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Mercer Law School hosts annual Law Review Symposium
MACON - Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law hosted its annual Law Review Symposium Nov. 5-6, bringing together the top legal writing scholars in the nation in celebration of 25 years of the Legal Writing Institute. Mercer Law School is home of the LWI, a non-profit organization comprised of more than 2,600 members. LWI is dedicated to improving legal writing by providing a forum for discussion and scholarship about legal writing, analyses and research. LWI is the second largest organization of law professors in the United States.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 11/11/09)
 
Marshall to Speak at Mercer Veterans Day Ceremony
MACON – United States Rep. Jim Marshall (D-Macon) will be the keynote speaker at a Mercer University Veterans Day Ceremony on Wednesday at the Walter F. George School of Law. The event begins at noon on the lawn outside of the Law School (rain location: Moot Court Room inside the Law School). The event is co-sponsored by Veterans Associations at Mercer University and Mercer Law School.
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(Posted: 11/10/09)
 
Roundtable discussion explores issues surrounding health care reform
MACON – Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law is hosting a roundtable discussion in November on health care reform, featuring panelists with expertise in law, medicine, political science and hospital administration. The event, titled “Interdisciplinary Roundtable on Health Care Reform,” is scheduled for 3:30 – 5 p.m. Nov. 3 at Mercer Law School, 1021 Georgia Ave. The panelists include Don Faulk, CEO, Medical Center of Central Georgia; Carol Babcock, Medical Center of Central Georgia; Dr. Dick Elliott, Mercer University Medical School; Chris Grant, political scientist, Mercer University; and Bill Hervey, adjunct professor, Mercer Law School.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 10/27/09)
 
Four law students named winners of 'banana' contest
Four Mercer Law students were crowned winners in the13th annual Torts Banana Day held Sept. 30. As a part of Law Professor Richard Creswell’s torts class, the contest is a fun way of studying how negligence is proven in slip-in-fall cases involving banana peels. On the day of the contest, the class was about burdens of pleading, production and persuasion, and how testimony and physical evidence can be used to satisfy those burdens. To win, students enter bananas into four categories: Most Beautiful Banana, Ugliest Banana, Tiniest Banana, and Biggest Banana. The winners were: Danielle Brewer -Most Beautiful Banana; Cam Rogers - Ugliest Banana; Wiley Jones - Tiniest Banana; and Amy Fletcher – Biggest Banana.
(Posted: 10/08/09)
 
Law School Dean Daisy Hurst Floyd To Rejoin Faculty Full-Time
MACON — Daisy Hurst Floyd, dean of Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law since 2004, has announced that she will step down as dean at the end of this academic year to become University Professor of Law and Ethical Formation.  “Daisy Floyd has become one of our most respected deans and academic leaders. I have come to admire her leadership skills, respect her strength of character, and value her friendship and her many and varied contributions to the life of the University,” said President William D. Underwood. “While the University will be poorer for its loss of her leadership as dean of the School of Law, we will be enriched by the contributions she will make in her exciting new role as University Professor of Law and Ethical Formation.”
Read more . . .
(Posted: 09/23/09)
 
President Obama nominates Mercer Law alum to be U.S. district attorney
WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama on Friday announced that he had nominated Michael J. Moore, a former chief assistant district attorney in Macon, to be the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Georgia. Moore is a 1993 Mercer Law School graduate. Currently, G.F. “Pete” Peterman III, a 1976 Mercer Law School alum, is serving as acting U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Georgia.
(Posted: 09/18/09)
 
Mercer Law students studio guests on "Nancy Grace" show

ATLANTA - Six Mercer Law School students were studio guests Wednesday on "Nancy Grace," appearing before a live national audience during the last segment of the popular legal analysis show. Nancy Grace, a 1984 Mercer Law School grad, invited the law students to be studio guests after they met during a recent Macon book signing for Grace's recent New York Times best seller "The 11th Victim."

See YouTube video clip

More About "The 11th Victim"

(Posted: 09/18/09)
 
Brazilian judges visit Mercer Law School in intercultural learning program
MACON, Ga. – In a unique intercultural and educational judicial program, 17 federal judges from Brazil will participate in a 10-day experiential learning visit at Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law to better understand the United States legal system. During the visit, held Sept. 15 – 24, the judges will attend law classes and panel discussions with Mercer Law School faculty and students, as well as area judges and lawyers. Among other events, the Brazilian judges will attend panel discussions on comparative law, legal culture, legal education and legal discourse in the United States. The judges are scheduled to visit the Macon federal court, Georgia state courts, and the state appellate and Supreme courts in Atlanta.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 09/16/09)
 
Mercer Law names winners of the Adam A. Milani Disability Law Writing Competition

A law student at the University of California, Berkeley, and another law student at the University of South Carolina are the winners of the Adam A. Milani Disability Law Writing Competition, a national competition sponsored by Mercer Law School and the ABA Commission on Mental and Physical Disability Law. Jesse Ferrantella of UC-Berkeley School of Law and Clark Lacy of USC School of Law have been named the winners of the competition honoring the work of the late Professor Adam Milani, a former Mercer Law School faculty member and a passionate advocate for disability rights.

Mercer Law School congratulates Jesse Ferrantella and Clark Lacy.

(Posted: 09/15/09)
 
Law graduate named Associate AD at UNLV
LAS VEGAS - Christian Hardigree, a 1996 Mercer Law School graduate, has been named associate athletics director for community development and special projects at UNLV. As an associate athletics director, Hardigree is a member of the department's senior staff and will focus on sport specific fundraising initiatives, community marketing projects and will also assist with other special projects. The announcement was made Aug. 31 by UNLV Interim Athletics Director Jerry Koloskie.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 09/09/09)
 
Recent graduate takes second seat in Atlanta murder trial

Just three months out of law school, Mercer Law alumna Katie Powers is helping to prosecute a highly publicized murder case involing the death of an Atlanta college student. Powers '09 was chair of Mercer Law School's 2008-09 Moot Court Board and led last year's mock trial team to first place in a national mock trial competition, where she was named "Best Advocate" and "Best Cross Examiner."

 

(Posted: 09/01/09)
 
Mercer Law students help repair home of 90-year-old
From WMAZ
 
MACON - A group of Mercer law students helped a 90-year old woman give her house a face lift. The students partnered with Rebuilding Macon in efforts to paint and replace boards at Nancy Hardy's home.  A few times a year the students take part in a rebuilding project.
 
(Posted: 09/01/09)
 
CNN's Nancy Grace '84 hosts Aug. 22 book signing in Macon

Nancy Grace, who recently published her first mystery novel The Eleventh Victim, is scheduled to give a book signing in Macon at Books A Million at 1 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 22. Grace, a 1981 Mercer University grad and 1984 Mercer Law School grad, is host of the CNN Headline News legal analysis show "Nancy Grace." Her new book is No. 6 on The New York Times bestsellers list of fiction. Books A Million is located at 2115 Eisenhower Parkway. For more information, contact the book store at 478.755.8885.

More about Grace's new book 

(Posted: 08/20/09)
 
New student orientation concluded on Friday

More than 140 first-year students at Mercer Law School began orientation Wednesday, the first step in a three-year journey toward becoming lawyers. The 1L class of 2012 comes from colleges and universities from across the nation: from Cornell to Hampton to Georgia Tech. Orientation ended Friday with a keynote address from the Honorable Martha C. Christian, Superior Court Chief Judge, Macon Circuit.   

(Posted: 08/10/09)
 
Beloved alum, professor passes at the age of 91
MACON - James C. Rehberg ’48, Professor Emeritus of Law, died early Wednesday morning at the age of 91.  He was a beloved colleague and mentor to many. Visitation will be from 5-7 p.m. Friday at Hart’s Mortuary Downtown, and the funeral will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at First Baptist Church of Christ.
(Posted: 08/05/09)
 
Mercer Law grad appointed interim U.S. Attorney
From The (Macon) Telegraph
The Department of Justice announced Thursday the appointment of G.F. “Pete” Peterman III as acting U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Georgia, officials said. Peterman will replace Max Wood, who resigned last month. Peterman, a graduate of the Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law, began working with the U.S. Attorney’s office in 1990 as a criminal assistant U.S. Attorney.
(Posted: 07/31/09)
 
Mercer law student wins national labor and employment law writing competition
WASHINGTON, D.C. (July 20, 2009)Mercer Law School student Erica L. Hickey has been named winner of the College of Labor and Employment Lawyers’ Second Annual Writing Competition for Law Students. Hickey, whose paper was titled Gomez-Perez V. Potter - Yet Another Step Away From Textualist Interpretation Of Employment Discrimination Statutes, received a $1,500 first-place prize. In addition to being posted on the CLEL’s Web site, Hickey’s article will be distributed with the CLEL’s newsletter, which is seen by over 1,000 fellows practicing in the United States and Canada.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 07/30/09)
 
Two Mercer Law alums on short list to fill vacancy on Georgia Supreme Court

Two Mercer Law School graduates, Alcovy Judicial Circuit Superior Court Judge Samuel D. Ozburn 76, and Henry County State Court Chief Judge Benjamin W. Studdard III 84, are among nine nominees to fill a vacant seat on the Georgia Supreme Court. The vacancy was created by the resignation of Chief Justice Leah Ward Sears.

To see a judicial questionnaire of the nominees, click here.

 

Read more . . .
(Posted: 07/13/09)
 
Lawyers taught ‘soul of criminal defense’ in institute at Mercer Law School
MACON, Ga. - About 250 criminal defense lawyers from across the nation will participate in the 26th Annual Trial Practice Institute of the National Criminal Defense College at Mercer's Walter F. George School of Law. The institute, which starts Monday (June 15) and runs through June 27, is designed to enhance the trial-advocacy skills of criminal defense attorneys who largely represent the poor.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 06/14/09)
 
Oxford Univ. Press publishes upcoming work by Mercer patent law expert
Mercer Law professor David Hricik's recent book titled, Patent Ethics: Prosecution, has been published by Oxford University Press and is available on the publisher’s Web site at www.oup.com.  The work is co-authored by Mercedes Meyer, partner at DrinkerBiddle. Stanford Law professor Mark Lemley and John Dzienkowski, professor at the University of Texas School of Law, praised Hricik and the book: “David Hricik is the nation's leading expert on patent ethics,” Lemley said. Dzienkowski called the book “sophisticated” and one that would benefit judges, academics and practicing lawyers.  
Read more . . .
(Posted: 06/03/09)
 
Graduates: 'pursue truth … and above all, seek justice'

MACON, Ga. - Invoking the names of great literary and legal giants as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Walt Whitman and U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, the Honorable Judge Edward H. Johnson of the Court of Appeals of Georgia offered an extraordinarily powerful message to the 2009 Mercer Law School graduates: “…pursue truth … and above all, seek justice.” In closing, Presiding Judge Johnson urged the 150-plus graduates to remember four things: “You’re part of a noble profession; “The U.S. judicial system is worth defending and preserving”; “Strive to find balance in your life”; and “Treat your clients with respect, compassion and a sense of humanity.”

