyer’s immigration committee. Previously\, Ms. Pollock was an Equal Justice Works Fellow at Public Counsel in Los\nAngeles\, where she instituted a Legal Orientation Program at two Orange County detention centers and represented detained immigrants in removal proceedings. She received her J.D. with honors from the University of Texas School of Law and her B.A. with honors from Duke\nUniversity.  Before law school\, Ms. Pollock was an accredited representative at the New York Legal Assistance Group\, where she represented clients in affirmative immigration matters. \nModerator:\nStacy Taeuber is an attorney with the Oregon Justice Resource Center Immigration Project\, where she advises Oregon public defenders regarding the immigration consequences faced by their noncitizen clients. Previously\, she was an immigration resource attorney for the Washington Defender Association\, where she worked with defenders and other stakeholders to address the immigration consequences faced by noncitizens accused of crimes. She has over 25 years of experience as an immigrant rights advocate; she has practiced in Florida\, Arizona\, New York\, Minnesota\, and Wisconsin\, and has argued cases before the Arizona and Wisconsin Supreme Courts\, the Seventh Circuit\, and federal district courts. She spent two years as a public defender in Arizona and was a contract defender in Wisconsin. Stacy founded the Immigrant Justice Clinic at the University of Wisconsin Law School and served as its director for four years and was a visiting clinical professor in the University of Minnesota Law School’s Federal Immigration Litigation Clinic for two years. Stacy received her B.A. in Spanish from Earlham College and her J.D. from Georgetown University Law School. stacy@taeuberlaw.com.\n \nWendy Wayne\nWendy Wayne is an immigration policy consultant and founder of South End Strategies LLC. She is a nationally recognized expert on enforcement policy\, legal representation programs and the interplay of immigration and criminal law. Wendy provides strategic guidance to nonprofit\nimmigration organizations\, designs and develops programs that increase access to justice and advises criminal defense and racial justice organizations on the impacts of immigration policy. Wendy is the former Director of the Immigration Impact Unit at the Committee for Public\nCounsel Services (CPCS)\, the Massachusetts public defender agency\, where she provided comprehensive training and advice to court-appointed attorneys throughout Massachusetts and engaged in systemic litigation on issues regarding immigration enforcement. She is a frequent\nspeaker at state and national conferences. Prior to becoming an immigration expert\, Wendy was a trial attorney at CPCS\, representing individuals charged with serious felonies. Wendy is the former Chair of the American Bar Association Commission on Immigration and\ncurrently serves as a Special Advisor. She is a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA)’s National ICE Liaison and Removal Defense Committees. She previously served on the Department of Homeland Security Advisory Council Task Force on Secure\nCommunities\, the Massachusetts Access to Justice Commission and the Board of Directors of the Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. \n 
URL:https://publicdefenders.us/event/fearless-advocacy-representing-non-citizens-in-criminal-court/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://publicdefenders.us/app/uploads/2025/11/non-citizens-Webinar.png
LOCATION:https://publicdefenders.us/event/fearless-advocacy-representing-non-citizens-in-criminal-court/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251211T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251211T163000
DTSTAMP:20260507T112201
CREATED:20251108T171412Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251205T214112Z
UID:10000467-1765465200-1765470600@publicdefenders.us
SUMMARY:Fearless Advocacy: Representing Noncitizens in IMMIGRATION Court
DESCRIPTION:NOTE: NAPD membership is NOT required to attend. To create a free account to purchase a ticket please go to: https://publicdefenders.us/create-account/ \nThe ongoing attacks on the rule of law and threat of criminal charges against defense lawyers fulfilling their ethical and constitutional duties to represent their noncitizen clients are intended to chill zealous representation. This webinar will educate attorneys about where the legal boundaries lie and how to navigate challenging situations\, empowering you to continue your advocacy with confidence. Our expert panelists will explore real-world scenarios and offer practical guidance on how to protect yourself while zealously representing your noncitizen clients. \nKara Hartzler is a senior appellate attorney at the Federal Defenders of San Diego\, Inc.  Prior to joining the Federal Defenders\, she served as the Legal Director and Criminal Immigration Consultant at the Florence Immigrant and Refugee Rights Project in Arizona. She has written numerous books and articles on the intersection between criminal and immigration law; served as an adjunct immigration professor; litigated hundreds of immigration and criminal appeals before the Ninth Circuit; and testified in front of the U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Immigration on the detention and deportation of citizens and other due process violations in the immigration system. \nStephanie Alvarez-Jones\, Southeast Regional Attorney\, National Immigration Project \nJennifer Friedman\, Deputy Public Defender\, San Francisco Public Defender\, Immigration Defense Unit \nJordan Pollock is currently the Specialized Unit Chief at the Dallas County Public Defender’s Office\, supervising the Appellate\, Actual Innocence\, Capital Punishment