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Stephen J. Morewitz

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Stephen J. Morewitz, (born 1954) [1] in Newport News, Virginia, is a forensic social scientist, [2] health care specialist, and medical educator who conducts research, teaches, and consults in forensic social science, chronic disorders, injuries, and health care across the life course, and medical education. He is on the faculty at San Jose State University [3] [4] and California State University, East Bay. [5]

Training and influences[edit]

A native of Newport News, Virginia, Morewitz decided to pursue undergraduate and graduate training in sociology, focusing on sociology of health and illness and criminology/deviant behavior. He graduated from the College of William & Mary with an A.B. (1975) and A.M (1978). In 1983, Morewitz graduated from the University of Chicago with a Ph.D. (High Pass in German Doctoral Language Exam). While at the University of Chicago, he was a doctoral student of Gerald D. Suttles, Morris Janowitz, Charles E. Bidwell, and Ronald M. Andersen. His doctoral dissertation analyzed the effects of community and organizational factors on medical decision-making among physicians at Michael Reese Hospital.[6]

Career[edit]

Morewitz is a Senior Lecturer and Lecturer at San Jose State University and Lecturer at California State University, East Bay. He has been on the faculty or staff of Michael Reese Hospital, School of Health Sciences, Educational Development Unit, [7] Argonne National Laboratory, Division of Biological and Medical Research, Radiobiology Section, University of Illinois Chicago, College of Medicine and School of Public Health, DePaul University, and California School of Podiatric Medicine, where he was Professor and Research Dean. [8]

Forensic social science, chronic diseases, injuries, and health care across the life course[edit]

Since 1996, Morewitz has authored, co-authored, and co-edited more than twelve books and other publications in forensic social science, chronic disorders, injuries, and health care across the life span, and medical education.

Research, consulting, and litigation[edit]

In 1984, at Argonne National Laboratory, Morewitz worked with James Stebbings, [9] Argonne National Laboratory, in developing the first directory and map of hazardous radium dial sites in the U.S., which can facilitate United States Environmental Protection Agency Superfund cleanup of hazardous radium dial sites, including radiation areas in Ottawa, Illinois. [10]

In 1988, attorneys started to ask Morewitz to assist them as an expert witness in court cases, and Morewitz founded the consulting firm, Stephen J. Morewitz, Ph.D., & Associates, [11] Chicago, Illinois, which combines litigation services with management and educational services. Stephen J. Morewitz, Ph.D., & Associates was later established in San Francisco, California, and Tarzana, California. One of his associates was Quentin Young, a Chicago, Illinois, physician and health care policy specialist.[12] Morewitz first met Quentin Young when they were both working at Michael Reese Hospital and participating in a Michael Reese Hospital, Educational Development Unit, medical staff research project. Lewis Yablonsky, an American sociologist, criminologist, author, psychotherapist, and public intellectual, was another Associate of Stephen J. Morewitz, Ph.D., & Associates. Lewis Yablonsky is best known for his work with gangs as well as with the Counterculture of the 1960s and worked with Morewitz on court cases involving gang issues. One of Morewitz's associates, Franklin J. Medio, a health professions educator and President, Consulting Services for the Health Professions, Charleston, South Carolina, worked with Morewitz at the Michael Reese Hospital, Educational Development Unit. [13] Another associate has been Dana Pearl, President, Human Organization, Inc., Evanston, Illinois, a specialist in sexual harassment training. [14] Jeffrey P. Rosenfeld, an environmental gerontologist, gerontology expert witness, and President of PlanWise, Bayside, New York, has been another Associate of Morewitz. [15]

Since 1988, Morewitz has testified as an expert witness and consulted in many court cases. He has consulted for law firms, including Corboy & Demetrio, Chicago, Illinois, which was founded by Philip H. Corboy, an influential American trial attorney and mentor and teacher to trial attorneys, who also worked with Morewitz's father in court cases [16] and Jeffery M. Leving, American divorce and family law attorney, known for his legal work and advocacy in the fathers' rights movement. Morewitz was asked by attorney John Gibaitis, Chicago, Illinois, to determine whether Joseph Guzulaitis, a former Nazi guard, was too disabled to be deported back to Lublin, Poland. [17] Authorities identified Guzulaitis as a member of a Lithuanian battalion that provided security for Adolf Hitler’s 3rd SS Panzer Division Totenkopf, an elite Division of the Waffen-SS in 1943 and murdered Jews. Guzulaitis reportedly had worked at two Nazi concentration camps, the Majdanek Concentration Camp (Lublin, Poland) and the Hersbruck concentration camp in Germany. Guzulaitis also reportedly guarded prisoners during the death march from Hersbruck to Dachau in 1945. Since 1975, the United States Department of Justice, Criminal Division, Office of Special Investigations has been investigating and deporting former Nazis who entered the U.S. illegally. [18]

