NEW JERSEY – Imani Oakley, Esq. former Legislative Director of NJ Working Families, joins #EyesOnNJ to host her 20th episode of “Upfront Now!” today at 5:00PM.

Imani will touch upon

  • Stop-And-Frisk
  • Interview with Josephine Ross, Author of “A Feminist Critique of Police Stops” & Law Professor

Josephine Ross, Author & Law Professor

Josephine Ross, Photo courtesy of Josephineross.info

Howard Law Professor Ross currently teaches Criminal Procedure where students learn the constitutional limits on police, Evidence, and the Reentry Clinic (a new legal course where students represent clients and work on policy related to ending mass incarceration and improving the lives of individuals with criminal records). Her criminal expertise stems from her years serving as public defender, representing clients who faced a range of charges, from misdemeanors to serious felonies. 

In the Criminal Justice Clinic, where Professor Ross taught for a decade, she supervised students who represented clients charged with misdemeanors in D.C. Superior Court. Professor Ross and her clinical law students presented “Know Your Rights” trainings to teens who had been arrested by police as part of a youth diversion program and to community groups. 

After Hurricane Katrina she took students to New Orleans to engage in legal work that became an annual Alternative Spring Break. Ross launched a legislative clinic where Howard Law students worked with the Justice Roundtable and ACLU on policing and sentencing reform. She has taught International Criminal Law at the University of the Western Cape through the Howard’s South Africa Program.

Imani Oakley, Esq. – Host, Upfront Now!

Imani Oakley, Esq.

Imani R. Oakley, Esq was the Legislative Director & Regional Organizer for New Jersey Working Families. Imani is also an alum of New Leaders Council-New Jersey and is currently fulfilling the role of NLC-NJ Institute Co-Chair where she is responsible for constructing and facilitating a six-month curriculum for New Jersey’s emerging leaders.   

Recently, Imani was voted-in as the Political Director for the Young Democrats of America’s Woman’s Caucus. Imani also currently holds the position of Northern Vice Chair for the New Jersey Young Democrats and was previously the Executive Chair of the Essex County Young Democrats. Imani is the former Deputy Chief of Staff for Assemblywoman Britnee N. Timberlake and has also served as a Constituent Advocate for Senator Cory A. Booker where her portfolio consisted of affordable housing, mortgages, taxes, student loans, consumer protection, pensions, and postal service issues. In 2018, Imani was honored to be the Keynote Speaker for the Montclair Branch NAACP’s 102nd Thurgood Marshall Freedom Fund Dinner and Awards Ceremony where she spoke about the theme “Face the Hate and VOTE” with an emphasis on protecting the voting process for the nation’s most vulnerable communities.

Imani has also been a strong advocate for criminal justice reform. In 2017, Imani was a panel speaker for the 2017 International Drug Policy Reform Conference where she spoke about her experience in effecting D.C.’s local marijuana legalization laws and what students can do to effect drug policy reform on their campus and in their communities. Furthering her endeavors to create positive change in drug policy reform, Imani was invited to participate in the 2016 Minority Cannabis Business Association’s Policy Summit where she helped draft model legislation for the legalization of marijuana in a manner that promotes access to the legal cannabis industry for marginalized communities.

As an unyielding advocate for the systemically powerless, in 2015, Imani was a legal observer during the anti-police brutality protests in Baltimore, Maryland, where she ensured that the First Amendment rights of protestors were not infringed upon. During this same year, Imani spent her summer working for the South African non-profit, Ndifuna Ukwazi, where she collected affidavits on property and sewage conditions from South African communities that suffered under Apartheid and are still experiencing Apartheid’s harsh effects, even in its aftermath.

Imani earned her Bachelor’s degree from Howard University, a Master of Arts degree from New York University, and a Juris Doctor degree from Howard University School of Law. While enrolled in law school, Imani was enrolled in the Legislative Legal Clinic and drafted policy reports for non-profit organizations focused on criminal justice reform. As the Captain of Oral Advocacy for the Goler Teal Butcher International Moot Court Team at Howard, Imani distinguished herself among national and international competitors as the 2016 Best Oralist at the Susan J. Ferrell Intercultural Human Rights Moot Court Competition. Through her passion for both policy and her community, Imani hopes to continue to be a servant of the people and a trailblazer for progress.

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