and Immigration units. Before taking on this role\, Ms. Pollock was an Immigration Specialist and Supervisor of the\nImmigration Unit of the Dallas Public Defender’s office\, where she has worked since 2014. Among other duties\, Ms. Pollock advises both public defenders and appointed attorneys of the immigration consequences of the criminal charges against non-citizen clients. Ms. Pollock also\nserves as an adjunct professor at Texas A&amp;M Law School\, where she teaches a course in “crimmigration\,” and is vice chair of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyer’s immigration committee. Previously\, Ms. Pollock was an Equal Justice Works Fellow at Public Counsel in Los\nAngeles\, where she instituted a Legal Orientation Program at two Orange County detention centers and represented detained immigrants in removal proceedings. She received her J.D. with honors from the University of Texas School of Law and her B.A. with honors from Duke\nUniversity.  Before law school\, Ms. Pollock was an accredited representative at the New York Legal Assistance Group\, where she represented clients in affirmative immigration matters. \nModerator:\nStacy Taeuber is an attorney with the Oregon Justice Resource Center Immigration Project\, where she advises Oregon public defenders regarding the immigration consequences faced by their noncitizen clients. Previously\, she was an immigration resource attorney for the Washington Defender Association\, where she worked with defenders and other stakeholders to address the immigration consequences faced by noncitizens accused of crimes. She has over 25 years of experience as an immigrant rights advocate; she has practiced in Florida\, Arizona\, New York\, Minnesota\, and Wisconsin\, and has argued cases before the Arizona and Wisconsin Supreme Courts\, the Seventh Circuit\, and federal district courts. She spent two years as a public defender in Arizona and was a contract defender in Wisconsin. Stacy founded the Immigrant Justice Clinic at the University of Wisconsin Law School and served as its director for four years and was a visiting clinical professor in the University of Minnesota Law School’s Federal Immigration Litigation Clinic for two years. Stacy received her B.A. in Spanish from Earlham College and her J.D. from Georgetown University Law School. stacy@taeuberlaw.com. \nWendy Wayne\nWendy Wayne is an immigration policy consultant and founder of South End Strategies LLC. She is a nationally recognized expert on enforcement policy\, legal representation programs and the interplay of immigration and criminal law. Wendy provides strategic guidance to nonprofit\nimmigration organizations\, designs and develops programs that increase access to justice and advises criminal defense and racial justice organizations on the impacts of immigration policy. Wendy is the former Director of the Immigration Impact Unit at the Committee for Public\nCounsel Services (CPCS)\, the Massachusetts public defender agency\, where she provided comprehensive training and advice to court-appointed attorneys throughout Massachusetts and engaged in systemic litigation on issues regarding immigration enforcement. She is a frequent\nspeaker at state and national conferences. Prior to becoming an immigration expert\, Wendy was a trial attorney at CPCS\, representing individuals charged with serious felonies. Wendy is the former Chair of the American Bar Association Commission on Immigration and\ncurrently serves as a Special Advisor. She is a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association (AILA)’s National ICE Liaison and Removal Defense Committees. She previously served on the Department of Homeland Security Advisory Council Task Force on Secure\nCommunities\, the Massachusetts Access to Justice Commission and the Board of Directors of the Massachusetts Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. \nJodi Ziesemer is the Policy Director for Immigration Emergency Response at the New York Legal Assistance Group (NYLAG) where she serves as a resource for NYLAG and partners organizations to summarize and digest changes to federal immigration policy and practice and engages in community-center advocacy on a local\, state\, and national level. Prior to joining NYLAG\, Jodi was a supervision attorney at Catholic Charities in their Unaccompanied Minors Program. In that position\, Jodi coordinated representation of recently arrived unaccompanied immigrant children and oversaw a team of attorneys who provide services to immigrant youth detained with the Office of Refugee Resettlement. In addition\, she has worked for the past ten years representing a wide variety of immigrants in front of Executive Office of Immigration Review (Immigration Court) and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Prior to graduating summa cum laude from New York Law School\, Jodi worked as a Board of Immigration Appeals representative for the National Immigrant Justice Center in Chicago and as a paralegal at Fitzgerald and Company\, LLC in Boston. During her more than twenty years in immigration law\, Jodi has worked on a range of projects including anti-human trafficking initiatives\, naturalization drives\, pro bono asylum clinics\, innovative representation projects for unaccompanied minors and victims of violent crime. Jodi holds a Bachelor’s Degree from Grinnell College and a Master’s in Law and Diplomacy from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and a J.D. from New York Law School. Jodi served an adjunct professor at St. John’s University and she co-authored an article for the Georgetown Immigration Law Journal entitled\, “The Right to Have Rights: Loss of Citizenship\, Asylum\, and Constitutional Principles.” (Vol 30\, No 3\, Spring 2016).