In the field of toxic tort, Morewitz, in 1990, performed literature reviews and analysis of research on childhood cancer incidence, prevalence, and risk factors for Patrick J. Kenneally, Ltd., Chicago, Illinois, a law firm in a United States district court case involving radiation contamination in West Chicago, Illinois, by Kerr-McGee Chemical Corporation.[19] The plaintiffs in this court case alleged that a thorium processing plant, Rare Earths Facility and its successors reportedly placed thorium tailings on local community residents' properties, and the thorium tailings caused cancer. [20] The United States Environmental Protection Agency has designated the area a Superfund National Priorities (NPL) List site. [21][22]

Morewitz testified as an expert witness in a California Superior Court case concerning the alleged sexual abuse of a priest by another priest, who was a convicted sex offender. [23] The alleged sexual abuse had occurred at a residential facility for disabled and retired priests. The alleged victim later committed suicide. Some individuals believe he had been murdered. [24][25]

In 1989, he was consulted on a Circuit Court of Cook County case involving alleged child sexual abuse at the Mother Goose Nursery and Kid Stop daycare centers.[26][27] Morewitz gave advice to a private investigator working with one of the law firms involved in the case, Stephen M. Komie, [28] about the reliability and validity of using anatomically correct dolls in child sexual abuse investigations. [29] This case is one of various court cases involving allegations of child sexual abuse at daycare centers, including allegations of daycare child sexual abuse in the McMartin preschool trial, (1987-1990), which included bizarre allegations that appeared to reflect the developing Satanic ritual abuse moral panic. [30]

Morewitz was asked to consult for the United States Department of Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, National Incidence Studies of Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and Thrownaway Children (NISMART-4) Expert Panel.[31]

In 2021, Morewitz assisted the French Gendarmerie Intelligence Service in finding effective ways to communicate with inmates to search for missing terrorist suspects and other criminal suspects.[32] In 2021, he worked with a journalist in trying to resolve a controversy about possible mistaken identity in the My Lai Massacre during the Vietnam War. [33]

Applications of forensic social science[edit]

In 2014, Morewitz founded the international and interdisciplinary organization, Forensic Social Sciences Association in San Francisco, California. He established the Forensic Social Sciences Association to expand the role of forensic social scientists in assisting in criminal and civil investigations, testifying and consulting as experts in policy-oriented government hearings, testifying as expert witnesses in court cases, and serving as media experts. The Forensic Social Sciences Association is affiliated with the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne, Law Faculty, Reims, France, and the first workshop of the Association was held there on April 5, 2019. Forensic Social Sciences Association member Martine Herzog-Evans, a law professor specializing in criminology and criminal law, on the University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne, Law Faculty, and author of French Reentry Courts and Rehabilitation: Mister Jourdain of Desistance (2014), [34] organized the Forensic Social Sciences Association workshop. Martine Herzog-Evans does research in criminology, probation, prison, domestic violence, legitimacy of justice, criminal (particularly procedural) law, procedural justice, therapeutic jurisprudence, and desistance.

Morewitz is founding Editor-in-Chief of The Forensic Social Scientist, the official newsletter of the Forensic Social Sciences Association. [35] He and Forensic Social Sciences Association member, Karen Shalev-Greene, are Founding Editors-in-Chief of two journals published by San Jose State University and the Forensic Social Sciences Association: the International Journal of Forensic Social Sciences [36] and the International Journal of Missing Persons. [37] Members of the Forensic Social Sciences Association include Caroline Sturdy Colls, Stjepan Mestrovic, Gerald Midgley, and Scott Myers-Lipton.

