stone-randolph

Randolph Stone is a Clinical Professor of Law at the University of Chicago Law School and the director of the Criminal & Juvenile Justice Project affording law and social work students the supervised opportunity to provide quality representation to children and adults. He has previously served as the Director of the Edwin F. Mandel Legal Aid Clinic, the Public Defender of Cook County, deputy director and staff attorney at the Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia, partner in the Chicago firm of Stone & Clark, attorney with the Criminal Defense Consortium of Cook County, and as a Reginald Heber Smith Community Lawyer Fellow for the Neighborhood Legal Service Program in Washington, D.C. Professor Stone is a past chair of the American Bar Association’s Criminal Justice Section, and serves on several boards and committees including the Youth Advocacy Programs, Inc., the Federal Defender Program for the Northern District of Illinois, and the Illinois Department of Juvenile Justice. In addition to clinical legal education, his teaching and writing interests have included criminal law, juvenile justice, the legal profession, indigent defense, race and criminal justice, evidence and trial advocacy. Professor Stone, a Viet Nam veteran, attended Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, received his B.A. from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and his J.D. from the University of Wisconsin Law School. He is married to Cheryl Bradley Stone and they have four children.