Hot shot lawyer joins fight to save Massapequa ‘Chiefs’ name out of love for hometown: ‘That’s our identity’
A high-powered lawyer joined the fight to keep the Massapequa Chiefs name and dissolve a state ban on Native American imagery in schools — and he worked pro bono out of hometown pride.
Nashville, Tennessee-based Oliver Roberts, who grew up in town before graduating from Harvard Law, stepped up in the 11th hour to join a reinvigorated legal battle against the Empire State’s logo ban.
“I think Massapequa is a great place, great people — a place of great values. I just thought it was my way of being able to give back,” Roberts, who played soccer and basketball in the Massapequa school system as a boy, told The Post.
“That’s what this is really all about — the state attacking towns like Massapequa, which just are towns that care about their local values,” said Roberts, a 29-year-old constitutional lawyer who successfully took on the IRS twice in court.
Roberts kept up with the Massapequa school district’s initial, lengthy lawsuit against the state Board of Regents after it imposed the ban in 2023, complete with threats of the funding penalties if schools didn’t comply.