(Posted: 05/18/09)
 
Students elect first Asian American woman SBA president
MACON, Ga. – Rizza Charmaine Palmares, a rising third-year law student from Savannah, Ga., was recently elected president of the Student Bar Association at Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law. Palmares, whose parents are from the Philippines and who considers herself Asian American, is the first Asian American woman elected as SBA president at Mercer Law School. Among other important functions, the SBA acts as the voice of the student body at the law school.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 05/12/09)
 
SBA students helping Rebuild Macon one house at a time
In March, Mercer Law School’s Student Bar Association’s Community Service committee worked with Rebuilding Macon to help a local disabled Macon citizen rebuild his home. The citizen, Tyrone Johnson, who is in a wheelchair, is in his early 20s and just started college. Over 20 Mercer Law students painted Johnson’s entire home.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 05/12/09)
 
State appeals court judge to deliver commencement address at Mercer Law School

MACON, Ga. – Presiding Judge Edward H. Johnson of the Court of Appeals of Georgia is scheduled to deliver the keynote address on May 16 for the 2009 commencement exercises at the Mercer University Walter F. George School of Law. More than 150 law students are scheduled to be hooded and receive the Juris Doctor degree from Mercer Law School. The commencement ceremony begins at 6 p.m. and will be held at the University Center on the campus of Mercer University.

Read more . . .
(Posted: 05/07/09)
 
Mercer’s Habeas Project A Lifeline for the Wrongfully Imprisoned

MACON, Ga. - The Habeas Project distinguishes Mercer as the first and, so far, only program in Georgia to handle non-capital, post-conviction cases on a strictly pro bono basis. To people who are wrongfully imprisoned, it represents a legal lifeline that could lead to a new trial.

Read more . . .
(Posted: 05/06/09)
 
2009 senior awards presented during Senior Dinner
Fourteen Mercer Law School seniors received awards during the 2009 Senior Dinner as the law school faculty and staff congratulated the more than 150 seniors scheduled to graduate on May 16. The senior dinner was held April 27 at the University Center.
Click on the link below for a list of the award recipients.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 04/29/09)
 
Mercer’s Phi Alpha Delta law fraternity initiates Judge Sara Doyle ’94 as honorary member

MACON, Ga. - Georgia Court of Appeals Judge Sara Doyle, a 1994 Mercer Law School graduate, was initiated April 20 as an honorary member of the law school’s Fish chapter of Phi Alpha Delta.

Read more . . .
(Posted: 04/28/09)
 
Moot court team earns 2nd place in Buffalo competition

A moot court team at Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law were finalist in the Buffalo Herbert Wechsler Criminal Law Moot Court Competition, finishing second in a field of 26 teams. The event was held March 28 at Buffalo School of Law.

Read more . . .
(Posted: 04/10/09)
 
Mock trial team wins 1st place in national ABA competition
In remarkable fashion, a mock trial team at Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law captured first place in the American Bar Association’s National Criminal Justice Trial Advocacy Competition, defeating Harvard and the University of Houston law schools in the semifinals and finals respectively. In addition, third-year Mercer law student Katie Powers was named the competition’s "Best Advocate" and "Best Cross-Examiner." By winning the overall championship and individual honors, Mercer Law School took home the competition’s three most coveted awards.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 04/05/09)
 
First-year student Steele wins Hugh Lawson award
First-year Mercer law student Christopher Steele recently won the Hugh Lawson Moot Court competition at Mercer’s Walter F. George School of Law. The annual competition, held this year on March 6 during Law Day, is awarded to a first-year student who most effectively argues before a panel of Mercer Law School alumni judges and the third-year student who formerly received the award.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 04/01/09)
 
AWLS auction raises more than $11,000 for charities
Three organizations that provide critical help to children in need, including one of the leading children’s research centers in the country, will be the beneficiaries of the more than $11,000 recently raised at an annual auction sponsored by the Association of Women Law Students at the Mercer University Walter F. George School of Law.
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(Posted: 03/25/09)
 
Law IT department captures hearts in local Soap Box Derby
One of the joys of Mercer Law School is its people. Take, for instance, the staff in the Information Technology Department. In a recent Soap Box Derby competition designed to continue strengthening ties between Mercer University and the City of Macon, the IT department entered its home-built car called, Ja-Macon, pictured here with the IT staff. Call it primitive if you wish, but the wooden-framed, water-squirting, four-wheel soap box adorned with the license plate, "LAW IT," won the People’s Choice Award and the hearts of hundreds. Who says law school isn’t fun?
(Posted: 03/20/09)
 
Mercer Law School remains dominant in premier moot court competition
MACON, Ga. – For the fifth time in six years, the corporate law moot court team at Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law advanced to the championship round of the Vale Corporate Competition in Wilmington, Del., the premier corporate moot court competition in the United States. Measured by mastery in brief writing and oral advocacy, the Mercer Law School team outperformed teams from 22 other law schools, including Emory, Florida State, Wake Forest, Brooklyn, Georgetown, Wisconsin, Tulane, Oregon and Miami.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 03/18/09)
 
Mercer law student auction benefits charities helping children in need
MACON, Ga. – Three organizations that provide critical help to children in need, including one of the leading children’s research centers in the country, will be the beneficiaries of more than $11,000 recently raised during the annual auction sponsored by the Association of Women Law Students at the Mercer University Walter F. George School of Law.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 03/11/09)
 
43rd U.S. Solicitor General urges law students to ‘make a difference’
Former U.S. Solicitor General Paul Clement urged Mercer Law School students to seek areas in the legal profession that allow them “to make a difference in professional life.” Clement spoke March 6 during Law Day at Mercer’s Walter F. George School of Law. “A single individual with a law degree has a tremendous ability to make a difference,” Clement said during his keynote luncheon address, referencing such icons as former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall and current Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 03/09/09)
 
Mercer moot court team captures regionals, competed in nationals in March
MACON, Ga. - The Frederick Douglass Moot Court team at Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law won the regional BLSA moot court competition and competed March 18-22 in California for the national moot court title. The moot court team, comprised of members of Mercer Law School’s Black Law Students Association, captured first place at the BLSA Southern Regional Convention in Nashville, Tenn., in February, defeating the University of Miami School of Law. The southern region is home to over 1,500 members from 44 law schools in Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee and Puerto Rico. The Mercer team lost in the national championship March 18-22 in Irvine, Calif.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 03/05/09)
 
Former presidential candidate upholds civil liberties
Bob Barr, former U.S. Congressman, federal attorney and 2008 Libertarian Party nominee for President of the United States, recently told a group of Mercer Law School students that they should “look at what government is doing not just on the surface.” At the invitation of the law school’s Federalist Society, Barr spoke on Feb. 24 on the topic “Is Big Brother Watching?” Barr’s address focused on his views on what he called the “diminution” of civil liberties in the United States.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 03/04/09)
 
Mercer Law School names 2009-10 Law Review Editorial Board
The 2009-10 Mercer Law Review Editorial Board members were recently selected. They include: Ryan Ingram, editor in chief; Nick Pavlov, senior managing editor; Tiffany Gardner, managing editor; Joe Stephens, managing editor; Sarah Smith, student writing editor; Michael Coots, Georgia survey editor; Brittany Flowe, lead articles editor; Val Leppert, articles editor; Jaime Richards, 11th Circuit survey editor; Erica Hickey, administrative editor.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 03/04/09)
 
Mercer Law student organization awards high school scholarship
A Bibb County 10th grader is the recipient of the first scholarship award given by the Mercer University Black Law Students Association in recognition of a high school student interested in pursuing a legal career.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 02/24/09)
 
Mercer Law alumni receive ETHOS awards
Mercer Law School alumni and Macon attorneys Amy Bell and James ‘Phil’ Bond, pictured here from left to right, were awarded the Mercer Law 2009 ETHOS Award for Public Service last night during the second annual fund-raising event. The Second Annual Celebration of ETHOS, an acronym that stands for “Extending The Hands Of Service,” was held Feb. 19. Bond, ’83, is the managing attorney in the Macon office of the Georgia Legal Services Program, and Bell, ’04, is an assistant public defender and head of the Property Division in the Office of the Macon Judicial Circuit Public Defender . The fund-raising event helps fund stipends for students working in unpaid summer internships in areas of public service.
(Posted: 02/20/09)
 
Footnotes to History: A Primer on the American Political Character
In the February edition of the Georgia Bar Journal, Footnotes to History, the recent book by Mercer Law School alum Griffin Bell, former U.S. Attorney General under President Jimmy Carter, is reviewed. Bell, class of 48, died January 5 at the age of 90. Read this insightful review of his book, edited by Mercer Law alum John P. Cole.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 02/20/09)
 
Former U.S. Solicitor General to deliver 2009 Mercer Law Day address
MACON, Ga. - Paul D. Clement, former United States Solicitor General and current partner in the Washington, D.C., office of King & Spalding law firm, is scheduled to deliver the keynote address at the annual Law Day luncheon at Mercer University Walter F. George School of Law on March 6. During the visit, the former solicitor general will also give a lecture during a class of first-year Mercer law students.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 02/13/09)
 
Legal Writing Institute renews contract with Mercer Law School
MACON, Ga. –  The Mercer University Walter F. George School of Law will remain the host law school for the Legal Writing Institute until at least 2016, renewing a previous five-year contract that began in 2003.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 02/13/09)
 
Mercer Law fund-raiser shines light on public-service law
MACON, Ga. – Mercer University School of Law, in conjunction with the Mercer University Law & Public Service Program, is hosting its second annual fund-raising event to support Mercer law students seeking unpaid summer internships in critical areas of public service.
Read more . . .
(Posted: 02/02/09)
 
Mercer Law students witness historical inauguration

‘Today is a true milestone in American history,’ student says

 MACON, Ga. (Jan. 20, 2009) - The goose bumps on her arms emerged just minutes before President Barack Obama took the oath of office, said Mercer University School of Law student Kelley Pierce, sitting amid dozens of colleagues in the law school student lounge.

 “This is a moment we will all remember,” said Pierce, 25, a second-year student from Columbus, Ga. “The first African-American president of the United States … It’s a pretty momentous feeling.”

 Dozens of students, faculty and staff at Mercer Law School gathered today in the lounge to watch the historic event. Some sat, others stood, but all were engaged in the moment.

 Minutes after President Obama took the oath and completed his inauguration speech, first-year law student Antoine Bostic, 23, said: “Growing up, I never thought this would happen.”

Sitting next to Bostic, first-year law student Lanicia Williams said a change has occurred. “I just think this opens the doors to everyone,” Williams said. 

 For Chong Pak, an Asian-American law student from Duluth, Ga., the event “is a true milestone in American history,” he said.

 “This says a lot about us as a nation of people,” said Pak, 38, a first-year student. “It shows us how far we have come, and how far we have to go. …We need vision and inspiration.”

