Johnson, Webbert & Beard, LLP

Johnson, Webbert & Beard, LLP Johnson, Webbert & Beard, LLP serves clients in Maine in employment rights, civil rights, discrimination, and harassment, including class actions.

Johnson, Webbert & Beard, LLP serves clients in Portland, Topsham, Thomaston, and throughout Maine, focusing primarily on civil and employment rights. The firm is the largest of its kind in the state, handling complex litigation that includes class action lawsuits. Its team shares 100 years of combined experience, including record-setting results. Team members have achieved national recognition fo

r their legal proficiency as trial lawyers by the Best Lawyers in America and Super Lawyers. Typical cases include wrongful termination, discrimination, harassment, and claims under the Maine Human Rights Commission, EEOC, and Title VII. Additional services include aviation law, personal injury, professional licensing, and malpractice.

https://themainemonitor.org/immigration-agents-identification-concerns/David Webbert, a civil rights attorney in Maine, ...
03/05/2026

https://themainemonitor.org/immigration-agents-identification-concerns/

David Webbert, a civil rights attorney in Maine, said that federal agents’ refusal to identify themselves can be dangerous, as citizens may unknowingly resist officers, or it can make it easier to impersonate officers.
“If you don’t know who they are, you can’t hold them accountable. That destroys the rule of law,“ Webbert said. “Secret police is not consistent with the rule of law. It’s consistent with a dictatorship.”

Amid a national debate, Maine law enforcement identification practices are guided by individual department policies, not legal requirements.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yah0gZIlOasPilot episode of Rescuing the Rule of LawPanel discussion on How ICE Enforcem...
03/05/2026

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yah0gZIlOas

Pilot episode of Rescuing the Rule of Law
Panel discussion on How ICE Enforcement is Eroding Due Process
Hosted by Roger Katz

Guest Panel

Carol Garvan
she/her/hers
Legal Director
American Civil Liberties Union of Maine

Sue Roche, Esq.
she/her/hers
Executive Director
Immigrant Legal Advocacy Project (ILAP)

David Webbert
he/him/his
Civil Rights Attorney, Johnson Webbert & Beard
Co-Founder, Maine Lawyers for the Rule of Law

Pilot episode of Rescuing the Rule of LawPanel discussion on How ICE Enforcement is Eroding Due ProcessHosted by Roger KatzGuest Panel Carol Garvanshe/her/he...

01/27/2026

A group of Maine attorneys led an "emergency" march through Portland's East Bayside neighborhood Friday to protest what they say is the disregard by ICE agents for the "rule of law."

Immigration and Customs Enforcement said it has arrested more than 100 people in Maine this week as part of an ongoing, large-scale operation.

Jennifer Wriggins is a retired University of Maine law school professor who joined the protest dressed as the Statue of Liberty.

"There should be accountability and there should be rules that actually follow the Constitution, and I'm concerned that neither of those things is happening right now," she said. "The Justice Department is being used as a personal enforcement tool of the President, and that is contrary to what we think of as the basic rule of law."

After seeing a memo that suggests ICE agents can forcibly enter homes without a judicial warrant, Wriggins says she's worried about the loss of Fourth Amendment constitutional protections against illegal search and seizure and what that will mean going forward.

The memo, which was reported by the Associated Press and other national outlets, appears to contradict longstanding guidance that immigration lawyers have been giving to clients for decades: that agents don't have a right to enter a place of residence without a warrant.

When asked about the memo during a press conference at Portland City Hall Thursday, Maine U.S. Sen. Angus King called the memo "blatantly unconstitutional."

"I think immigration laws should be enforced, but not in this way," said Wriggins. "I'm a lawyer, and I believe in the US Constitution and the rule of law, meaning that people are supposed to be treated equally under the law and the Constitution is supposed to be followed."

