

Inner City Law Center began in 1980, when Nancy Mintie, freshly
graduated from UCLA Law School, set up a legal clinic for the down
and out in a rusty construction trailer parked behind the Catholic
Worker soup kitchen. While living in a homeless shelter herself,
Nancy provided legal services for the poorest and most vulnerable
people in our city at what one early supporter called “the
little Skid Row castle in the sky.”
Founded on the basic principle that every human being should be
treated with dignity and respect at all times, it was not long
before the young organization starting handling complaints of miserable
living conditions throughout Los Angeles’ downtown neighborhoods.
For example, in the early 1980’s, a young mother, her five
little girls in tow, showed up at the door of ICLC’s trailer
office with a large plastic bag. In the bag was a foot long rat
(not counting the tail) that was responsible for
attacking all five of her children. Because the rat was too big
to catch in a conventional trap, she had stayed up several nights
in a row, chasing it around the apartment until she was able to
bash it over the head with a board. ICLC promptly accepted both
the case and rat, which was put in formaldehyde and named Melvyn
after the slumlord owner of the building. After that, a stream
of other mothers from the building appeared at the ICLC trailer,
each with their own four legged exhibits. Soon the ICLC trailer
reeked of formaldehyde, and rats in glass jars adorned every flat
surface. Melvyn (the rat) was ICLC’s lead exhibit at trial.
When ICLC began taking on slumlords, most legal experts believed
that there were little or no damages to be had in the slum housing
arena. However, ICLC was able to demonstrate that significant remedies
were available in the field of habitability law. With the pro bono
assistance offered by members of the Board of Directors ICLC has
emerged victorious in case after case over the years.
By the late 1980’s, ICLC had settled into a storefront at
Fifth and San Pedro. Several attorneys and client advocates now
formed a dedicated staff that served hundreds of clients each year.
ICLC’s central mission -- to guarantee the right to decent
housing – led ICLC to expand from enforcing housing codes
and fighting against exploitation by unscrupulous landlords, to
securing government benefits for our clients and taking other steps
to empower our clients to improve their own lives.
As the staff’s expertise grew, ICLC developed creative strategies
to achieve its goals, including novel tort theories and remedies
designed to encourage clients to break the cycle of poverty. Today,
ICLC is a recognized expert on housing issues and government benefits,
and regularly works with other community organizations and with
government officials on housing and homeless issues.
The passion and dedication that launched Inner City Law Center
lives on and burns in the current staff as strong as ever. Now
located at the corner of Seventh and Central Avenue, on the eastern
edge of Skid Row, ICLC serves over two thousand homeless and low-income
clients each year.