SS Quanza research[edit]

In 1988, David E. Morewitz started to conduct research on the SS Quanza history and submitted Freedom of Information requests to obtain relevant documents. At David E. Morewitz's request, Morewitz began to investigate the SS Quanza history. Morewitz's research showed that his grandfather, Jacob L. Morewitz, had filed a controversial admiralty law libel suit in September 1940 to help rescue refugees fleeing Nazi Europe and were imprisoned on board the Portuguese ship, SS Quanza, which was anchored in Hampton Roads, Virginia, about one year after the controversial SS St. Louis refugees had been turned away from American shores. [38] United States district court Judge Luther Way, in his 1943 opinion, wrote that if it had not been for Jacob L. Morewitz's maritime libel suit, the SS Quanza would have been forced to sail back to Nazi Europe with all the refugees on board. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the United States State Department, including Assistant Secretary of State Breckinridge Long, were very concerned that Nazi and Communist spies were on board the SS Quanza, and they posed a threat to national security. [39] Morewitz found that because of the SS Quanza controversy, the United States government significantly reduced immigration of European refugees escaping Nazi Europe. [40] His research is included in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum “Americans and the Holocaust” Exhibition on the National Mall, Washington, D.C. [41] Blanche Wiesen Cook credits David E. Morewitz and Morewitz with restoring interests in the SS Quanza history. [42] Morewitz wrote the first full-length article on the SS Quanza history in the Summer of 1991. [43] David E. Morewitz and Morewitz helped to establish the Collection Relating to the SS Quanza, 1995-2000, at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Rare Book & Manuscript Library. [44]

Individuals involved in the SS Quanza history include Aristides de Sousa Mendes, Eleanor Roosevelt, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Cordell Hull, Breckinridge Long, Patrick Murphy Malin, Rabbi Stephen Wise, Marshall Field III, > Josephus Daniels, James Grover McDonald, Lazaro Cardenas, and Cecilia Razovsky. SS Quanza passengers included Marcel Dalio, Madeleine Lebeau, and Maurice Goldenhar.

Creative work[edit]

In 1989, Morewitz met Susan Lieberman,[45] Chicago Dramatists Resident Playwright, [46] in a Chicago, Illinois, apartment while doing laundry, and they decided to co-author a play about the SS Quanza history. Steamship Quanza chronicles the lives of a husband-and-wife team of admiralty law attorneys who try to use their legal skills to rescue Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi Europe while imprisoned on board the Portuguese ship, SS Quanza, which was anchored in Hampton Roads, Virginia, in September 1940. Their play, Steamship Quanza, was written in 1991 and premiered at the Chicago Dramatists that same year. [47]

In 1991, Morewitz became curator of the SS Quanza Museum Exhibit, which was built by Daryl Michaels, Chicago, Illinois, interior designer and owner of Interior Design Concepts[48] and includes two scale ship models of the SS Quanza, which were built by the model shipwright Martin Meyer of Chicago, Illinois. [49] The SS Quanza exhibit has been shown at the Virginia Historical Society, University of Richmond, Virginia War Museum, Jewish Museum & Cultural Center, Portsmouth, Virginia, and other institutions. In 2005, Morewitz met the American novelist and poet Victoria Redel, in preparation for her novel about the SS Quanza incident, The Border of Truth (2007). [50] Morewitz is portrayed as the character, Marty Lieberman, a SS Quanza Museum curator, in Victoria Redel's novel, The Border of Truth (2007).

In 2018, Morewitz discussed his SS Quanza research and play with Stephanie Hawthorne, a M.A. student at Old Dominion University, who was doing research on designing a SS Quanza video game. Hawthorne later designed a prototype of a SS Quanza video game as part of her M.A. Thesis at Old Dominion University in 2019. [51]

Morewitz is an Executive Producer of the PBS documentary about the SS Quanza history, Nobody Wants Us (2020). The documentary describes the traumatic lives of three teenagers, Irving Redel, Malvina Schamroth Parnes, and Simone Neufeld (nee. Sabina Goldenhar) and Annette Lachmann, age 3, who were imprisoned on board the SS Quanza and faced being sent back to Nazi Europe and Nazi persecution. Since 2020, Morewitz has been assisting in implementing Holocaust school curriculum related to the SS Quanza controversy.