(Posted: 01/20/09)
 
Mercer alumna makes history in State of Georgia

(Jan. 7, 2009) In the state chamber of the House of Representatives yesterday – amid a sea of state dignitaries, family, friends and media – Mercer University undergraduate and law school alumna, M. Yvette Miller, was sworn in as the state’s first African-American woman chief judge of the Georgia Court of Appeals.

Read More . . .

Judge Millers Bio . . .

Photos from the event . . .

(Posted: 01/07/09)
 
Distinguished Alumnus and Former U.S. Attorney General Griffin B. Bell Dies

(Jan. 5, 2009) - Griffin Boyette Bell, one of Mercer University’s most distinguished graduates and the 72nd Attorney General of the United States, died today in Atlanta. He was 90. A graveside service will be held at 11 a.m. Wednesday at Oak Grove Cemetery in Americus. Judge Bell’s memorial service will be held at Atlanta’s Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church on Friday at 11 a.m.

Read more . . .

(Posted: 01/05/09)
 
Alumna to become first African-American woman to head Georgia Court of Appeals

Mercer University undergraduate and law school alumna, Judge M. Yvette Miller, will become the first African-American woman to hold the position of chief judge of the Georgia Court of Appeals when she is officially sworn in Jan. 6, 2009, at the Georgia State Capitol.

In October, Judge Gary Blaylock Andrews, senior judge of the Georgia Court of Appeals, made the motion that unanimously selected Judge Miller, by acclamation, as chief judge of one of the busiest appellate courts in the United States. Elected by her peers to serve a two-year term, Judge Miller will be responsible for the administration on the court and will act as the head of the court for ceremonial purposes and for all communications.

“Judge Miller stands in a long line of Mercer graduates who have distinguished themselves and their alma mater through dedicated public service to our state and nation,” said Mercer President William D. Underwood. “We are very proud of Judge Yvette Miller and her accomplishments and wish her the very best as she leads the Georgia Court of Appeals.”

First appointed to the state Court of Appeals in 1999 by Gov. Roy Barnes, Judge Miller has been re-elected statewide, without opposition, for two six-year terms. Before that appointment, Gov. Zell Miller appointed her to the state court of Fulton County, and she was re-elected as a trial judge on the state court without opposition. Previously, she served as director and judge of the Appellate Division of the State Board of Workers’ Compensation, where she was the first woman, first African American, and youngest person ever to hold that position.

“Judge Miller personifies the Mercer Lawyer in her skills as a lawyer and judge, her commitment to justice and the public good, and her dedication to her alma maters,” said Mercer Law School Dean Daisy Hurst Floyd. “She continues to shatter glass ceilings for women and African Americans across the country. The entire Mercer University School of Law family salutes her and this extraordinary historical feat in becoming the first African-America woman chief justice of the George Court of Appeals.”

Judge Miller was born and raised in Macon. She received her Bachelor of Arts degree, cum laude, from Mercer University in 1977 and her law degree from Mercer’s Walter F. George School of Law in 1980. Judge Miller also earned an LL.M. degree in litigation from Emory University School of Law and an LL.M. degree in judicial process from the University of Virginia School of Law.

(Posted: 12/11/08)
 
Mercer Law professors editors of new law, rhetoric e-journal

Hricik Scott
Berger Sammons
Two Mercer University School of Law professors are editors of a new electronic journal that features selected abstracts of scholarly works probing the threads that connect law and rhetoric.

The editors, Linda L. Berger and Jack Lee Sammons, both professors of law at Mercer Law School, developed the e-journal to expand intellectual dialogue and scholarship beyond the legal community about the rhetoric of law.

The e-journal, released online Dec. 2 by Social Science Research Network to thousands of subscribers, represents a return to the law’s origins in rhetoric in a time in which the law is threatened by contemporary politics and other disciplines such as economics.   

“This journal, we hope, will eventually help create a community of scholars well versed in and committed to the quality of the legal conversation in all its forms,” said Sammons, who holds the Griffin B. Bell Professor of Law endowed professorship at Mercer Law School.

“If we are to hold on to the unique elements of this conversation, elements that translate persuasion into justice, then we need to understand them.”

The Law & Rhetoric Abstracts e-Journal, published twice a week, will be available to some half-a-million SSRN subscribers, and immediately available to more than 8,000 law professors and other academics who have directly subscribed to the Legal Scholarship Network. The Legal Scholarship Network is one of several SSRN specialized research networks.

To subscribe to the Law & Rhetoric Abstract e-Journal, visit the SSRN Web site at www.ssrn.com or e-mail Sammons at jlsjr@aol.com or Berger at berger_ll@law.mercer.edu.

(Posted: 12/04/08)
 
Mercer Law School team captures 4th consecutive regional moot court victory

For the fourth consecutive year, a team from Mercer University School of Law has won the Region 5 contest of the National Moot Court Competition, defeating Emory University School of Law in the final round last weekend.

Mercer law students Stacey Furgason and Katie Powers captured the victory during the regional 2008 National Moot Court Competition on Nov. 21-22 in the Russell Federal Courthouse in Atlanta. Along with the overall moot court victory, Powers won the Best Oralist award. The team is coached by Reynold J. Kosek Jr., professor of law at Mercer, and Peter Bennion, a student coach. Other participating law schools included the universities of Florida, Georgia and South Carolina. Mercer and Emory will now advance to the national competition in New York City in February where they will compete against the top two teams from the other 13 regions in the country.

Mercer Law School’s regional victory brings its record to 2-0 this year in moot court competition. In October, a team finished first in the Emory Civil Rights and Liberties Moot Court Competition held in Atlanta. Due to its extraordinarily strong national standing in moot court competitions, Mercer was one of only sixteen law schools nationally selected to compete in a new national moot court competition in April, signifying that Mercer’s program had one of the top records in the country during the 2007-08 academic year.

“We are extremely pleased by the performance of this moot court team – both the students and their coaches – who did an extraordinary job representing themselves and the entire Mercer University School of Law family,” said Dean Daisy Hurst Floyd. “At Mercer, we prepare our students for the practice of law in all its various manifestations. And it is good to see that the hard work of our students, faculty and staff continues to pay off. We look forward to supporting this team in its bid for the national championship in New York City.”

 

Read more . . .
(Posted: 11/25/08)
 
Mercer Law School Graduates Pass State Bar Exam in Record Margin

MACON – More than 95 percent of Mercer University School of Law graduates who took the Georgia Bar Examination for the first time in July passed, according to the annual report released Nov. 3 by the Georgia Office of Bar Admissions.

The first-time pass rate of 95.8 percent for Mercer Law School graduates is the highest first-time pass rate at the law school this decade. Since 2001, Mercer’s first-time pass rate has been as high as 94.2 percent. The score this year is a testament to the dedicated faculty and extraordinary law school students who are trained at Mercer, said Dean Daisy Hurst Floyd.

“I am enormously proud of how our graduates performed this year on the state bar examination,” Dean Floyd said. “I am equally proud of our faculty, administration and staff who work tirelessly each day to help our students become exemplary lawyers who will join the legal profession with excellent skills, integrity, and a commitment to service. The fact that our graduates performed so well on the state bar exam is yet another confirmation of the quality of legal education provided at Mercer University School of Law.”

Mercer Law School is ranked among the Top 100 law schools in the United States, and its legal writing program is the best in the nation, according to U.S. News & World Report’s 2009 ranking of “America’s Best Graduate Schools.” The law school’s public interest law program was recently ranked No. 6 in the nation by preLaw Magazine.

“We are delighted for all our graduates who passed the bar,” said Mary S. Donovan, assistant dean for student affairs at Mercer Law School. “We look forward to seeing all their good work in practice.”

Located in central Georgia, the Mercer University Walter F. George School of Law is among the oldest in the country, founded in 1873. Its innovate Woodruff Curriculum – which focuses on ethics and practical skills amid small class sizes – earned the Gambrell Professionalism Award from the American Bar Association for its “depth of excellence.” With the use of this curriculum, Mercer Law School has developed the nation’s leading legal writing program and is home of the only Legal Writing Institute. With a total enrollment of about 400 students, taught by some of the sharpest legal minds in the country, Mercer Law School is among the nation’s very best.

For more information about Mercer University School of Law, visit our Web site at www.law.mercer.edu or call 478.301.5000.

(Posted: 11/10/08)
 
Mercer Ranked Number Six Among Public Interest Law Schools

The Walter F. George School of Law has been ranked number six in the country among the Best Public Interest Law Schools, according to PreLaw magazine. The rating is based on information reported in the E-Guide to Public Interest Law Schools, including student involvement, curriculum and financial factors.

The top 10 law schools included: Northeastern University School of Law, Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, Lewis and Clark School of Law, American University Washington College of Law, Stanford Law School, Mercer, University of Maryland School of Law, University of Washington School of Law, University of North Carolina School of Law and City University of New York School of Law.

The publication said the schools in its top 10 excelled in many areas, including the strength of the clinical programs and loan assistance programs, pro bono requirements and the percentage of graduates entering the field.

The student involvement category assigned points for student activity and percentage of graduates of the class of 2006 who entered jobs in the public interest field.

The curriculum category assigned points for the existence of a public interest coordinator, strength of clinical programs and existence of a voluntary or mandatory pro bono graduation requirement.

The financial factors category assigned points for cost of tuition, availability of grants and scholarships and strength of loan repayment or loan assistance programs.

The link to the article is http://www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/cypress/prelaw-fall-08/#/28.

(Posted: 10/31/08)
 
Mercer Students Win the Emory Civil Rights and Liberties Moot Court Competition

The team of April Holloway and Lyndsey Hurst finished first in the Emory Civil Rights and Liberties Moot Court Competition held in Atlanta on October 10-12.  In the final round, presided over by Presiding Justice Carol Hunstein of the Georgia Supreme Court, the Mercer team defeated a team from the University of San Diego.  Cory DeBord and Leah Fiorenza served as student coaches and Tim Floyd was the faculty coach.

The competition fielded outstanding competitors from law schools throughout the nation.  Our students demonstrated once again their excellence in written and oral advocacy.  Congratulations to these students and to the Mercer Moot Court Program!

Learn more about our moot court program . . .

Read more . . .
(Posted: 10/14/08)
 
Mercer to Host Ethics Symposium on November 7
On November 7, the Law School will host the 9th annual Georgia Symposium on Professionalism and Ethics.  The topic for this years symposium is "Ethics and professionalism in the Digital Age."  There will be presentations and panel discussions on e-discovery, the internet and lawyer marketing, and meta-data.  The symposium will take place in the Law School Courtroom beginning at 9 a.m. on the 7th.  The event is open to the public, and CLE credit will be available.  For further information, contact professor Patrick Longan at (478) 301-2639 or longan_p@law.mercer.edu  The program for the Symposium is available at www.law.mercer.edu/elaw/law review symposium 2008.pdf.
(Posted: 09/24/08)
 
Mercer to Host Law and Rhetoric Workshop at AALS Meeting

Mercer Law School will host a Law and Rhetoric Workshop on January 6, 2009 at the AALS Annual Meeting in San Diego.   Detailed information about the workshop is available at: www.law.mercer.edu/lawandrhetoric/ 

(Posted: 09/23/08)
 
John E. James Distinguished Lecture to be held on September 16, 2008

The 2008 JOHN E. JAMES DISTINGUISHED LECTURE will be held on Tuesday, September 16, 2008 at 5:30 p.m. in the Moot Court Room of the Law School. Professor The Lord McColl of Dulwich CBE will speak on Human Trafficking—A World-Wide Problem.

