Aundré
M. Herron is a graduate of Wellesley College. She holds a master’s degree in
African-American Studies from the Boston University Graduate School and a Juris
Doctor degree from the Boston University School of Law. She is admitted to
practice in the states of Missouri and California.
Following
her graduate school training, she taught African-American History and
Literature at various institutions in the Boston area, including Wellesley
College, Boston State College and Emerson College. She also served as Assistant
Director of a residential drug treatment facility in Boston.
After
completing her legal studies, Aundre lectured in legal research and writing at
the
University
of Missouri School of Law and served as an Assistant Prosecuting Attorney in
Missouri, where she tried over 35 jury and judge-tried cases. During her tenure
as an assistant DA, she also served as warrant and extradition officer for the
state of Missouri, responsible for the review and filing of criminal charges
and matters related to the apprehension, extradition and prosecution of
fugitives charged with crimes. In 1984, she was appointed to the faculty of the
National Institute for Trial Advocacy, where she served as Trial Advocacy
Instructor for the Mid-America Regional Trial Advocacy Seminar held at the
University of Kansas. She played a key role on a Kansas City, Missouri
taskforce on Black on Black Homicide and presented the findings at the First
International Criminology Conference, held in Havana, Cuba in 1989.
Following
her work as a trial lawyer, she returned to academia, where she lectured in legal
research and writing, criminal law, and trial advocacy, while serving as
Director of Student Services at the District of Columbia School of Law. She
played an instrumental role in helping the school obtain ABA accreditation
before graduation of the founding class. In 1991, she joined the staff of the
California Appellate Project, where she serves as Senior Staff Attorney,
working with inmates on California’s death row and counsel appointed to
represent them.
In
addition to the unique perspective she brings as a result of having served on
both sides of the criminal justice system, Aundré also brings the insight of
someone who has lost more than one family member to the homicide epidemic in
America. A former member of the Board of Directors for the Northern California
Affiliate of the ACLU, she is a sought-after speaker and commentator on capital
punishment and is actively involved in the struggle to abolish the death penalty.
She was featured in the 2005 independent film “Outside In,” which explores the
death penalty through the eyes of people who regularly visit inmates on
California’s death row.
Currently,
she serves on the Board of Directors for Death Penalty Focus and, in the summer
of 2007, was re-elected to a second three-year term on the ACLU National Board
of Directors.
In
her spare time, Aundré is a successful stand-up comedienne with an impressive
array of awards and credits.
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