Media expert[edit]

Since the 1980s, Morewitz has been a media expert. He appeared on the KTVU television channel to discuss a Florida school massacre, mental illness, and gun control. [52] He appeared on the KRON 4 News television channel on October 6, 2017, about an active shooter in Las Vegas, Nevada. [53] Morewitz was interviewed by USA Today on October 31, 2021, about death threats made against public servants. [54] and he was interviewed by the Washington Post on February 19, 1995, about the O.J. Simpson Trial jurors. [55]

Awards, honors, and professional recognition[edit]

In 2001, Morewitz was elected Chair of the Society for the Study of Social Problems Crime and Delinquency Division. In 2003, he won a Society for the Study of Social Problems Outstanding Scholar Book Award for his book, Stalking and Violence. New Patterns of Obsession and Trauma (2003).[56] In 2004, Morewitz won a Society for the Study of Social Problems Outstanding Scholar Book Award for his book, Domestic Violence and Maternal and Child Health (2004). [57] In Spring 2010, he was named San Jose State University Scholar Presenter for his book, Death Threats and Violence. New Research and Clinical Perspectives (2008). [58] In 2010, he was elected Chair of the Society for the Study of Social Problems Law and Society Division. Between June 11, 2012, and September 1, 2012, a solo-author retrospective book and play exhibit was held at the California State University, East Bay Library. He was awarded The George Washington Cup from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, College of Law. Morewitz is a winner of the Top 10 Injury Posters, 128th Annual Meeting of the American Public Health Association, Injury Control & Emergency Health Services Session, Boston, Massachusetts, November 13, 2000. [59] He was inducted into Sigma Xi, the international research honor society for scientists and engineers. In 2010, Morewitz was a Finalist for the Society for the Study of Social Problems, Law & Society Division, Edwin H. Sutherland Book Award. Author Meets Critics Sessions were held at the 62nd Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, San Francisco, California, November 18-20, 2010, and the 59th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Social Problems, San Francisco, California, August 8, 2009, to discuss Morewitz's book, Death Threats and Violence. New Research and Clinical Perspectives (2008). An Author Meets Critics Session was held at the 66th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, San Francisco, California, November 19th-22, 2014, to discuss Morewitz's book, Handbook of Forensic Sociology and Psychology (2014) (Edited with Mark L. Goldstein).

Morewitz was the winner of a 2015 San Jose State University Annual Authors and Artists Award for publishing his book, Kidnapping and Violence. New Research and Clinical Perspectives (2019). Morewitz won a 2016 San Jose State University Annual Authors and Artists Award for his publishing his book, Runaway and Homeless Youth. New Research and Clinical Perspectives (2016). Morewitz's book, Runaway and Homeless Youth. New Research and Clinical Perspectives (2016) was named "Book of the Month" by the Oxford Health Libraries, National Health Service, United Kingdom, October and November 2016. [60] He was a winner of a 2020 San Jose State University, College of Social Sciences, Department of Sociology & Interdisciplinary Social Sciences Research Travel Award, a 2021 San Jose State University, College of Social Sciences, Department of Justice Studies Research Award, and a 2021 Bonner Foundation Fellowship. Morewitz was a California State University, East Bay, Faculty Learning Communities Fellow in Service Learning and Community Engagement [61] in 2011 and was a California State University, East Bay, Faculty Learning Communities Fellow in Technology in 2012. Morewitz was nominated for a 2020 Capital Emmy Award [62] and won a Gold Telly Award [63] for his role as an Executive Producer of the PBS documentary about SS Quanza, Nobody Wants Us. The American Sociological Association has published two articles about Morewitz's work in forensic social sciences. [64][65]

Volunteer activities[edit]

Since the 1980s, Morewitz has volunteered in living history museum activities, including archaeological investigations, environmental preservation, and medical education. Since the 1980s, he has been a Garfield Farm and Inn Museum (LaFox, Illinois) volunteer, [66] docent, [67] donor, and member of the Garfield Farm and Inn Museum 1840s Society. Morewitz was recruited to be a docent, volunteer, and member by Jerome Johnson, Executive Director and founding board member. [68] In the 1990s, he was a volunteer faculty member at San Francisco General Hospital, Behavioral Medicine Clinic, and other hospitals.