Lord McColl studied medicine at London University and was Professor of Surgery at Guy’s Hospital until 1998. He continues to teach at King’s College on the Guy’s Campus. Lord McColl is also Surgeon to the international charity Mercyships and frequently operates in the poorest countries of West Africa.

Lord McColl was made a Life Peer for his work for disabled people in the Queen’s Birthday Honours in 1989. He was Parliamentary Private Secretary to Prime Minister John Major from 1994-97. Since 1997, he has been a Shadow Minister for Health.

Lord McCall was made a CBE in 1997 and a Fellow of King’s College in 2001. for his charitable work for Mercyships, he received the Great Scot Award 2001 and the Distinguished Maritime Award of the National Maritime Association, USA 2002.

 

(Posted: 09/16/08)
 
Results of Milani Writing Competition Announced

The Adam A. Milani Disability Law Writing Competition is a national disability law writing competition sponsored by the Mercer University School of Law and the ABA Commission on Mental and Physical Disability Law. The competition honors the work of the late Professor Adam Milani, a passionate advocate for disability rights, an accomplished legal scholar, and a beloved faculty member at the Law School. This year’s winners are:

Abigail Blodgett (University of Oregon School of Law)
Paul Lawler (Florida State College of Law)
Hana Nielsen-Kneisler (UC Berkeley School of Law)

Congratulations to these fine legal writers.

(Posted: 09/10/08)
 
Mercer selected to participate in Moot Court National Championship
Mercer Law School has been invited to the first annual Moot Court National Championship hosted by the University of Houston Law Center.  According to the sponsors, “the top 16 moot court programs from the previous academic year are invited to Houston to earn the right to say they are the best of the best.” Based on its overall record in moot court competitions last year, Mercer was among the sixteen most successful schools in the nation.  The competition will be held in Houston on January 15-17, 2009.
(Posted: 09/05/08)
 
Firm of Mercer Law School Alumnus, Tommy Malone, Wins $5.2 Million Settlement for Fulton County Judge’s Widow
(Posted: 08/12/08)
 
Mercer Law Welcomes New Faculty

 

Linda BergerLinda L. Berger
Professor of Law
Walter F. George School of Law

Professor Berger obtained her B.S., cum laude, in General Studies, very special honors, Journalism from the University of Colorado.  She received her J.D., summa cum laude from Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH.   Before joining Mercer, Linda was a Professor of Law at Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego, CA.  Professor Berger’s expertise and areas of teaching include Legal Writing, Law & Rhetoric, Media Law, Constitutional Law, First Amendment Practice, Scholarly Legal Writing, and Legal Drafting.

 

 

Scott TitshawScott Titshaw
Assistant Professor of Law
Walter F. George School of Law

Scott Titshaw obtained his B.A. in English and Government from Georgetown University.  He received his J.D., cum laude from the University of Georgia School of Law and an LL.M., magna cum laude from the Universität Hamburg.  Before joining Mercer, Scott practiced immigration and international business law at Arnall Golden & Gregory, LLP in Atlanta.  Professor Titshaw’s expertise and areas of teaching include Sexual Orientation and the Law, Property, and Immigration Law.

Learn more about our faculty . . .

(Posted: 07/25/08)
 
Mercer Students Work as Public Defenders this Summer

On Thursday, May 29, Chief Judge Martha C. Christian administered the oath of office under the Third Year Practice Act to six Mercer Law Students.

The students will be serving in the Macon Circuit Public Defender's Office over the course of the next year.

They are (from left to right): Gabby Lawrence, Devin Franklin, Amanda Cosson, Chief Judge Martha Christian, Kadee Reynolds, Andrew Dillon, Anne Carroll.

(Posted: 06/10/08)
 
Law Graduate Jensen is 2008 Griffin B. Bell Award Recipient

Grant JensenGrant Michael Jensen is the 2008 recipient of the Griffin B. Bell Award for Community Service, the highest honor Mercer University bestows on a graduating student nominated from all of its 11 schools and colleges. The Houston, Texas, native was presented a crystal Steuben sculpture and a frame certificate during the May 10th commencement of the Walter F. George School of Law, where he received a juris doctor degree.

Named in honor of Mercer alumnus and former United States Attorney General Griffin B. Bell, the award recognizes students who have exemplified the true meaning of community service during their studies, improving the lives of others through their dedication and commitment.

Jensen, while completing his studies at the Mercer Law School, has provided an outstanding example of what it means to serve others. His highly respected leadership and generous giving of personal time and energy have demonstrated an exemplary commitment to community service.

Read more . . .

(Posted: 05/19/08)
 
Law School Building Closed Wednesday May 14, through Sunday, May 18
The Law School building will be closed from Wednesday, May 14, through Sunday, May 18, for asbestos abatement.  This summer the Law School’s first floor restrooms are scheduled for renovation.  In order to begin the renovation project, asbestos must be removed from each of the four first floor restrooms and, for health and compliance reasons, it is important for all floors of the building be vacant during this time, May 14, 2008, through May 18, 2008.  Your flexibility and patience while we work to improve our facilities are appreciated.
(Posted: 05/12/08)
 
National Jurist Recognizes Mercer as a Leader in Public Interest Placements

Mercer has been named by National Jurist Magazine as among the top 50 schools on a list entitled "Where Public Interest Lawyers Go to Law School."  Mercer is listed at number 41.  The March 2008 edition of the magazine, in which the article appears, is available at www.nxtbook.com/nxtbooks/cypress/nationaljurist0308/index.php  Information about Mercer's Law and Public Service program is available at www.law.mercer.edu/academics/service/

(Posted: 04/02/08)
 
Law School Legal Writing Program Again Ranked Best in Country

The Legal Writing Program at the Walter F. George School of Law of Mercer University is again the top-ranked program among all of the law schools in the nation as announced today by U.S. News and World Report. The 2009 edition of America’s Best Graduate Schools lists Mercer’s program first in the country after being tied for first with Seattle University in 2006, second in 2007 and first in 2008. Seattle this year is ranked second, followed by University of Nevada-Las Vegas, Temple University, John Marshall Law School, Stetson University, Boston College, Northwestern University, Brooklyn Law School and the University of Oregon.

The specialty ranking, begun by U.S. News in 2006, is voted on by legal writing directors throughout the country, reflecting the opinion of those with specialized knowledge.

Overall, the Mercer Law School remains among The Top 100 Law Schools in the country, tying four other schools at that mark – Stetson University, Syracuse University, University of Buffalo-SUNY and University of Louisville. This is the fifth consecutive year the Mercer Law School has been among the top 100 in the country. Founded in 1873, it is one of the oldest law schools in the country.

(Posted: 03/29/08)
 
Georgia Court of Appeals to hear oral arguments at Mercer Law

The Georgia Court of Appeals will once again hear oral arguments at the Law School on Monday, March 31, 2008 at 2:15pm in the Moot Courtroom. 

The public is welcome. 

Read the briefs for the cases to be heard . . .

(Posted: 03/19/08)
 
Funeral Arrangements set for Former Law School Dean

Karl P. Warden, J.D., LL.M., 77, died Monday, March 17, 2008 in a local hospital. Memorial services will be held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at Mulberry United Methodist Church, Stephens Chapel with the Rev. Cil Mitchell officiating. Burial will be private. THe family will meet friends from 12:00 noon to service time oin Wednesday at the church. -Born in Fayetteville, WV, Professor Warden received a J.D. from West Virginia University, LL.M. from the University of Michigan. He was a Post Doctoral Fellow at the University of Wisconsin. He was admitted to practice in West Virginia and Tennessee. Professor Warden served at the University of Denver School of Law and Vanderbilt University School of Law, Dean and Professor of Law, University of North Dakota School of Law, Dean and Professor of Law, Mercer University Law School, Griffin B. Bell Professor of Law, Mercer University and was Professor of Law Emeritus, Mercer University. Professor Warden has also served as Visiting Professor of Law at University of Kansas, Indiana University, University of Florida, Louisiana State University, University of Papua New Guinea, Cambridge University in England, Emory University Law School, University of Tennessee, Modern University for the Humanities in Moscow, Russia. He received numerous honors and award including W. W. Cook Fellow, University of Michigan, Fulbright-Hays Fellow, Visiting Scholar, Wolfson College, Cambridge University (two times), Visiting Professor of Law, Cambridge University, Griffin Bell Distinguished Professor of Law, Mercer University, Outstanding Professor awards at Denver, Vanderbilt and Mercer and Honorary Professor, Modern University for the Humanities, Russia. A published author, he has written Criminal Law, Vanderbilt University, Legal Medicine with Special Reference to Diagnostic Imagine, Procedure After Judgment or Decree, two volumes and numerous articles in legal and non-legal publications. He also published three not pertaining to law, Professor Thief, Clumsy Foot and Jacks Joke. Professor Warden was a member of Mulberry United Methodist Church. He was also member of Central Georgia Model Railroad Club. -Professor Warden is survived by his wife of fifty-three years, Betty Warden; his daughter, Cindy Warden Bowden (Tom); his son, Karl Duval Warden (Marsha Hagan) and his grandchildren, Christina Bowden, Karl Brennan Warden and Zachary Smith Warden. -Visit www.mem.com to express tributes. -Snows Memorial Chapel Funeral and Cremation Services, Cherry Street has charge of arrangements.

(Posted: 03/18/08)
 
BLSA co-sponsors local Black History month presentation

Supreme Court Justice Benham (center) and BLSA StudentsOn Wednesday, February 27, 2008, the Black Law Students Association (BLSA) of the Walter F. George School of Law at Mercer University cosponsored with Suntrust Bank and the Macon Bar Association in presenting the movie: Summer Hill, A story of Community.  The screening was a black history month presentation by the Historic Douglass Theatre in Macon, Georgia.

The Summer Hill project documents and interprets the history and culture of Summer Hill, a historically predominate African American neighborhood that formed just outside of Cartersville, Georgia in the late 1800s.  Summer Hill native son, Justice Robert Benham, the first African American Justice and Chief Justice of the Georgia Supreme Court, was featured in the movie and led a discussion after the screening.

Pictured is Supreme Court Justice Benham (center) and BLSA Students.

Learn more about Mercer's Black Law Students Association . . .

