Doug Kendall, American lawyer, died at 51

  Dead Famous

Doug Kendall, died on September 26, 2015 from colon cancer. He was a litigator, author, activist, and non-profit entrepreneur.

He is CAC’s founder and President. Kendall previously founded Community Rights Counsel (CRC), CAC’s predecessor organization, and directed CRC for more than a decade before CAC’s launch.

In 2011, the National Law Journal recognized Kendall as a “legal visionary” for CAC’s success in “reclaiming the Constitution for the legal left.”

Kendall has represented clients in state and federal appellate courts around the country and has co-authored more than four dozen briefs filed before the U.S. Supreme Court, representing clients including the National Governors Association, the National League of Cities, the League of Women Voters, the American Judicature Society, and many of the nation’s preeminent constitutional scholars.

Kendall is regularly called on to speak as an expert on a wide range of legal topics.

He has been quoted in more than 500 national news stories, appeared on television dozens of times, and been an on-air guest on NPR more than a dozen times.

His commentary has run in The New Republic, Slate, and dozens of major papers, including The Washington Post, USA Today, and The Los Angeles Times.

Kendall contributes regularly to Huffington Post, where his commentary on legal developments is regularly featured on the site’s homepage.

Kendall is the co-author of three books, and the lead author of numerous book chapters, reports, and studies.

His academic writings have appeared in scholarly journals, including the Virginia Law Review.

Kendall received his undergraduate and law degrees from the University of Virginia.

He died at age 51 on September 26, 2015.