Selected publications[edit]

  1. Morewitz, Stephen J. (2019). Kidnapping and Violence. New Research and Clinical Perspectives. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-1-4939-2116-4
  2. Morewitz, Stephen J. (2008). Death Threats and Violence. New Research and Clinical Perspectives. New York: Springer Science+Business Media, LLC. ISBN 978-0-387-76661-4
  3. Morewitz, Stephen J. (2019). Clinical and Psychological Perspectives on Foul Play. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-3-030-26839-8
  4. Morewitz, Stephen J. and Goldstein, Mark L. (Eds.). (2014). Handbook of Forensic Sociology and Psychology. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-1461471776
  5. Morewitz, Stephen J. (2004). Domestic Violence and Maternal and Child Health. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. ISBN ‎978-0306485015
  6. Goldstein, Mark L. and Morewitz, Stephen J. (2011). Chronic Disorders in Children and Adolescents. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-1-4419-9763-0
  7. Morewitz, Stephen J. (2016). Runaway and Homeless Youth. New Research and Clinical Perspectives. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-30861-6
  8. Morewitz, Stephen J. and Goldstein, Mark L. (2007). Aging and Chronic Disorders. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-70856-0
  9. Morewitz, Stephen J. (2006). Chronic Diseases and Health Care. New Trends in Diabetes, Arthritis, Osteoporosis, Fibromyalgia, Low Back Pain, Cardiovascular Disease, and Cancer. New York: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-28778-2
  10. Morewitz, Stephen J. and Sturdy Colls, Caroline. (Eds.). (2016). Handbook of Missing Persons. Switzerland: Springer International Publishing. ISBN 978-3-319-40197-3
  11. Morewitz, Stephen J. (1996). Sexual Harassment and Social Change in American Society. Lanham, MD: Austin & Winfield, Publishers, University Press of America, Inc., Rowman & Littlefield Pub. Group. ISBN 978-1880921760
  12. Morewitz, Stephen J. (2003). Stalking and Violence. New Patterns of Obsession and Trauma. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. ISBN 978-0-306-47365-4
  13. Livingston, Bruce and Morewitz, Stephen J. (1996). The Medical Malpractice Handbook. The Plaintiff. Lanham, MD: Austin & Winfield, Publishers, University Press of America, Inc., Rowman & Littlefield Pub. Inc. ISBN 978-1880921654

Notes[edit]