(Posted: 02/28/08)
 
Article co-authored by Mercer 2L Featured on Front Page of Georgia Bar Journal

Hricik Scott
Hricik Scott
An article by Mercer 2L Chase Scott and Professor Hricik on metadata is the cover story of the Georgia Bar Journal.  The article, the first of a two-part piece, explains in plain English how software can include in e-mailed documents important and sometimes confidential information.  Many lawyers are unfamiliar with metadata, and the ethical issues that it creates are splitting the authorities.  The second part will address the ethical issues.  Together, Professor Hricik and Chase have published three articles, and are working on a fourth.  Professor Hricik has co-authored at least one article with every one of his research assistants.  Their Georgia Bar Journal article was also cited and discussed in the National Law Journal and in an article now on law.com.

Read the article now . . .

Learn more about Professor Hricik . . .

(Posted: 02/25/08)
 
Law Day to be held March 7

The Law Schools 2008 Annual Law Day celebration will take place March 7, 2008. The event will honor the Class of 1948. 

Keynote speaker for the luncheon is the Honorable Jim Marshall, United States Representative, Georgias 3rd Congressional District and former Mercer Law professor.

View more details, including the paper registration form . . .

Online RSVP form . . .

(Posted: 02/19/08)
 
Law & Public Interest Students to Host Showcase and Benefit Concert

Students in the Mercer Law School Law and Public Interest program are sponsoring a Showcase and Benefit Concert on Thursday, Feb. 28, at the Cox Capital Theatre in downtown Macon. Proceeds from the event will fund stipends for students in unpaid public interest summer internships.

Two distinguished individuals will be recognized at the event for outstanding leadership in public service: the Honorable Bryant Culpepper and Tomieka Daniel of the Georgia Legal Services Program.

The event will be held from 6:30 p.m. - 12 midnight with the awards and raffle to begin at 8 p.m. Among the many items in the raffle include a Waterford crystal lamp and a framed Sterling Everett print.

Live entertainment will be provided by two bands composed of faculty and staff from the Law School.

Admission is $25. All contributions are tax-deductible. For more information, contact Courtney Dickey at dickey_ca@mercer.edu or (478) 301-5023.

(Posted: 02/19/08)
 
Mercer Sweeps Charleston's Law School's National Moot Court Competition

Both of Mercers moot court teams advanced to the final round this weekend in Charlestons Moot Court Competition, beating out two teams from Seton Hall during the semi-final rounds. Second year students Jonathan Adams and Stacey Furgason took first place in the competition overall, despite tough competition. Ms. Furgason won best oralist for her efforts in this round.

Second year students Leah Fiorenza and Jamie Flowers took second place in the competition and also took home the award for best petitioners brief.

The students were coached by third-year students Laura Murtha and Tara Conway and Professor Linda Jellum. Another terrific showing by Mercers Moot Court Program.

See our entire trophy case . . .

(Posted: 02/11/08)
 
BLSA Alumni Reunion to be held Feb 15-16

Mercer Law School will hold its Inaugural Black Law Students Association Alumni Reunion on Friday, February 15 and Saturday, February 16, 2008.  The event will "kick-off" at a reunion commencement dinner with Dean Daisy Hurst Floyd on Friday at 6:30 p.m.  Early bird programs will begin at 9:00 a.m. for guests arriving early on Friday.  More details, including a complete reunion schedule can be found here.

Print an RSVP form here

(Posted: 01/28/08)
 
Upcoming Open Houses for Prospective Students

Aerial view of Mercer Law SchoolAll prospective students are encouraged to attend an Open House at the Law School on Friday, February 15, 2008 from 2:00-5:00 p.m. Information on Admissions, Financial Aid, and Career Services will be provided. Additionally, prospective students have the opportunity to meet faculty and current students at the Open House.

Please RSVP by contacting the Admissions Office at 478-301-2605, 800-342-0841 ext. 2605 inside Georgia, 800-637-2378 ext. 2605 outside Georgia.

Visit the Admissions web site

(Posted: 01/07/08)
 
Law Review Symposium on The Opportunity for Legal Education to be held November 9

On Friday, November 9, 2007 the Mercer Law Review will host its annual symposium. This year the theme of the symposium is The Opportunity for Legal Education. Speakers include Dean Daisy Floyd, Roy T. Stuckey from The University of South Carolina School of Law, William M. Sullivan from The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, Alice M. Thomas from Howard University School of Law, President William D. Underwood, and Judith Welch Wegner, also from The Carnegie Foundation. The symposium will run from 9:40 am to 4:00 pm. Transcripts of the proceedings, along with papers by the participants, will be published in Volume 59 of the Mercer Law Review

More information about the symposium ...

(Posted: 11/01/07)
 
Mercer Law Students Participate in Rebuilding Together

On Sunday, October 21st, members of the Mercer Law School Sports and Entertainment Law Society, Phi Alpha Delta, and the Student Bar Association, along with Rebuilding Together Macon, volunteered to help renovate the home of an elderly and disabled Macon resident.  The group repainted the entire house, built a screened in porch, and performed some minor internal repairs.  This is the third home Mercer Law students, faculty, and staff have renovated over the last two years, and we hope to continue to participate in future Rebuilding Together projects.

Learn more about Student Organizations at Mercer Law School . . .

(Posted: 10/25/07)
 
Results of Milani Writing Competition Announced

Chuchev Ressmeyer
Chuchev Ressmeyer
The Adam A. Milani Disability Law Writing Competition is a national disability law writing competition sponsored by the Mercer University School of Law and the ABA Commission on Mental and Physical Disability Law.  The competition honors the work of the late Professor Adam Milani, a passionate advocate for disability rights, an accomplished legal scholar, and a beloved faculty member at the Law School.   This year’s winners are:

Kellen Ressmeyer (Indiana University School of Law, Bloomington) (Essay category)
Krum Chuchev (Franklin Pierce Law School) (Law Practice category)

Congratulations to these fine legal writers.

(Posted: 10/10/07)
 
Seventh Annual John E. James lecture held at the Law School

On Tuesday, September 18, environmentalist and international affairs expert Sir Crispin Tickell presented "Environment on the Edge" at the Seventh Annual John E. James Distinguished Lecture. Tickell is Director of the Policy Foresight Programme at the James Martin Institute for Science and Civilization at Oxford University.   A streaming video broadcast of the lecture is available at www.law.mercer.edu/johnjameslecture.htm.

Most of Sir Crispin Tickell’s career was in the Diplomatic Service. He has been Chef de Cabinet to the President of the European Commission, Ambassador to Mexico, Permanent Secretary of the Overseas Development Administration and British Permanent Representative to the United Nations. He is author of Climate Change and World Affairs and Mary Anning of Lyme Regis.

Previous lecturers in the John E. James Distinguished Lecture Series have included Professor Jean Yves de Cara, 2006; Imam Feisel Abdul Rauf, 2005; The Right Honorable the Baroness Scotland of Asthal QC, 2004; Baron Walter van Gerven, 2003; The Honorable Louise Arbour, 2002; and The Right Honourable Gordon Slynn of Hadley, 2001.

Macon attorney and Mercer Law School alumnus John E. James created this Distinguished Lecture Series as an opportunity for Mercer Law School students and other citizens in the community to hear from some of the world's renowned legal orators. The lecture series is facilitated with the assistance of Lord Gordon Slynn of Hadley and the lecture series committee composed of The Honorable Tommy Day Wilcox, The Honorable Hugh Lawson, Robert F. Hatcher, Candi Nobles James, M.D., and Mercer Law School Dean Daisy Hurt Floyd.

(Posted: 10/01/07)
 
Creswell Awards Prizes for Banana Day 2007

First-year students in Sections 2, 3 and 6 unpeeled into the mysteries of burdens of proof in slip and fall cases in Professor Dick Creswell’s annual Banana Day Class.  While Emily Macheski-Preston, Kristine Pham, Emmanuel Donate, Maya Guntz, and Joy Davis explained the intricacies of cases involving hapless plaintiffs taking pratfalls after stepping on such hazards as banana peels in supermarkets and train stations, the entire Torts class introduced the bananas they had brought as demonstrative evidence. 

Award winners shown here are:
(right to left) Joy Davis – Most Beautiful Banana, Joe Stephens – Ugliest Banana,  Amanda Lewis – Smallest Banana, and Audrey James – Biggest Banana (a record 8 5/8 inches, 7.8 ounces).  Creswell concluded:  “The thing speaks for itself!”

(Posted: 09/27/07)
 
Tuesday Sept. 18: John James Lecture

Crispin TickleEnvironmentalist and international affairs expert Sir Crispin Tickell will present "Environment on the Edge" at 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 18, at the Seventh Annual John E. James Distinguished Lecture. Tickell is Director of the Policy Foresight Programme at the James Martin Institute for Science and Civilization at Oxford University. The presentation will take place in the Moot Court Room of Mercer's Walter F. George School of Law in Macon.

Most of Tickell’s career was in the Diplomatic Service. He has been Chef de Cabinet to the President of the European Commission, Ambassador to Mexico, Permanent Secretary of the Overseas Development Administration and British Permanent Representative to the United Nations. He is author of Climate Change and World Affairs and Mary Anning of Lyme Regis.

Previous lecturers in the John E. James Distinguished Lecture Series have included Professor Jean Yves de Cara, 2006; Imam Feisel Abdul Rauf, 2005; The Right Honorable the Baroness Scotland of Asthal QC, 2004; Baron Walter van Gerven, 2003; The Honorable Louise Arbour, 2002; and The Right Honourable Gordon Slynn of Hadley, 2001.

Macon attorney and Mercer Law School alumnus John E. James created this Distinguished Lecture Series as an opportunity for Mercer Law School students and other citizens in the community to hear from some of the world's renowned legal orators. The lecture series is facilitated with the assistance of Lord Gordon Slynn of Hadley and the lecture series committee composed of The Honorable Tommy Day Wilcox, The Honorable Hugh Lawson, Robert F. Hatcher, Candi Nobles James, M.D., and Mercer Law School Dean Daisy Hurt Floyd. The program is free and open to the public.

(Posted: 09/12/07)
 
Mercer Welcomes Class of 2010

Class of 2010The Law School welcomed 148 members of its new 1L class on August 13.

The Class of 2010 was chosen from 1,367 applicants.  The new class hailed from 17 states, representing a wide range of majors from 63 undergraduate schools.

(Posted: 08/28/07)
 
Huntsville Scholar Takes Top Law School Honor

Laura HarperWalter F. George School of Law of Mercer University presented Laura Watts Harper of Huntsville, Ala., the 2007 George Waldo Woodruff Award of Excellence during spring commencement in Macon.  The most prestigious honor the law school bestows on a student, the Woodruff Award is presented to the law graduate with the highest cumulative academic average for the three years of law study.

The wife of Dave Harper, she is the daughter of William and Nancy Watts of Huntsville, Ala., and the granddaughter of Charles and Ruth Hill also of Huntsville and Josie and Bill Watts of Tuscaloosa, Ala. She is a graduate of Randolph School in Huntsville.