David Webbert helped to organize the march. A Maine-based attorney and member of Maine Lawyers for the Rule of Law, he said the group chose the East Bayside neighborhood for their march because it is actively being targeted by ICE "to let residents know they have their back."

Webbert says he and other volunteer lawyers with Maine ACLU have a good track record of getting those detained by ICE released, but he said, in these cases, time is of the essence.

"The judge gets to say, 'Hey, do you have a good reason for holding this person?' And if they don't, they have to release them. And we're winning those cases in a very large majority," he said. "But if they move the person out of state before we can do it, then we can't sue in Maine, and they take them to Texas or places that they think the system is going to be more favorable to them. So it is, it is important to be quick."

Webbert says the group has plans to file lawsuits against ICE and individual ICE agents as soon as next week.

"I want to sue them for money. So, if you work for ICE and you break the law, we're going to, we're going to try to get the legal system to make you pay money for it."

✍️ Molly Enking/Maine Public
📸 Tulley Hescock/Maine Public

Federal Court in Boston Rules that IBM Broke Federal Law By Trying to Shorten the Deadline for Suing It over Age Discrim...
10/17/2025

Federal Court in Boston Rules that IBM Broke Federal Law By Trying to Shorten the Deadline for Suing It over Age Discrimination

BOSTON — Judge Angel Kelley on the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts ruled in favor of an IBM worker who was let go because of his age along with about 20,000 other workers as part of discriminatory mass layoffs. Judge Kelley held that his age discrimination claim is timely even though it was not filed by a contractual deadline imposed by IBM. The judge also found that the statute of limitations in the federal Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) is a “substantive” right that cannot be shortened by contract.

“IBM’s top executives covered up their underhanded scheme to fire thousands of workers because of their age and keep them from suing over it,” said David Webbert, the lead counsel for Mr. Rumsey who successfully argued the case to the Court. “It is long overdue for IBM to be held accountable and for Mr. Rumsey and others like him to get the justice they deserve.”
The plaintiff is represented by Public Justice; Johnson & Webbert, LLP; Cohen, Milstein, Sellers & Toll; Gibbs Mura; and Solidarity Law.

More information on our website at:

IBM former employee

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lK4VAokZNNUOctober 14 Public Forum - Standing up for the Rule of Law: How do we save it?
10/17/2025

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lK4VAokZNNU

October 14 Public Forum - Standing up for the Rule of Law: How do we save it?

Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

Attorney David Webbert Files lawsuit against Bangor hospital on behalf of doctor who was fired for reporting safety conc...
06/23/2023

Attorney David Webbert Files lawsuit against Bangor hospital on behalf of doctor who was fired for reporting safety concerns.

https://www.bangordailynews.com/2023/06/16/news/bangor/brenda-gowesky-bangor-hospital-lawsuit-joam40zk0w/

Dr. Brenda A. Gowesky, 68, of Alexandria, Virginia, and formerly Camden, previously worked as an emergency room physician at Northern Light Eastern Maine Medical Center.

In May 2017, she was fired after 10 years on the job, the complaint said. The following January, Gowesky filed a claim with the Maine Human Rights Commission alleging that she was fired after reporting concern about patient safety in the emergency room of the Bangor hospital.
..

Gowesky’s attorney, David Webbert of Topsham, said that the doctor’s lawsuit is an example of how much influence a large health care organization like Northern Light Health can wield.

“It’s a huge monopoly,” Webbers said of the organization. “It’s a tough situation for any doctor who gets on the wrong side of Northern Light.”

Dr. Brenda A. Gowesky claims she was fired after reporting concern about patient safety in the emergency room of the Bangor hospital.

Attorney Ryan Schmitz represents Black man as all-white jury determines whether his termination from EMMC was discrimina...
10/27/2022

Attorney Ryan Schmitz represents Black man as all-white jury determines whether his termination from EMMC was discrimination

The hospital has denied discriminating against David Ako-Annan and said that turnover was high at the Orono facility he was managing.

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