The Atlanta Lawyer June/July 2016 | Page 5

ends up doing this a couple of more times for others who need the same service. while serving as president, our greatest president, during our nation’s most difficult crisis. Next, he runs into some legal trouble. Two brothers living in Kentucky on the other side of the river operate a ferryboat—they are licensed to take people across the Ohio River, from Kentucky to Ohio and back. These brothers take out a warrant, believing this young man is violating a Kentucky statute that requires ferryboat operators to be licensed. As members of the Atlanta Bar Association, we know that it provides, in all sorts of ways, meaningful opportunities for attorneys to grow and learn. Plenty of us have had formative experiences through the Atlanta Bar that have shaped us and helped direct our careers. Often, if not always, those experiences start with an invitation for a colleague. So there is a lawsuit. The lawsuit is The Commonwealth of Kentucky v. Abraham Lincoln. So why not think of how WE, THE MEMBERS might reach out to other attorneys and show them what the Bar can do? A judge—a justice of the peace back then—hears the case. The Kentucky statute prohibits boat operators from carrying persons across the river without a license. The penalty for violating this statute is a fine, and if you are unable to pay, then prison. Reading the statute closely, the judge rules that the defendant has not violated the law because he is not carrying passengers across the river, but instead only out to the middle. This was Abraham Lincoln’s first ever exposure to the law – a dispute, a good judge, careful examination of the law. Not guilty, as it turned out. It is reasonable to conclude that this experience influenced Lincoln’s career choice. Whether it actually did, we can never really know. But we do know for certain that Abraham Lincoln spent 25 years practicing law as a trial attorney. During these years, he was developing the skills he would constantly call upon The Bar’s new 2 FOR 2 program is designed to encourage participation and membership growth. How so? By asking all of us to invite another attorney to any Atlanta Bar event – and then to do this again during the year with either the same person or another attorney. Two invitations during the course of the year. That is 2 FOR 2. Will you do it? I hope so, and the Bar hopes so. Look for details this fall—including information about prizes—at atlantabar.org. And if you have ideas about how to promote 2 FOR 2, please let me hear from you! The more input, the better. Have a great summer and see you this fall. James D. Blitch IV President, Atlanta Bar Association CLICK TO SEE complete program description & how to enter The Official News Publication of the Atlanta Bar Association THE ATLANTA LAWYER 5