She completed her undergraduate studies at Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Ga., where she was tapped for the esteemed Phi Beta Kappa national honor society. Mercer awarded her the Agnes Scott Presidential Scholarship, which covered her educational expenses at the Law School. 

At Mercer, Ms. Harper completed her studies for the juris doctor degree magna cum laude. A member of the Mercer Law Review, she received the Faculty Legal Writing Award in 2005. Her superior academic accomplishments earned her membership in the prestigious Order of Barristers and the Brainerd Currie Honor Society. Throughout her law studies, Ms. Harper earned a number of CALI Awards, which are presented to students who have the highest grade in their individual classes each semester. She was also the recipient of a Faculty Award to Outstanding Seniors in recognition for her academic and leadership qualities. Through Mercer’s Habeas Project, Ms. Harper assisted in the representation of indigent criminal defendants, signing an amicus brief to the Georgia Supreme Court.

After completing the Bar exam in July, she will join the law firm of Lanier Ford Shaver & Payne in Huntsville, Ala.

About the George Waldo Woodruff Award of Excellence:George Waldo Woodruff Award of Excellence was established to honor the memory of George W. Woodruff, a distinguished businessman, proponent of education and a friend of the Walter F. George School of Law. It is given to the graduate having the highest cumulative academic average.

(Posted: 06/07/07)
 
Cox Awarded Honorary Degree at Law School Commencement

Cathy CoxFormer Secretary of State of Georgia Cathy Cox received the honorary Doctor of Laws degree at the 2007 commencement of the Walter F. George School of Law of Mercer University on May 12. Mercer President William D. Underwood and Law School Dean Daisy Floyd hooded Cox and presented the Mercer alumna with the framed degree.

In her commencement address, Cox told the law graduates that as new lawyers they have one particular responsibility – to give “the respect due our judicial system.” 

She said, “When a court makes a decision that is controversial or unpopular, and the media and bloggers go wild with the ‘activist judge’ tripe – you and I need to find opportunities to re-educate our neighbors on a judge’s duty to follow the law, not public opinion polls.”

Recently named the president of Young Harris College in north Georgia, Cox was the first woman to hold the statewide office of Secretary of State in Georgia, when elected to the first of her two terms in 1999. Before her election to the statewide office, she served two terms as a state representative in the Georgia legislature.

As Secretary of State, she led Georgia to become the first state in the nation to deploy a modern, uniform voting system and moved Georgia from having the second worst to the second best voting accuracy rate in the nation. Governing magazine named her one of its 2002 Public Officials of the Year, the first Secretary of State in the nation to receive the recognition.

After completing her second term as Secretary of State earlier this year, she became the Carl E. Sanders Political Leadership Scholar at the University of Georgia School of Law.

In March, the Board of Trustees of Young Harris College elected her as the 21st president of the 121-year-old private institution of higher education. Cox will assume her presidential duties at the end of the 2006-2007 academic year.

 A native of Bainbridge, she earned an associate’s degree in agriculture at Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College and a bachelor’s degree in journalism at the University of Georgia. She was a newspaper reporter with The Gainesville Times and The Post-Searchlight in Bainbridge.

 In 1983, she entered the Mercer Law School, where she was editor in chief of Mercer Law Review and a member of the Brainerd Currie Honor Society. She graduated magna cum laude with a juris doctor degree in 1986 and, for 10 years, practiced law in Atlanta and Bainbridge.

She has served on the Board of Trustees of Mercer University and on the Board of Visitors of the Walter F. George School of Law.

Her husband, Mark Dehler, is also an attorney.

Read Ms. Cox’s entire commencement address here . . ..

(Posted: 06/07/07)
 
Law School remembers those affected at Virginia Tech

The Law School community gathered at noon on Tuesday, April 17, to remember those affected by the tragedy at Virginia Tech.

(Posted: 04/16/07)
 
Legal Writing Program Ranked Number One and Law School Ranked in the Top 100 by U.S. News

The Legal Writing Program at the Walter F. George School of Law of Mercer University is the top-ranked program among all of the law schools in the nation as announced today by U.S. News and World Report. The 2008 edition of America’s Best Graduate Schools lists Mercer’s program first in the country after a ranking of second in 2007 and tied for first with Seattle in 2006.   The specialty ranking, begun by U.S. News in 2006, is voted on by legal writing directors throughout the country, reflecting the opinion of those with specialized knowledge.

Overall, Mercer Law School remains among The Top 100 Law Schools for the fourth consecutive year.

(Posted: 03/30/07)
 
Professor Fleissner Continues his Service on the Libby Prosecution

Professor Jim Fleissner continues his government service as deputy to Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald in the prosecution of I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, former chief of Staff to Vice-President  Cheney.  Professor Fleissner began work on the CIA leak investigation in early 2004 during a leave of absence from the law school, and has continued working on the case under a special appointment since his return to the law school in 2005.  Libby was indicted in October 2005. On March 6, 2007, after a trial held in the federal district court in Washington, D.C., a jury convicted Libby of obstruction of justice, perjury, and making false statements to the FBI.  Professor Fleissner will be working on post-trial motions, sentencing submissions, and will be representing the government on appeal.

(Posted: 03/15/07)
 
Law Day Speaker Says Public Service Plays Key Role in Legal System

(The following article was published Saturday, March 10, 2007, in the Macon Telegraph.)

By Jennifer Burk
TELEGRAPH STAFF WRITER

The mix of lawyers, social workers and landscapers who work for the Georgia Justice Project may seem unusual, but they work toward one common goal: representing people accused of crimes and helping them turn their lives around.

"What we're really about is trying to change people's lives," said Douglas Ammar, executive director of the Georgia Justice Project.

Ammar was the keynote speaker Friday at the Walter F. George School of Law's Law Day. He spoke at an afternoon luncheon to about 100 lawyers, judges, law students and law faculty about the importance of public service.

The Georgia Justice Project was founded by an Atlanta lawyer in 1986. It defends people accused of crimes and then helps them rebuild their lives, whether they win or lose the case.

The free legal services get people in the door, Ammar said, but after that, the project offers its clients social services and even a job through a landscape company it operates.

The project receives no government funds and raises all its money privately, Ammar said. Clients come as referrals from community groups and must be willing to work to turn their lives around.

The project has seen success. The relapse rate among its clients is about one-third that of the national population, according to the group's Web site, www.gjp.org.

"We all have an opportunity and responsibility for how we engage in the power of being a lawyer," Ammar said. "Your power is in your humanity."

Ammar related a conversation with a man serving a 15-year sentence for murder. The Georgia Justice Project provided his legal services, watched over his family and came to visit him in jail.

Ammar recalled the man saying: "You've been more than my lawyer. ... You've been my friend."

That is what the Georgia Justice Project strives for, he said.

The project hasn't started any cases in Middle Georgia - the vast majority of them are in metro Atlanta - but it occasionally makes its way down here as workers visit clients in jail, Ammar said. It's difficult for the project to expand because of its limited resources, he said.

The Georgia Justice Project has only 22 paid employees and turns away 90 percent of people who contact it each year, he said. Last year, the project had around 150 active cases, he said.

Similar programs are starting to crop up around the state, though, he said, and other states and countries have reached out to the Georgia Justice Project for help starting similar programs.

In July, Mercer University's law school started a law and public service program in which students work on real cases with offices such as legal services and the public defender, said Tim Floyd, director of the program and a law professor. Some Mercer students intern with the Georgia Justice Project.

The program was created to encourage a spirit of public service among law students, Floyd said.

"Our justice system really only works if everyone involved has an effective advocate," he said.

Randy Aderhold, chief of the civil division of the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Middle Georgia District, said public service is a necessary component of the justice system.

"Pure public service is the only way some in our society are taken care of," said Aderhold, who was awarded a meritorious service award at Law Day.

Superior Court Judge Lamar Sizemore, a Mercer law graduate, was also recognized at the event and was given the outstanding alumnus award.

"I think we all have a duty to give back to our community whenever we have the opportunity," he said.

To contact Jennifer Burk, call 744-4345 or e-mail jburk@macontel.com.

(Posted: 03/09/07)
 
Southeastern Bankruptcy Law Institute and Judge Drake Establish Endowed Chair

The Southeastern Bankruptcy Law Institute Inc. (SBLI) and Judge Homer Drake have pledged a gift to establish the SBLI/W. Homer Drake, Jr. Endowed Chair in Bankruptcy Law at Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law.

The establishment of the endowed chair, formally announced Feb. 22 at a recognition dinner in Atlanta, honors Mercer alumnus, Trustee and United States Bankruptcy Judge Walter Homer Drake Jr., A.B. ’54, LL.B. ’56, of Newnan.

"We are thrilled that the Southeastern Bankruptcy Law Institute has chosen to establish the SBLI/Homer Drake Endowed Chair at Mercer," said Law School Dean Daisy Floyd. "Judge Drake has been for many years a national force in the area of bankruptcy law, and the endowed chair in his honor will greatly supplement our teaching resources in this increasingly important area of the law."

A United States bankruptcy judge for the Northern District of Georgia, Judge Drake served as chief judge from 1968 to 1976. He is a former partner in the Atlanta law firm of Swift, Currie, McGhee & Hiers. He is a founder of, and adviser to, the Southeastern Bankruptcy Law Institute, a former member of the Judicial Conference of the United States’ Committee on the Administration of the Bankruptcy System, a fellow of the American College of Bankruptcy, and is a past president of the National Conference of Bankruptcy Judges.

A loyal alumnus, Judge Drake is a past president of the Mercer Law School alumni association and past chairman of the Law School Board of Visitors. He currently serves on the Mercer Board of Trustees. The University honored him in 2002 with the Monroe F. Swilley Award for Christian Statesmanship and in 2003 honored him with the Mercer Law School Outstanding Alumnus Award.

He has served as an adjunct professor of law at Emory University School of Law and the University of Georgia School of Law. The author of two books and numerous articles, he was recipient of the first David W. Pollard Achievement Award presented in 1994 by the Atlanta Bar Association for contributions to bankruptcy law and practice.

Professor Michael Sabbath, a Law School faculty member of more than 28 years who has held the SBLI/Homer Drake Endowed Professorship, will be the holder of the endowed chair. Sabbath earned his undergraduate degree from the University of Wisconsin and holds the J.D. and LL.M. degrees from Emory University and Columbia University, respectively.

(Posted: 03/01/07)
 
Competitive Counseling?

Everyone knows who wins the court cases.  Just look in the legal news for accounts of the prominent victors and losers.  But who are the best lawyer-counselors behind the closed doors of the confidential law office?

The American Bar Association understood that question to be one of the most interesting unanswered queries in the study of law practice, so it started the Client Counseling Competition in loose parallel with moot court competitions that test more public lawyering performance.

As an integral part of the Woodruff Curriculum, Mercer Law School in 1990 began to require that each Mercer student take an intensive one-week, one-credit course at the start of the second year in which each student would study and practice interviewing and counseling clients. Medical schools have been doing the same sort of thing for years, but law schools have been slower to accept the concept. Mercer is presently the only law school in the nation that requires each student to study the art of clientcounseling as a stand-alone subject.