  1. Stephen J. Morewitz's selected biographical information and list of books are at the following URL link: https://g.co/kgs/f3Hbty
  2. Morewitz has three forensic certifications: Certified Criminal Justice Specialist (C.C.J.S., Cert. # 01121), January 2018-present, The National Association of Forensic Counselors. Accredited by: National Commission for Certifying Agencies; Certified Clinical Psychopathologist (C.C.P., Cert. # 01121), February 1998-present, The National Association of Forensic Counselors. Accredited by: National Commission for Certifying Agencies; Certified Professional Sociological Practitioner (C.P.S.P., Cert. # 01121), February 1997-present, The National Association of Forensic Counselors. Accredited by: National Commission for Certifying Agencies.
  3. Information about Stephen J. Morewitz at the San Jose State University, Justice Studies Department, is available at the following URL: https://www.sjsu.edu/justicestudies/about-us/directory/morewitz-steven.php
  4. Information about Stephen J. Morewitz, San Jose State University, Department of Sociology and Interdisciplinary Social Sciences is at the following URL link: https://www.sjsu.edu/people/stephen.morewitz/
  5. Information about Stephen J. Morewitz, California State University, East Bay, Department of Public Health, is profiled at the following URL: https://www.csueastbay.edu/directory/profiles/ph/morewitzstephen.html
  6. Morewitz, Stephen J. (1983). "Medicine, Social Control, and Social Change: A Case Study of Michael Reese Hospital and the Chicago Jewish Community." Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Sociology, University of Chicago. http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/554928
  7. Leslie Sandlow was the Director of the School of Health Sciences, Educational Development Unit, and Senior Vice President for Academic and Medical Affairs at Michael Reese Hospital. Dr. Leslie Sandlow. Obituary. https://today.uic.edu/obituary-dr-leslie-sandlow
  8. Anthony Dintcho, was Dean of Academic Affairs at the California School of Podiatric Medicine.
  9. James Stebbings Collection. University of Colorado Boulder, University Libraries. https://archives.colorado.edu/repositories/2/resources/1119
  10. United States Environmental Protection Agency. (no date). Ottawa Radiation Areas, Ottawa, IL. https://cumulis.epa.gov/supercpad/cursites/csitinfo.cfm?id=0500634
  11. American Sociological Association. (February 1989). “Sociologist Found Litigation Firm.” Footnotes, Vol. 17, No. 2. (https://www.asanet.org/sites/default/files/asa.02.1989_0.pdf)
  12. Young, Quentin. (2013, September 3). [Everybody In, Nobody Out: Memoirs of Rebel Without a Pause.] Friday Harbor, WA: Copernicus Healthcare. ISBN-10:0988799669 https://store.hesperian.org/prod/Everybody_In_Nobody_Out.html
  13. Franklin J. Medio, President, Consulting Services for the Health Professions, Charleston, South Carolina, is a professional educator with a solo, private consulting practice. He is a former Associate Dean for Graduate Medical Education at the Medical University of South Carolina
  14. HR Classroom (2006, February). "EEOC Settles Sexual Harassment Case for $350,000; Training Also Required." https://nationwide.hrcare.com/article.aspx/38/460/
  15. Rosenfeld, Jeffrey P. (1998). "Will Contests, Legacies of Aging and Social Change." In Miller, Jr., R.K. and McNamee, Stephen J. (Eds.). Inheritance and Wealth in America. (pp. 173-191). New York: Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.
  16. Corboy, Philip H. (2012, January 1). Final Arguments. Portland, OR: Trial Guides LLC ISBN-10:1934833584 https://www.trialguides.com/products/final-arguments
  17. The United Press International. (2001, November 6). “Man Suspected of Nazi Past.” https://www.upi.com/Top_News/2001/11/06/Man-suspected-of-Nazi-past/50361005069580/
  18. Feigin, Judy and Richard, Mark M. (Editor) (December 2006).The Office of Special Investigations: Striving for Accountability in the Aftermath of the Holocaust (Report). U.S. Department of Justice, Criminal Division. p.6. https://www.justice.gov/sites/default/files/criminal/legacy/2011/03/14/12-2008osu-accountability.pdf
  19. Muzzey v. Kerr-McGee Chemical Corp. 921 F.Supp. 511 (N.D. Ill, 1996) https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp/921/508/1988419/
  20. Patrick J. Kenneally, Thomas Louis Trinley, and Shawn A. Warner, Patrick J. Kenneally, Ltd., Chicago, Illinois, were attorneys on the Muzzey v. Kerr-McGee Chemical Corp. case. Muzzey v. Kerr-McGee Chemical Corp. 921 F.Supp. 511 (N.D. Ill, 1996) https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp/921/508/1988419/
  21. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (no date). Superfund Site: Kerr-McGee (Residential Areas) West Chicago. https://cumulis.epa.gov/supercpad/cursites/csitinfo.cfm?id=0500762
