Of Counsel Magazibe Volume 22/Spring 2021

Page 65

Sarah Jane Brinson ’09 Sarah Jane Brinson, 37, passed away on Friday, March 12 at Vidant Medical Center after a month-long fight against COVID-19 double pneumonia. Sarah is survived by her parents, Doug and Annette Brinson of Arapahoe, North Carolina; her brother, Jack Brinson of Columbia, Maryland; her sister and brother-in-law, Mary Kate Brinson Parrish and Jacob of Greenville, North Carolina; her nephew, Jackson Parrish; her niece, Emma Kate Parrish; and her dog Sadie. Sarah graduated from Pamlico County High School in 2002. She then earned in 2006 a B.S. in political science and a B.A. in Hispanic studies. In 2009 Sarah graduated from North Carolina Central University with a J.D. degree. She owned and operated Brinson Law in Clinton, North Carolina until she returned home in 2020 to be closer to her family. She then taught American Government at Pamlico Community College. Sarah’s love of her family, many friends, her ECU girls, and of Bethany Christian Church was boundless. Sarah was always positive in her attitudes toward people and life. She was always able to find the good in life’s situations, help others, and to be loyal to her friends. She loved to travel to different countries and share in their cultures. She was known as “the documenter” among her family and friends as she captured in photos life’s important events, both big and small.

Ola M. Lewis ’90 Superior Court Judge Ola M. Lewis, 54, died Sunday, Dec. 29, 2019 at her home in Bolivia after a two-year battle with a rare form of liver cancer. Judge Ola grew up in Spring Lake, North Carolina, and later her family moved to Brunswick County. She followed in her father’s footsteps, graduating from Fayetteville State

University before attending North Carolina Central Law School, where she graduated in 1990 with a J.D. She worked one year in private practice with then became North Carolina Speaker of the House before returning to her Brunswick County home to serve as a county prosecutor. In 1993, only two years after returning home, Judge Ola was appointed district court judge, the youngest judge serving at that time in North Carolina. She would serve in this role for seven years before being appointed by former North Carolina Governor Jim Hunt in 2000 to serve as a special superior court judge. She traveled 21 counties in this role, telling friends and family her motto was, “Have gavel, will travel.” The longest serving female judge in the history of North Carolina, Judge Ola remained on the bench until her death. In her 19 years on the superior court bench, she served as special superior court judge, resident superior court judge and senior resident superior court judge. During her time as judge, she fostered the county’s drug treatment court, helping hundreds of residents find sobriety and reduce inmate population and costs. Her drug court program created a national template that has since been used in other effective drug court programs throughout the United States. In 2017, she began the Brunswick County Opioid Addiction Task Force with Sheriff John Ingram. The task force’s charge was to raise awareness about opioids’ negative impacts on people, families and communities. In this role, Judge Ola encouraged Governor Roy Cooper to declare the opioid addiction crisis a statewide public health emergency. In 2018, for this and her many other accomplishments, Gov. Cooper awarded her the Order of the Long Leaf Pine. In 2010, the Honorable Governor Beverly Perdue awarded her the Old North State Award. In 2017, the Honorable Josh Stein, Attorney General for the State of North Carolina presented Judge Ola the Dogwood Award for her “dedication to keeping people safe, healthy and happy in their communities.” She is survived by her loving husband of 16 years, Reginald Holley; mother, Doris Lewis; brother, Cliff Lewis, and his wife, Donna; and sisters, Peggy Walker and Pam Lewis. She is also survived by many beloved family members as well as a host of friends.

VOLUME 23 • SPRING 2021

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Memorials

1min
page 66

Why I Support HBCUs — Frank S. Turner

3min
page 65

Dean’s Note NCCU School of Law Donors

6min
pages 67-72

NCCU Law School Alumnus Patrick Hannah Heads the Corporate Roundtable for the National Caucus of State Legislators and Raleigh Durham Airport Authority

3min
pages 62-63

Meet Preston Mitchum ‘11

2min
page 64

Incubating Legal Practices for Justice The Durham Opportunity and Justice Incubator — Mark Atkinson ‘20

5min
pages 60-61

Alumni Mock Interview Program Launched February 2021

2min
page 59

From Humble Beginnings to Entrepreneurial Heights: The Story of David Lee Cook, III ‘81

2min
page 58

NCCU Law School Trio Provides a Play-by-Play Account of an NFL Experience of a Lifetime — Daniel Adams, Sorrell Saunders & Julian Cuthbertson

4min
pages 56-57

Reflections on the Adoption Law Moot Court Competition Capital University Child Welfare — Courtney Brown, 3L

1min
page 55

NCCU School of Law Moot Court 2021 A Spring Competition Season Like No Other — Professor Shelly DeAdder

2min
page 54

Dr. Brenda R. Shaw — The Title III Program and its Impact on the NCCU School of Law

5min
pages 52-53

Sharon N. Gaskin — An Admissions Adventure

4min
pages 50-51

Eagle Soars: India Y. Ali ‘13

0
page 49

Teaching Outside of the (Classroom Box: Lessons Learned While Teaching Remotely During the COVID-19 Pandemic — Professor Kia H. Vernon

4min
pages 44-45

NCCU School of Law’s Summer Start Initiative: Five Weeks Impact Student Success - Professors Kia H. Vernon, Dorothy D. Nachman, & Donald W. Corbett

5min
pages 46-48

Race and Place: The Upbuilding of Hayti and Black Wall Street — Andre D. Vann

23min
pages 34-41

NCCU School of Law’s Legal Pipeline Programs: Increasing Diversity of the Legal Profession One Student at A Time — Associate Dean Angela A. Gilmore

4min
pages 42-43

NCCU School of Law’s First Marketing Campaign — Mitzi Townes

3min
page 33

RJR Nabisco Endowed Chair — Professor Reginald Mombrun

1min
page 32

John D. Fassett Professorship Endowed Chair — Dr. Malik Edwards

0
page 31

Charles Houston Endowed Chair — Professor Irving L. Joyner

1min
page 30

“Bloody Sunday” History, Legacy and Continuing Need — Professor Irving L. Joyner

7min
pages 22-23

Continuation of Interview: Professor Cheryl Amana Burris & Attorney John L. Burris

13min
pages 27-29

A Change of Perspective — Alexis Murray, SBA President

2min
page 21

COVID-19, Ethics, and The Law — Sheila M. Parrish-Spence

5min
pages 19-20

Eagle Soars: Fenita Morris - Shepard Named Chief Legal Counsel of NCCU

1min
page 18

Transition in Chaos — Chip Baggett ‘16

7min
pages 14-15

To Patent and Serve — Kia C. Bell

3min
page 8

Interview: Professor Cheryl Amana Burris & Attorney John L. Burris

16min
pages 10-13

Message from the Dean

4min
pages 3-4

Tribal Governance in the Midst of the “Storm” — Joshua Richardson ’20

6min
pages 16-17

Technology Initiative — Associate Dean of Technology and the Law April G. Dawson

3min
page 5

NCCU School of Law Alumnus’ Eyewitness Account of the Development of a COVID-19 Product — Emily Hales

4min
pages 6-7

Alumni Highlight: Sheila R. Spence

1min
page 9
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