Not surprisingly, Mercer has emerged as one of the leading law schools in the country in competing consistently for top honors in the ABA's Client Counseling Competition.  In the past 14 years, Mercer has won the regional competition five times, and placed no lower than fifth in the nation in each of those years.

In the ABA's 2007 Southeast Regional competition, Mercer's Webster-Award-winning counseling team of Alexandra Cornwell and Sidney Simms advanced to the regional championship round.  For the second year in a row, unfortunately, Mercer narrowly lost in that championship round, this time to the University of Miami Law School.  Miami will represent the Southeast at the ABA Nationals in Texas in March -- but Mercer served notice to all that it continues to prepare its students for counseling at the highest levels of excellence.

Mercer's other team of Courtenay Miller and Lindsey Zittrouer also performed admirably at the Southeast Regionals, placing ninth as a late entry after Vanderbilt unexpectedly withdrew from the competition, opening up the slot.

The entire Mercer Law School community joined in congratulating all these fine students who collectively contributed to Mercer's regional and national reputation in client counseling.  Unlike the students at other schools, each Mercer student could appreciate on a very personal, practical level why client counseling is not such an easy thing to do, and is worth serious study.  Go Bears!

(Posted: 02/20/07)
 
Law Day set for March 9

Mercer Law School’s Annual Law Day celebration is scheduled for Friday, March 9. This year’s Law Day will celebrate the University’s new Law and Public Service Program, which is housed in the Law School, and honor Law School graduates working in public service.

Keynote speaker for the Law Day luncheon is Doug Ammar, executive director of the Georgia Justice Project. Ammar is a graduate of Davidson College and the Washington & Lee Law School. He is in demand as a speaker both nationally and internationally, and has spoken about the Georgia Justice Project’s innovative and holistic approach to representing clients in Israel and Italy in the last year. More information about the Georgia Justice project is available at www.gjp.org.

The Law and Public Service Program at Mercer began in July 2006 and offers public service learning for students through clinical courses, public interest practicum opportunities, and volunteer community service.

Law Day Brochure and Online Registration Form

Learn more about the Law and Public Service Program

(Posted: 01/23/07)
 
Admissions Open Houses: January 19 & February 9, 2007
All prospective students are encouraged to attend an Open House at the Law School on Friday, January 19, 2007 or Friday, February 9, 2007 from 2:00-5:00 p.m. Information on Admissions, Financial Aid, and Career Services will be provided. Additionally, prospective students have the opportunity to meet faculty and current students at the Open House. Please RSVP by contacting the Admissions Office at 478-301-2605, 800-342-0841 ext. 2605 inside Georgia, 800-637-2378 ext. 2605 outside Georgia.
(Posted: 12/13/06)
 
Mercer wins regional moot court competition, claiming best brief and best oralist awards

Mercer Law School’s National Moot Court team won the Region 5, National Moot Court Competition. Mercer also captured the best brief award, and Tiffany Williams, a Mercer student, was named the best oralist in the final round. The team, composed of Barton Black, Mary Weeks, and Tiffany Williams, will advance to the national championship, to be held in New York City January 29-February 1, 2007. Madison Roberts served as student coach for the team, and Professor Reynold Kosek serves as faculty coach.

Learn more about our Moot Court program

(Posted: 11/20/06)
 
Mercer Faculty Continue to "Rock", according to the Princeton Review

The Mercer Law Faculty was ranked ninth in the nation by The Princeton Review on its top ten list entitled "Professors Rock (Legally Speaking)." The ranking, contained in The Best 170 Law Schools, 2007 Edition, is based on responses from student surveys on two ratings: the quality of teaching and the accessibility of faculty. This is the third consecutive year that the Mercer faculty ranked in the top ten. Rock On, faculty. More information is at www.princetonreview.com.

Read about recent scholarship by our faculty

(Posted: 10/18/06)
 
Law Review Symposium on Using Metaphor in Legal Analysis and Communication

On Friday, November 10, 2006 the Mercer Law Review will host its annual symposium.  This year the theme of the symposium is Using Metaphor in Legal Analysis and Communication. Speakers include Linda Berger from Thomas Jefferson Law School, Michael Goldberg from Vitas Hospice, Mark Johnson from the University of Oregon, David Ritchie from Mercer Law School, Michael Smith from the University of Wyoming, and Steven Winter from Wayne State Law School.  The symposium will run from 9:30 am to 4:00 pm.  Transcripts of the proceedings, along with papers by the participants, will be published in Volume 58 of the Mercer Law Review.

More Information

(Posted: 10/06/06)
 
Professor Jim Hunt returns from Fulbright position

During the 2005-2006 academic year Associate Professor Jim Hunt was a Fulbight Scholar in Kyiv, Ukraine. Ukraine, a former republic within the Soviet Union, has been independent since 1991. Ukraine is experiencing profound changes in politics, economics, and education as it shifts from a communist planned economy to a market-oriented multi-party democracy. Professor Hunt was affiliated with the law department and the master's program in economics at the National University Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, the oldest university in Ukraine.

At Kyiv-Mohyla he taught graduate students in Law and Economics, Economic History, and Legal Analysis. He also lecured on American history and law at universities in Kyiv, Odesa, Lviv, Dnipropetrovsk, Ternopil, and Khmelnytskyy, as well as at the Belarusian State University in Minsk, Belarus. He was an official observer in Ukraine's March 2006 parliamentary elections for the European Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

(Posted: 10/03/06)
 
Law School to Sponsor Forum for Judge Candidates

WHO:                  Candidates for the Macon Judicial Circuit Superior Court Judgeship

WHAT:                Judicial Forum

WHEN:                Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2006, 6-7:30 p.m.

WHERE:             Walter F. George School of Law, Moot Court Room, Mercer University

WHY:                   Dean Daisy Floyd and the Mercer Law School are sponsoring a Judicial Forum for the five candidates for the Macon Judicial Circuit Court judgeships. The five candidates include Pamela White Colbert, Ed Ennis, Cedric Leslie, Charles E. Jones and Tripp Self. The Forum is open to the public.

(Posted: 09/29/06)
 
Results of Milani Writing Competition Announced

The Adam A. Milani Disability Law Writing Competition is a national disability law writing competition administered by the Mercer Law School.  The competition honors the work of the late Professor Adam Milani, a passionate advocate for disability rights, an accomplished legal scholar, and a beloved faculty member at the Law School.  This year, over 50 student writers participated, representing nearly 30 law schools across the nation.  We are pleased to announce this year’s winners:

Stacy Mikulik (Emory University), who won the Essay category;

Gilbert Hain (Florida Coastal), who won the Law Practice category for appellate briefs; and

Elizabeth Stawarski (St. Thomas, MN), who won the Law Practice category for trial-level briefs.

Congratulations to these fine legal writers!

(Posted: 09/11/06)
 
Law School begins new Law and Public Service Program

Tim Floyd
Tim Floyd
 
Sarah Gerwig-Moore
Sarah Gerwig-Moore
Students at Mercer’s Walter F. George School of Law and throughout the University have new opportunities to engage in needed community service and to learn valuable lessons in cooperation.  This fall, the University has instituted a new Law and Public Service Program that is designed to promote volunteerism and attention to public interest law. 

The centerpiece of the program is experiential learning by students, through new clinics and expanded public interest practicum opportunities in which students work on real cases and receive academic credit.  In addition, the program will coordinate and encourage volunteer community service and legal service opportunities by students, and will assist students with summer placements in public service offices and in full time public service careers after graduation.  Although the program is housed at the Law School, this a University-level program; a central feature of the program will be finding opportunities for interdisciplinary collaboration and cooperation in service between law students and students in other schools and colleges of Mercer. 

Students at the Law School have a strong record of volunteer public service, but the Law and Public Service Program marks the first effort toward a centralized coordination and development of such efforts.  Two new faculty members, Professor Tim Floyd and Professor Sarah Gerwig-Moore, have been hired to develop the Program.  They will find and coordinate service opportunities, supervise the work of individual students, and teach the classroom components of the courses.  As Director of the Law and Public Service Program, Floyd reports to Dr. Horace Fleming, Executive Vice President and Provost of the University.

 “This program will involve students from many fields in the University other than Law, including at the undergraduate level,” says Fleming.  “The program will educate students about public service and acquaint them with opportunities for serving their community.  Through clinics, our students will gain practical insights into the legal system and how it works.  At the same time, they will help provide valuable legal services to underrepresented persons in the community.” 

According to Floyd, “Mercer is an institution with a long history of concern for public service, and the breadth of our academic and professional programs provides numerous opportunities to work together to find creative and holistic solutions to client problems.”

(Posted: 09/06/06)
 
Georgia Court of Appeals hearing arguments at the Law School
As part of its Centennial commemoration, the Georgia Court of Appeals will hear oral arguments at Mercer Law School in the Courtroom on Thursday, September 21st.   Arguments will run from 10:00 until 12:00, with a short break between 10:40 and 10:50.  The schedule of arguments and the briefs for the arguments are available to the Law School Community on the X drive in the "Georgia Court of Appeals 2006" folder. 
(Posted: 08/23/06)
 
John E. James Distinguished Lecture to be held on Sept 12

The 2006 JOHN E. JAMES DISTINGUISHED LECTURE will be held on Tuesday, September 12, 2006 at 5:30 p.m. in the Moot Court Room of the Law School.  Professor Jean-Yves de Cara of the Faculty of Law at the Université Jean Moulin in France will speak on The Role of Law in International Trade and Investment.

(Posted: 07/23/06)
 
Mercer's Recognition in the U.S. News Rankings

The Walter F. George School of Law of Mercer University continues to advance in the national rankings due in good part to the opinions of the nation's judges and lawyers. In the 2007 U.S. News and World Report edition of America's Best Graduate Schools now hitting the stands, the school was rated an average of 3 out of a possible 5 by judges and lawyers across the nation, which accounts for 15 percent of a school's overall ranking.

 

The Walter F. George School of Law of Mercer jumped 13 places among "The Top 100 Schools."  While the school tied with five other law schools – LSU, Northeastern University, Penn State, Pepperdine and Santa Clara, Mercer had the highest rating of the five among judges and lawyers.

 

The other most influencing factor, Mercer Law School Dean Daisy Floyd said, is the school's nationally respected Legal Writing Program. For the second year in a row, the Mercer Legal Writing Program is one of the top programs in the nation, ranked only behind Seattle University. The Legal Writing ranking is among a listing of the top 10 programs in several specialty areas, based on survey responses from faculty who teach in the field.

 

"I am delighted that the Law School's programs are receiving the national recognition they deserve," Dean Floyd said. "One of the gratifying aspects of this year's ranking is that Mercer's reputation among lawyers and judges has improved significantly. Lawyers and judges understand that Mercer graduates lawyers who are ready to practice law. We offer our students one of the best legal writing programs in the country and a unique approach to professionalism training, emphasizing that being a good lawyer has a lot to do with who you are and not just what you know. Mercer is a special place, and I am pleased for our faculty, staff, students, and alumni that it is receiving the recognition it deserves."