URL:https://publicdefenders.us/event/fearless-advocacy-representing-non-citizens-in-immigration-court/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://publicdefenders.us/app/uploads/2025/11/Fearless-Immigration-Webinar.png
LOCATION:https://publicdefenders.us/event/fearless-advocacy-representing-non-citizens-in-immigration-court/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251215T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251215T140000
DTSTAMP:20260507T112201
CREATED:20250701T192837Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251017T152643Z
UID:10000341-1765803600-1765807200@publicdefenders.us
SUMMARY:Intrafamilial Homicide: A Neurocriminological and Forensic Psychological Perspective
DESCRIPTION:Family or domestic homicide is an extreme form of domestic violence where a household member or significant other is murdered. Intrafamilial homicides can take several different forms\, including the murder of newborns\, infants\, siblings\, children\, parents\, significant others\, or other family members. Motivations for acts of intrafamilial homicide vary by the nature of the relationship between the perpetrator and victim (e.g.\, spouse-spouse\, parent-child\, or child-parent) and a host of other factors. Survivors impacted by these events are left to suffer grave consequences\, including serious trauma and the loss of a loved one. We understand the profound effects these traumatic events have on individuals\, families\, communities\, and professional organizational settings. Our goal is to equip attendees with the knowledge and tools to help better understand and hopefully prevent these tragedies from occurring in the future.\n\nThis training course aims to provide attendees with an understanding of the different manifestations of family homicide as well as its causes\, consequences\, and risk factors. Intervention\, screening\, and prevention strategies will also be explored. Other topics explored in this training will include adverse life experiences\, attachment problems\, abnormal brain structures and chemistry\, blood sugar imbalances\, central nervous system dysfunction\, unhealthy nutritional practices\, HPA axis dysfunction (a system that controls reactions to stress and regulates many body processes)\, psychiatric comorbidity\, substance misuse\, stalking\, rumination\, dysfunctional interpersonal dynamics\, possessiveness\, estrangement\, coercive control\, brain injury\, strangulation\, abrupt life changes (e.g.\, job loss)\, self-regulation deficits\, victim-offender dynamics\, executive dysfunction\, self-destructive behaviors\, and humiliation to name a few. Research findings from the fields of neurocriminology and forensic psychology will also be used throughout this training to further enhance our understanding of these complex topics.\n\n\nJerrod Brown\, Ph.D.\, M.A.\, M.S.\, M.S.\, M.S.\, is a professor\, trainer\, researcher\, and consultant with multiple years of experience teaching collegiate courses. Jerrod is also the founder and CEO of the American Institute for the Advancement of Forensic Studies (AIAFS). Jerrod is also the founder and co-editor-in-chief of Forensic Scholars Today (FST). Jerrod has also provided consultation services to a number of caregivers\, professionals\, and organizations pertaining to topics related to family violence\, autism spectrum disorder (ASD)\, fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD)\, intellectual and developmental disabilities\, confabulation\, suggestibility\, sleep disturbances\, serious and persistent mental health disorders\, trauma and other life adversities\, alexithymia\, executive dysfunction\, criminal recidivism\, traumatic brain injury (TBI)\, and youth firesetting. Jerrod has completed four separate master’s degree programs and holds graduate certificates in Medical Biochemistry\, Exercise Prescription\, Neuroscience and the Law\, Neuropsychology\, Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)\, Other Health Disabilities (OHD)\, Dyslexia\, and Traumatic-Brain Injuries (TBI). In 2021\, Jerrod completed a post-doctoral certificate in Leadership and Organizational Strategy from Walden University and a Professional Certificate in Forensic Psychology from San Diego State University Global Campus. In 2023\, Jerrod completed a diabetes care and education certificate from Central Arizona College. Currently\, Jerrod is pursuing his fifth master’s degree in Applied Clinical Nutrition from Northeast College of Health Sciences. Jerrod also holds a wide range of professional certifications and has completed several comprehensive training programs. Jerrod has also conducted over 300 workshops\, webinars\, and on-demand trainings for various organizations and professional and student audiences. Jerrod has published several articles and book chapters\, and previously co-edited the book Forensic Mental Health: A Source Guide for Professionals (Brown & Weinkauf\, 2018) with Erv Weinkauf. Jerrod has also been quoted in various magazines\, newspapers\, and other professional outlets and has appeared in two documentaries related to the topic of FASD. Jerrod is also regularly featured on several national and international podcast programs.
