Jenkins Competitors Advance to Semifinals

The following participants in the 2012 Jenkins Honors Moot Court Competition will be advancing to the semifinals, which will take place on Wednesday, March 28:

Kristina Gordon and Sarah McNutt v. Bailey Briggs and Nathan Imfeld

Ariane Strombom and Megan Zabkowicz v. Patrick Ritter and Matthew Hanson

The participants are advancing from three preliminary rounds this weekend.  Please congratulate the semifinalists and all the competitors for their hard work and outstanding performances this weekend.

 

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Professor Lindsey Honored for VITA Work

Professor Vada Waters Lindsey today was honored by the United States Postal Service as a one of fourteen “Women Putting Their Stamp on Metro Milwaukee.”  Professor Lindsey was honored in the Government Service or Law category for her tireless work on the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program, which program has served more than 1,000 people in six years at Marquette University Law School.  Aside from coordinating the program, Professor Lindsey also trains all the student volunteers who assist with the tax preparation.  The MULS VITA site has a 100 percent accuracy rate.

Professor Lindsey received her award today at a luncheon at the Country Inn in Waukesha. Congratulations, Professor Lindsey.

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Prof. O’Meara on Stand Your Ground

With the Trayvon Martin case drawing national attention to self-defense law, our own Professor O’Meara has a New York Times op-ed on Stand Your Ground laws.  He argues that the laws are unnecessary because traditional self-defense law provides ample protection for defenders who use lethal force appropriately.  He observes:

In my home state of Wisconsin, a large group of criminal prosecutors, defense attorneys and judges could come up with only one case in which any homeowner was prosecuted when he shot someone who entered his home illegally. That conviction was later overturned.

Stand Your Ground laws may thus add little to the protection of individuals who act reasonably, but they risk impeding the prosecution of others who are too quick to resort to deadly force.

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