 

(Posted: 04/07/06)
 
Legal Writing Institute Conference

Professor Linda Edwards will host the 2006 Legal Writing Institute Conference on June 7 - 10.  The conference will be attended by approximately 450 professors of legal writing, representing almost all accredited law schools in the nation.  Professor Edwards will host a two day retreat for the Board of Directors immediately before the conference and will host the two-day Writer's Workshop at Callaway Gardens immediately after the conference. 

(Posted: 04/06/06)
 
Mercer Finalists in 2006 National Corporate Law Competition

The Vale Corporate Law Moot Court Competition, held each year in the corporate law capital of Delaware, is where the law school guns meet each year for bragging rights in corporate law.  For the third straight year, Mercer has vied for the title.  Two years ago, Mercer lost narrowly in finals against Brooklyn Law School.  Last year, Mercer won Best Brief before bowing out in the final four.  This year, Mercer once again went to the finals.  No other team in the past three years enjoys a better overall record. 

On Sunday, March 19, Mercer second-year students Tiffany Williams, Jacob Massee and Barton Black (coached by third-year student and former Vale competitor, Bethany Rezek) went up against the very same NYU team they had soundly defeated the day before. The same teams went to the finals because they had amassed the highest points totals for briefs and oral arguments in the four-day competition.  The finals bench included two Delaware Supreme Court justices, two Chancery (special corporation) Court judges and Prof. William Carney from Emory. (The court bench Mercer did so well with on Saturday had included the practitioner who had chaired the committee that wrote the statute at issue.)

The large ampitheatre moot court room was nearly full of Widener students and faculty, defeated teams from the competition, Mercer's other team (Jenny Richter, Jason Blanchard, Robert Glass and student coach Yoon Hwang (from the Vale 2005 team that won best brief), who had also done very well but did not make the finals).  Tiffany and Jacob's argument went very well, but Mercer didn't get as many questions as hoped.  That might have hurt because Mercer's team had good answers for everything, and Tiffany and Jacob can really deliver the goods.  Mercer caught NYU by surprise a little, but NYU's team did a good job listening to arguments and responding to them.  Although Mercer probably performed even better than it had on Saturday, the Court gave the nod to NYU. 

The bench was very complimentary, noting how difficult and complicated the problem was, and all five justices invited the advocates to practice corporate law in Delaware and thereby to raise the already high standard of practice there.  Emory's Professor Carney publicly acknowledged in the critiques that he occasionally benches Emory moot court teams, but he hadn't realized how good student advocates can get.   

All Mercerians are proud of both teams.  The standard of competition was extremely high, a point repeatedly made by the organizers and judges. 

(Posted: 03/22/06)
 
Mercer Law Alum Adopts Street in Front of Law School

The Keep Macon-Bibb Beautiful Commission hosted an unveiling on March 17 recognizing Nancy Grace for adopting Georgia Avenue, from Orange Street to Bond Street, in front of the Mercer Law School.

Nancy, who hosts her own nightly television show on the Headline News cable network, graduated from Mercer with Bachelor of Arts degree in 1981 and a J.D. from the Walter F. George School of Law in 1984. She currently serves on the Mercer Board of Trustees.

Nancy was recognized at the ceremony “for her dedication and willingness to maintain cleanliness, beautification and litter control on Georgia Avenue.”

Pictured are Nancy Grace, sixth from left, along with other Mercer Law School alumni.

(Posted: 03/20/06)
 
Gabrielli Moot Court Success

Mercer's two Gabrielli Moot Court teams faired extremely well at the competition this spring. The team of Will Fleenor, Aynsley Harrow, and Ken Smith advanced to the competition finals. In a hard fought battle, the team lost a split (3-2) decision to Brooklyn Law School. Aynsley Harrow won best oralist of the competition. The team of Leslie Cadle, Thomas Gore, and James Robson won best brief and advanced to the semi-final round. They lost to the eventual champions Brooklyn Law School . In all, Mercer took 3 of the 4 awards given at this competition.

(Posted: 02/27/06)
 
Law Review Symposium on Rule 68 to be held on Friday, February 17
On Friday, February 17, the Mercer Law Review will be hosting a symposium entitled, Revitalizing FRCP 68: Can Offers of Judgment Provide Adequate Incentives for Fair, Early Settlement of Fee-Recovery Cases? This Symposium will examine the continuing apparent underutilization of Rule 68 in federal fee-shifting cases, the reasons it has withered despite the incentives for its use, the states’ growing experience with counterpart rules, and proposals to reinvigorate Rule 68 in federal fee-shifting litigation. Eight prominent civil rights and employment discrimination lawyers from around the nation, representing the perspectives of plaintiffs and defendants, will provide the principal testimony on the tactical and economic considerations attending the use of Rule 68 offers. They will be joined by a senior federal judge, who is perhaps the nation’s foremost judicial expositor of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and an author of his own proposal for amending Rule 68. The expert panel is rounded out by academic researchers who are conducting national empirical studies of Rule 68 and related state rules, and another expert who served as Reporter to the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules of the Judicial Conference of the United States during the last failed attempt to amend Rule 68. More information about the Symposium is available on the Law Review’s website.
(Posted: 02/11/06)
 
Mercer Hosting Critical Tax Theory Conference
On April 7 & 8, 2006, Mercer University School of Law will host the 2006 Critical Tax Theory Conference. This conference, organized by Professor David A. Brennen (Ellison C. Palmer Professor of Tax Law), is the 9th in the Critical Tax Theory series of conferences. During the conference, tax law professors from around the country will gather at Mercer's law school to discuss ongoing and future research projects related to tax law. Over the years, the conference has been, or will be, hosted by University of Michigan, Seattle University, Rutgers Newark University, UCLA and many others.
(Posted: 02/10/06)
 
Admissions Open Houses
All prospective students are encouraged to attend an Open House at the Law School on Friday, January 20, 2006 or Friday, February 10, 2006 from 2:00-5:00 p.m. Information on Admissions, Financial Aid, and Career Services will be provided. Additionally, prospective students have the opportunity to meet faculty and current students at the Open House. Please RSVP by contacting the Admissions Office at 478-301-2605, 800-342-0841 ext. 2605 inside Georgia, 800-637-2378 ext. 2605 outside Georgia.
(Posted: 11/16/05)
 
Mercer Moot Court Team Wins Southeast Regional to Advance to National Finals
On November 4-5, 2005, Mercer Law School won the Region V, National Moot Court competition in Atlanta. The team, which includes Zach McEntyre, Ann Patton Nelson and Brett Thompson, also received awards for the Best Brief in the competition, Best Oralist in the 4 preliminary rounds (Ann Patton Nelson) and Best Oralist in the final round (Zach McEntyre). Mercer and the University of Georgia Law School advance to New York, where they will compete with top teams from the other regional competitions for the National Championship in February.
(Posted: 11/07/05)
 
Mercer Professor Playing a Key Role in Investigation of White House Leak

Professor Jim Fleissner, who returned in July to the law school from a leave of absence spent in government service, continues to serve the U.S. Department of Justice under a special appointment.  He is serving as deputy to Special Counsel Patrick Fitzgerald and was part of the team of federal prosecutors who secured the indictment of the Chief of Staff to the Vice President, I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby for perjury, obstruction of justice, and making false statements during the investigation into the leaking of the identity of CIA official Valerie Plame.  He was in Washington, D.C. for the return of the indictment and the public announcement.  Professor Fleissner had earlier served as lead counsel for the Office of Special Counsel in the litigation concerning subpoenas issues to reporters Judith Miller of the New York Times, Matthew Cooper of Time Magazine, and Tim Russert of NBC.  He successfully argued the appeals of Miller and Cooper before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and filed the government’s brief in opposition to certiorari in the Supreme Court.  He has served as Deputy Special Counsel since January 2004.     

(Posted: 11/01/05)
 
Mercer Law Faculty Rock On, according to Princeton Review
The Mercer Law Faculty was ranked ninth in the nation by The Princeton Review on its top ten list entitled "Professors Rock (Legally Speaking)." The ranking, contained in the on-line version of The Best 159 Law Schools, 2006 Edition, is based on responses from student surveys on two ratings: the quality of teaching and the accessibility of faculty. This is the second consecutive year that the Mercer faculty ranked in the top ten. Rock On, faculty. More information is at www.princetonreview.com.
(Posted: 10/10/05)
 
Georgia Court of Appeals to hear arguments at Mercer in October
On Wednesday, October 19, the Georgia Court of Appeals will hear arguments in the Law School's Moot Courtroom. The special session will begin at 10:00 A.M. The schedule of arguments and briefs for the arguments is available online.
(Posted: 09/13/05)
 
Workshop with Professor Robert Audi
On September 30 and October 1, 2005, Robert Audi , the David E. Gallo Professor of Business Ethics at Notre Dame University , will be conducting a workshop with the faculty and invited guests on "Principles and Cases in Law and Ethics."
(Posted: 09/13/05)
 
Mercer Co-Sponsoring National Ethics Workshop in September
The first annual Workshop of the National Institute for Teaching Ethics & Professionalism (NIFTEP) will take place in Atlanta on September 23 - 25, 2005. Participation is limited and by application only. Accepted applicants will be designated NIFTEP Fellows and their participation will be fully funded (travel, hotel and all workshop costs). The application deadline is Monday, August 8. For more information and the on-line application, go to: http://law.gsu.edu/ccunningham/Professionalism/Index.htm


NIFTEP is a Partnership of Five Universities:

The Louis Stein Center for Law & Ethics at Fordham University

The Mercer University School of Law Center for Legal Ethics and Professionalism

The Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough Center on Professionalism at the University of South Carolina

The Stanford Center on Ethics

The W. Lee Burge Endowment for Law & Ethics at Georgia State University

(Posted: 09/12/05)
 
Imam Feisel Abdul Rauf to speak at John James Lecture
On Tuesday, September 20, 2005, the Law School will host the Fifth Annual John E. James Distinguished Lecture. Imam Feisel Abdul Rauf will present the lecture entitled, What is Islamic Law? He is founder and CEO of the American Society for Muslim Advancement and he is Imam of Masjid Al-Farah, a mosque in New York City, 12 blocks from Ground Zero. He is also the architect of the Cordoba Initiative, an interreligious blueprint for improving relations for improving relations between America and the Muslim world and pursuing Middle East peace. The lecture will be presented at 5:00 in the Moot Court Room. A reception will follow.
(Posted: 09/12/05)
 
Distinguished Visitors from Nankai University
Dean Xinyi Hou and Professor Hongyou Sun, from Nankai University Law School in Tianjin, China, will visit the Law School from August 28 - 31, 2005. They will present several lectures on Chinese law and Chinese legal education while they are in residence.
(Posted: 08/22/05)
 
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