URL:https://publicdefenders.us/event/intrafamilial-homicide-a-neurocriminological-and-forensic-psychological-perspective/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://publicdefenders.us/app/uploads/2025/07/Intrafamilial-Homicide-Webinar.png
LOCATION:https://publicdefenders.us/event/intrafamilial-homicide-a-neurocriminological-and-forensic-psychological-perspective/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251216T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251216T130000
DTSTAMP:20260507T112201
CREATED:20250812T161317Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251202T144629Z
UID:10000435-1765886400-1765890000@publicdefenders.us
SUMMARY:Reconceptualizing Preservation of the Right to Self-Defense in Jury Trials
DESCRIPTION:The right to self-defense is one of the oldest and most universal concepts in Anglo-American criminal law and criminal procedure. Nonetheless\, trial judges across the country are being absolved of erroneously denying the accused’s valid request for a substantiated self-defense jury instruction based on personal opinions\, prejudices\, and biases about the credibility of the accused’s case. \nAnjali Pathmanathan\, visiting lecturer and former public defender\, studied this phenomenon and wrote a law review article\, “Directing Unconstitutional Verdicts: Discussing Strategies to Combat When Judges Become Jurors on Self-Defense.”  She came to the conclusion that these trial judges are essentially directing verdicts of guilt against the accused. So what can trial counsel do to combat this practice and stop trial judges from usurping the jury’s role in this unconstitutional manner? \nThis webinar will offer a reconceptualization of how trial counsel can argue and preserve their client’s right to the jury’s consideration of their self-defense claim\, while\, hopefully paving the pathway for more fair jury trials and\, if needed\, subsequent appeals. \nREGISTER to attend this informative and advocacy-focused NAPD webinar.  Registration is free for NAPD members. \nAnjali Pathmanathan is a Visiting Lecturer in Law\, Criminal Legal System Advocacy Fellow\, and Associate Research Scholar in Law at Yale Law School. Prior to joining Yale\, she was an Assistant Professor of Legal Writing at St. John’s University School of Law and an Adjunct Professor of Clinical Law at Brooklyn Law School. \nBefore she began teaching\, Pathmanathan was a Senior Appellate Counsel for the Center for Appellate Litigation\, where she represented incarcerated individuals in all aspects of their direct appeals and post-conviction claims before the New York State courts. She also previously served as a Program Associate for the former Center on Immigration & Justice at the Vera Institute of Justice\, after beginning her legal career as a Staff Attorney for the Criminal Defense Practice of the Legal Aid Society of New York. \nAs an experienced public defender\, her scholarship focuses on issues related to due process and the criminal legal system\, and has been published in the Georgia Criminal Law Review\, International Criminal Law Review\, The Harbinger of The N.Y.U. Review of Law & Social Change\, and the New York Law Journal. \nShe holds a J.D. from Boston College Law School and a B.A. from New York University.
URL:https://publicdefenders.us/event/self-defense-in-jury-trials/
CATEGORIES:Webinar
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://publicdefenders.us/app/uploads/2025/08/Reconceptualizing-Preservation-of-Self-Defense.png
LOCATION:https://publicdefenders.us/event/self-defense-in-jury-trials/
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR