In 1968, the NECLC reorganized as a membership organization, with the members controlling the organization's policies. He won a $25,000 judgment in 1983. In the 1980s, the NECLC successfully represented a Pennsylvania
child welfare worker who had
exposed the illegal practices of his employers in
Prochaska v. Pediaczko (1981). After the U.S. Department of State denied a visa to Hortensia Allende, the widow of assassinated Chilean president
Salvador Allende, in 1983, the NCLC won decisions in U.S. District Court and in the
First Circuit Court of Appeals in 1988 that the government's action violated the
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952. In June 1990, the NECLC file suit against the Department of the Treasury which was continuing to ban the importation of paintings, drawings and sculpture from Cuba, despite exemptions provided for "informational materials" in the Free Trade in Ideas Act of 1988. Plaintiffs included
Sandra Levinson, director of the Center for Cuban Studies,
Dore Ashton, professor of art history at Cooper Union, and
Mario Salvadori, professor emeritus of architecture and engineering at Columbia University. The Treasury modified its regulations in response to the suit on April 1, 1991. In 1998, the NECLC merged into the
Center for Constitutional Rights. ==Awards==