  22. Meyer, Erin and Chicago Tribune Reporter. (2012, January 21). "40 Years Later, Toxic Waste Still Haunts DuPage County." Chicago Tribune. https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-met-superfund-cleanup-20120118-story.html
  23. Chevedden v. The California Province of the Society of Jesus
  24. Rey Mordecai Hassan, Hassan Law Firm, San Francisco, California, was one of the attorneys on the Chevedden v. The California Province of the Society of Jesus case.
  25. Mercury News. (2007, December 13). "Jesuits Settle Suit over Los Gatos Priest Who Killed Himself." https://www.mercurynews.com › 2007/12/13 › jesuits-s...
  26. The United Press International. (1989, March 30). "Fabiano Found Innocent of Sex Abuse Charges." https://www.upi.com/Archives/1989/03/30/Fabiano-found-innocent-of-sex-abuse-charges/9507607237200/
  27. Chicago Tribune. Embattled Nurseries becoming a cause. Chicago Tribune https://www.chicagotribune.com › news › ct-xpm-1987-0...The defendant, Sandra Fabiano, 40 years old at the time, was a longtime resident of a southwest suburb of Chicago, Illinois, and had purchased Mother Goose. She also was the owner of The Kid Stop.
  28. Stephen M. Komie was one of the attorneys on this case, which was appealed to the Illinois Appellate Court: Fabiano and Fabiano v. City of Palos Hills, et al., Appellate Court of Illinois, First District, First Division, No. 1-00-1266, Decided November 25, 2002. https://casetext.com/case/fabiano-v-city-of-palos-hills-1
  29. Levy, H.B., Markovic, J., Kalinowski, M.N., Ahart, S., and Torres, H. (1995, September 1). “Child Sexual Abuse Interviews: The Use of Anatomic Dolls and the Reliability of Information.” Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 10(3).
  30. de Young, Mary. (2004). The Day Care Ritual Abuse Moral Panic. McFarland. ISBN 0786418303, 9780786418305
  31. U.S. Department of Justice, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. (no date). National Incidence Studies of Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and Thrownaway Children (NISMART) 4. https://ojjdp.ojp.gov/research-and-statistics/research-projects/%20national-incidence-studies-missing-abducted-runaway-and-thrownaway-children-nismart-4/overview
  32. intelligenceonline.com. (2021 November 5). “Gendarmerie Intelligence Service Goes into Business Protection in the Absence of a Greater Counter-terrorism Role.” IntelligenceOnline. https://www.intelligenceonline.com/government-intelligence/2021/05/11/gendarmerie-intelligence-service-goes-into-business-protection-in-the-absence-of-a-greater-counter-terrorism-role,109665062-art
  33. Calleja, David. (2010 September 7). “The Diaries of My Lai Orphan Tran Van Duc.” Foreign Policy Journal. https://www.foreignpolicyjournal.com/2010/09/07/the-diaries-of-my-lai-orphan-tran-van-duc/
  34. Herzog-Evan, Martine (2014). French Reentry Courts and Rehabilitation: Mister Jourdain of Desistance. Paris: L'Harmattan. ISBN-10:2343024618
  35. The Forensic Social Scientist, Official Newsletter of the Forensic Social Sciences Association. ISSN 2771-4942; Print ISSN 2771-4934
  36. International Journal of Forensic Social Sciences; Online ISSN 2771-2990; Print ISSN 2771-2982 https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/ijfss/
  37. International Journal of Missing Persons Online ISSN 2769-7045; Print ISSN 2769-7037 https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/ijmp/
  38. Respondents' Exhibit 3. Rand et al. v. Steamship "QUANZA," U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia, Luther Way, U.S. District Judge, Decided January 22, 1943.
  39. Israel, Fred L. (Ed.). (1966, January 1). The War Diary of Breckinridge Long: Selections from the Years, 1939-1944. Omaha, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ASIN:B000PXB8ZS https://www.worldcat.org/title/war-diary-of-breckinridge-long-selections-from-the-years-1939-1944/oclc/16738434
  40. Israel, Fred L. (Ed.). (1966, January 1). The War Diary of Breckinridge Long: Selections from the Years, 1939-1944. Omaha, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ASIN:B000PXB8ZS https://www.worldcat.org/title/war-diary-of-breckinridge-long-selections-from-the-years-1939-1944/oclc/16738434
  41. U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum (no date). Americans and the Holocaust Exhibition. National Mall. Washington, D.C. https://exhibitions.ushmm.org/americans-and-the-holocaust
  42. Wiesen Cook, Blanche. (2016). Eleanor Roosevelt, Volume 3: The War Years and After, 1939-1962. New York: Viking and and Penguin. Blanche Wiesen Cook credits David E. Morewitz and Morewitz for reviving the SS Quanza story in Footnote Number 312, p. 622. ISBN-10:0143109626
  43. Morewitz, Stephen J. (1991, Summer). "The Saving of the S.S. Quanza." William & Mary Magazine, Vol. 59, pp. 25-27; cited at the Virginia Museum of History and Culture website: https://virginiahistory.org/learn/jacob-l-jl-morewitz.
