School of Law Logo7:58pm 12/17/2024

Year: 2015

  • Bradley Hargett: Serving the State

    Bradley C. Hargett (’16) was surprised when he learned in June that he had won the Alabama State Bar’s Pro Bono Law Student Award. “I had no idea I had been nominated and it was very exciting to know that the state bar recognizes the efforts of law students and attorneys in pro bono service,”…

  • Professor Delgado Named Faculty Fellow for Texas A&M University Institute for Advanced Study

    Professor Richard Delgado has been selected as a faculty fellow for the Texas A&M University Institute for Advanced Study for the 2015-2016 academic year. Each faculty fellow will partner with one or more of the departments offering graduate degrees housed in Texas A&M’s 16 colleges or schools, or the Texas A&M Health Science Center. Delgado, the…

  • Professor Gross Says Drug Laws Are Designed to Demand Guilty Pleas, Not to Find Justice

    Professor John Gross recently wrote in a guest op-ed for Al.com that police and prosecutors are constantly urging legislatures to give them “overly broad” and “unnecessarily punitive” laws to help fight crime. The result is 94 percent of criminal convictions are the result of guilty pleas. “Plea bargaining, something that occurs largely without judicial supervision,…

  • Professor Gross Weighs in on Prosecution of Chemical Endangerment Cases

    Professor John Gross recently told ProPublica there is a disparity in the way prosecutors in Alabama’s 67 counties have applied the “chemical endangerment of a child” statute. “Each county is its own little fiefdom,” said Gross, director of the Law School’s criminal defense clinic. “You get vastly different results in terms of how the cases are…

  • Expert to Lecture at Law School on Legal Responses to Catastrophes

    The University of Alabama School of Law will host Distinguished Visiting Lecturer Kenneth Feinberg at noon Tuesday, Sept. 29, in the Bedsole Moot Courtroom 140. The lecture is free and open to the public. Feinberg is an expert in mediation and alternative dispute resolution. He has handled financial claims for major crises and disasters. He…

  • Legal Scholars to Visit and Discuss Law’s Rhetorical Life

    Legal scholars will visit The University of Alabama School of Law and discuss law’s rhetorical life Sept. 18 during a symposium. The Rhetorical Process and Legal Judgments Symposium begins at 8:30 a.m. in the Bedsole Moot Courtroom, Room 140. Legal scholars will investigate how questions of rhetoric shape the development of legal and judicial decisions,…

  • Alabama Law Ranks 10th Best in Study of Graduates’ Debt Load

    Students, academics, and commentators are all paying more attention to the debt load with which law graduates enter the workforce. Many recent articles have detailed the negative impact that large law school debt has on career choices. According to one recent examination, Alabama Law graduates fare well in this metric. The University of Alabama School…

  • Professor Hobbs Discusses Arguments for Opening Bentley Divorce File

    Motions filed Monday by state media outlets to unseal Gov. Robert Bentley’s divorce proceedings argue the case file should be open to the public because most of the state’s divorce cases are open. Professor Steven Hobbs recently told the The Decatur Daily the best argument to unseal the Bentley files may be because it involves the highest elected…

  • Professors Rushin and Delgado Comment on Trial of Alabama Police Officer

    Federal prosecutors plan to retry the Alabama police officer who was charged with violating an Indian man’s civil rights after a jury deadlocked Friday and a mistrial was declared in the case. Madison police officer Eric Parker was accused of using unreasonable force when he slammed Sureshbhai Patel, 58, to the ground in February. Professor…

  • Professor Krotoszynski Weighs in on Marriage License Case in Kentucky

    Professor Ronald Krotoszynski Jr. recently told The New York Times and “Background Briefing with Ian Masters” same-sex couples in Kentucky who have been denied marriage licenses will ultimately receive them. The U.S. Supreme Court has refused to allow a county clerk in Kentucky who objects to same-sex marriage on religious grounds to continue to deny…