Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition
Jessup Team Members Adrian Braude (2L), Alex A. Hale (2L), Eric Furreboe (2L) and Allison Weber (2L) (pictured right) battled twelve other teams in the Rocky Mountain Regionals at the University of Denver’s Sturm College of Law in late March. They scored well in the memorial competition and proved their grasp of difficult issues of human rights, armed international aggression and environmental harm in the oral rounds. Congratulations on a job well done, and kudos to coach Shirley Spira for another great year.
Richard Grand Closing Argument Competition
The Richard Grand Closing Argument Competition is an internal competition established in 1995 by the late Richard Grand (‘58), a Tucson-area plaintiffs’ attorney.
He conceived the idea of a competition which would emphasize jury arguments focusing on damages. Five finalists are selected from a preliminary round and then compete in a final round often judged by alumni who have previously won the competition. This year’s finalists included:
1st place ($2,500 prize) - Samantha Barrera (1L)
2nd place ($1,500 prize) - Max Larnerd (3L)
3rd place ($500 prize) - Derek Kilgore (3L)
4th place ($250 prize each) - Jade DuBroy (2L) and Zack Schimke (2L)
Samuel M. Fegtly Moot Court Competition
In April, the final round of the Samuel M. Fegtly Intramural Moot Court Competition was held at University of Arizona Law. This internal moot-court competition, which allows 2L and 3L students to argue an appellate case, has been funded by alumnus J. Scott Burns (’76) in honor of his father, F. Britton Burns (’41), since 1985.
This year, students argued the constitutionality of a forensic cell phone search at the border. Hannah Hays (2L) and Lauren Rhoades (2L) argued in the final round before Judge Allison Eid (United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit), Judge James Ho (United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit) and noted United States Supreme Court advocate Allyson Ho (Gibson Dunn).
Lauren won the F. Britton Burns award for best oral argument, Hannah won the Samuel M. Fegtly award for best combined score in the preliminary rounds, and Allison Weber (2L) won the Suzanne Rabe Award for best brief.
Congratulations to all the participants and thank you to the Burns family for their continued support. Thank you also to the many alumni and local attorneys who helped judge the preliminary rounds.
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