Roland Coleman Jr., former L.A. County Bar Assn. president, dies at 74

Roland Coleman Jr., former L.A. County Bar Assn. president, dies at 74
Arcadia, CA – October 12: Roland Coleman, 72, in his livingroom on Wednesday, Oct. 12, 2022, in Arcadia, CA. Yesterday he said was a great day. Today his blood pressure was very low and he was feeling out of sorts. Coleman has been hoping to get a kidney transplant. But to have a shot at a donated organ, he needs to get onto the waitlist. Coleman was referred to Keck Medical Center two years ago to start being evaluated as a possible candidate for transplant but has not been put on the waitlist so far. His situation underscores the challenges that kidney patients can face in getting waitlisted – a step in the transplant process that is less scrutinized than what happens to patients once they get onto the list. (Francine Orr / Los Angeles Times)
(Francine Orr/Los Angeles Times)

Roland Coleman Jr., former L.A. County Bar Assn. president, dies at 74

Emily Alpert Reyes April 6, 2024

Attorney Roland Lee Coleman Jr.,

who became

the second Black person to lead the Los Angeles County Bar Assn., has died. He was 74.

Coleman also served as president of the John M. Langston Bar

Assn.

of Los Angeles,

which had been

founded in the 1920s to serve and support Black lawyers excluded

by from

other bar associations.

During his own career,

Coleman

once

recounted being told that a Black attorney couldnt win cases in Glendale or Fullerton. In the face of racism, “I really believed I had to be better than anybody else,” he said.

In the courtroom,

“he knew every rule backward

s

and forward,

s

in the courtroom,

said Ian Stewart, an attorney who worked with Coleman at the law firm Wilson Elser. But “his style was one where he could really connect.”

He was tenacious, Stewart said, but “hed do it with a smile on his face.” If you were on the opposite side of a legal battle, “youd end up shaking hands and walking away buddies.”

Coleman grew up in Los Angeles,

as

one of four children. As a teenager at Los Angeles High School, he was “perhaps the most popular person on campus,” said Earl E. Thomas, a

longtime

friend and fellow attorney. Jackie Herod, another longtime friend, said he was known as a sharp student who

also

ran long distance and joined an array of clubs, including cheerleading and debate.

20240403-210600.jpeg

Thomas said that

at partieswhenever someone threw a party

, “Roland would get in the middle of the floor, and he would start dancing,” doing the newest moves as everyone formed a circle around him to watch

, Thomas said

. “A lot of people would say the party didn’t start until Roland got there.”

Coleman graduated from the University of Southern California and Loyola Law School.

H

e worked for the Los Angeles city attorneys office and then for the California Department of Transportation before being hired at Wilson Elser, where he became a partner.

“He was a superstar,” said Pat Kelly, who hired Coleman at the firm and worked closely with him. “He could simplify difficult issues and explain them in a commonsense way.”

Beyond the courtroom, Coleman volunteered to assist L.A. County residents as freeway construction was “wreaking havoc on the citizens in the community,” helping them to address complaints about noise and other hazards, said U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Los Angeles).

With his help, “we forced Caltrans to set up an office right in the community where they could deal with complaints,” Waters said. And when residents were being displaced, “we were able to force them to increase the offers for those homes. … Roland was basically responsible for all of that.”

Coleman “just took it on like it was his job,” said retired Superior Court judge John Meigs Sr., who became friends with him as a law student.

As president of the Langston Bar Assn., Coleman started a

n annual

hall of fame

event

to honor people in the legal profession who “persevered, sacrificed and in spite of those obstacles and those hardships succeeded,” said retired judge Allen Webster, another former president of the association.

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After the 1991 killing of Latasha Harlins, a 15-year-old Black girl

who wasfatally

shot by a Korean-born shopkeeper, the Los Angeles County Bar Assn. was divided on a recall campaign against Judge Joyce A. Karlin, who sentenced the shopkeeper to probation. Coleman later told the Metropolitan News-Enterprise that many in the Los Angeles County Bar Assn. saw the recall effort as an attack on the independence of the courts.

“I appreciate the independence of the courts, I understand the desire for that. But these kinds of concerns of respect have to be a two-way street,” Coleman recalled telling leaders of the association. Courts “have to respect the people who appear before them.”

The

bar

association decided not to weigh in against the recall.

“Inwardly, he was sensitive to the feelings and needs of others. Outwardly, he was fearless and fierce in his commitment to friends, family and community,” his sister Carmen Freeman said.

Coleman led the L.A. County Bar Assn. from 2001 to 2002, the second Black person to hold the position since the group was founded in 1878.

As president, “his focus was, ‘How can we better help the community that we serve?'” said Danette Meyers, an attorney who was active with the

bar

association.

During his presidency, Coleman pledged to make attorneys available pro bono to assist victims of discrimination, joining state officials at the announcement of a hotline to report hate crimes. He also worked to improve public access to legal services.

“His voice had a lot of credibility,” said Miriam Krinsky, who followed him as county bar association president. “When he chimed in on an issue, I really wanted to make sure that I was listening closely.”

Later in

his

life, Coleman suffered

from

health problems and endured years of frustration as he tried to get onto the waiting list for a donated kidney. The Times chronicled his ordeal, which included tangling with a health insurance company over where he could be evaluated for a possible transplant.

Coleman

later

decided to switch insurance plans to improve his chances and started driving for a ride-share company to pay for higher premiums. He told The Times that on his first day as a driver, he began chatting with a passenger he picked up in North Hollywood, who promptly offered to donate a kidney if approved.

Herod said

“There was never a stranger in Roland’s life,”

Herod said.

Coleman never got a kidney transplant.

But

even as he grew

increasingly

ill,

Herod said,

he could

still

make

Herodher

laugh during

their

phone calls.

“He would say, ‘Jackie, if you see a kidney running around, catch it. Catch it for me, and I’ll pick it up.'”

Coleman is survived by his wife, Evelyn Jenkins Coleman,

his

son Roland Coleman III (also known as R.J.),

his

stepson Jeremy Jenkins,

his

sister Carmen Freeman and

his

brother Lorin Coleman.

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