Richmond Law students J.P. Brown, Albert Flores, Kelly Gibson, and Dan O’Brien have one thing in common: They came to law school firm in the knowledge that they wanted to practice criminal law.
Feature Stories
“People follow their passions all the time, but I think mine gets stereotyped for being something that grandmothers do," says Emily Whitted, ′16. "I just needed a push, someone to say, ‘That’s not silly.’”
Student interns gain value work experience; provide community service through work in Spatial Analysis Lab
Richmond Law professor Noah Sachs has just delivered his congressional testimony on the subject of regulatory reform. He’s exceeded his five-minute time limit by 30 seconds, but he’s not too worried about it.
Two years ago, Sarah Rose, L’15, took on a research project investigating potential backlogs of untested rape evidence kits in Virginia.
When Suzi Bass started applying for summer internships in the fall of her 2L year, she decided to cast a wide net.
As the Supreme Court of the United States released its most recent round of decisions, Richmond Law weighed in – directly, through interviews, and indirectly, through citations in SCOTUS opinions.