  44. Collection Relating to the SS Quanza, 1995-2000, at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Rare Book & Manuscript Library. https://archon.library.illinois.edu/rbml/index.php?p=collections/findingaid&id=448&q=&rootcontentid=101925
  45. Barnidge, Mary Shen. (1991, June 20), “Steamship Quanza.” Chicago Reader. https://chicagoreader.com/arts-culture/steamship-quanza/
  46. Plunka, Gene A. (2012). Staging Holocaust Resistance. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ASIN:‎ B009C8WD8I https://link.springer.com/book/10.1057/9781137000613
  47. Barnidge, Mary Shen. (1991, June 20), “Steamship Quanza.” Chicago Reader. https://chicagoreader.com/arts-culture/steamship-quanza/
  48. Chicago Tribune. (2002, November 10). "A Sit-Down Affair." - Chicago Tribunehttps://www.chicagotribune.com › news › ct-xpm-2002-1...
  49. Martin Meyer, Midwest Model Shipwrights. see the following link: http://www.shipmodelsocietyofnewjersey.org/important-links.php.
  50. Redel, Victoria. (2007). The Border of Truth. New York: Penguin Random House, pp. 142-143, 171-173. ISBN-10:1582434069 https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/674471/the-border-of-truth-by-victoria-redel/
  51. Hawthorne, Stephanie. "Harbored: Like Museums, Videogames Aren't Neutral" (2019). Master of Arts (MA), Thesis, Humanities, Old Dominion University, DOI: 10.25777/176r-k992 https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/humanities_etds/21
  52. KTVU television channel interview. https://archive.org/details/KTVU_20180220_170000_KTVU_Mornings_on_2_at_9am
  53. KRON 4 News television channel interview. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YpHSiskf078
  54. Interview in USA Today. https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/10/31/death-threats-public-servants-divided-nation/8570943002/?gnt-cfr=1
  55. Interview in the Washington Post. https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1995/02/19/simpson-trial-jurors-study-in-inscrutability/d6d342dd-b54d-4e61-95a3-7c3482eafc5c/
  56. Morewitz, Stephen J. (2003). Stalking and Violence. New Patterns of Obsession and Trauma. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. ISBN 978-0-306-47365-4. The Society for the Study of Social Problems's annual award categories are listed at: https://www.sssp1.org/index.cfm/m/296/Student_Paper_Competitions_and_Outstanding_Scholarship_Awards/
  57. Morewitz, Stephen J. (2004). Domestic Violence and Maternal and Child Health. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. ISBN ‎978-0306485015. The Society for the Study of Social Problems's annual award categories are listed at: https://www.sssp1.org/index.cfm/m/296/Student_Paper_Competitions_and_Outstanding_Scholarship_Awards/
  58. Information about the San Jose State University Scholar Series presentation can be found at: c:/users/morewitz/Downloads/MorewitzOL.pdf
  59. American Public Health Association Program Listing. Injury Control & Emergency Health Services Session. Boston, MA, November 13, 2000. https://apha.confex.com/apha/128am/techprogram/session_3821.htm
  60. Oxford Health Libraries. https://www.oxfordhealth.nhs.uk/library/
  61. Faculty Learning Community. https://www.csueastbay.edu/dsj/highlights/ditl/index.html
  62. National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, National Capital Chesapeake Chapter. (2021, June). 2020 Emmy Award Nominations and Emmy Recipients. https://www.capitalemmys.tv/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/63rd-Capital-Emmys-Nominations-and-Emmy-Recipients.pdf
  63. The Telly Awards. (no date). (Gold) (2020). Nobody Wants Us. https://www.tellyawards.com/winners/2020/television/general-documentary-individual/nobody-wants-us/236201/
  64. American Sociological Association. (February 1989). “Sociologist Found Litigation Firm.” Footnotes, Vol. 17, No. 2. (https://www.asanet.org/sites/default/files/asa.02.1989_0.pdf)
  65. American Sociological Association. (February 2010). “Doing Forensic/Litigation Sociology.” Footnotes, Volume 38, No. 2. (https://www.asanet.org/sites/default/files/fn_2010_02.pdf)
  66. Rodkin, Dennis. (1997, August 3). Morewitz is photographed in the Chicago Tribune article: "Vegetable Growers Celebrate the Past." Chicago Tribune, Home 6 Section 15. Photograph caption: "In period costume, volunteer Stephen Morewitz and Jerome Johnson (in the background), executive director of the Garfield Farm Museum, tend to the garden's 19th Century vegetable garden."
  67. Morewitz, Garfield Farm and Inn Museum (LaFox, Illinois) docent, was interviewed in the May 1991 Chicago Tribune article: ”Kane County Menagerie is a Breed Apart.” https://www.chicagotribune.com › news › ct-xpm-1991-0...
  68. Chicago Tribune. (1996, July 27). "Pioneering Period Won't End at Farm." https://www.chicagotribune.com › news › ct-xpm-1996-0...


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