Idaho Law Magazine 2013

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A MAGAZINE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO COLLEGE OF LAW

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Fall 2013

T H I S I S O U R C O L L E G E O F L AW

Inside . . .

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Don Burnett caps illustrious career by serving as University of Idaho FALL 1 interim president [page 4]


A MAGAZINE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO COLLEGE OF LAW Fall 2013 interim President Donald L. Burnett, Jr. interim DEAN Michael A. Satz Associate Deans Lee Dillion Jeffrey A. Dodge Richard Seamon Editors Terri L. Muse Eric M. White Magazine Design Beth A. Case Writers and Contributors Stacie Jones Terri L. Muse Photographs Doug Clark Melissa Hartley Joe Pallen Website www.uidaho.edu/law

The University of Idaho is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer and educational institution. Š2013, University of Idaho College of Law

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Address for Correspondence Idaho Law Magazine c/o Terri Muse 322 E. Front St., Ste. 590 Boise, ID 83702

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(208) 364-4044 tmuse@uidaho.edu

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IDAHOLAW Pictured left to right, top to bottom: Linda Copple Trout, former Chief Justice Idaho Supreme Court; Ernesto Sanchez, executive director Idaho Legal Aid Services – retired; Wendy Couture, associate professor of Law; Judge Dayo Onanubosi, Third Judicial District; Karen Gowland, Boise, Inc.; Marc Bybee, Class of 2013; Judge Candy Dale, Chief Magistrate Judge, United States District Court, District of Idaho; Idaho Attorney General Lawrence Wasden; United States Senator James Risch; Dennis Johnson, Heritage Insurance president and CEO; and Jane Gordon, Class of 2013.

TABLE OF CONTENTS DEAN’S MESSAGE.................................................................................................2 AT THE HELM......................................................................................................................4

Don Burnett caps illustrious career by serving as University of Idaho interim president

IT’S A FAMILY THING..........................................................................................10 For many families, the College of Law is a tradition that runs deep COMMENCEMENT..............................................................................................14 LAW ADVISORY COUNCIL................................................................................18 DONOR ROLL..................................................................................................... 20 WELCOME NEW FACULTY................................................................................ 28 Law Faculty Publications.........................................................................29 Faculty – Staff Outreach and Engagement Activities............... 31 IDAHO LAW: News & Notes..................................................................................34

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On the Cover:

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Dean’s Message Legacies of Service, Family, Excellence and Giving at the College of Law

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on Burnett served the College of Law well during his 11 year tenure as dean. For those of you who haven’t heard the news, Dean Burnett transitioned to Interim President Burnett, the interim president of the University of Idaho. Don assumed the role of interim president in June 2013, and continues a truly remarkable legacy of service to the University and the State of Idaho for which we are quite grateful. Our feature story in this issue provides a chronology of his legal career and highlights his reflections about his career path. The College of Law accomplished much under Don’s leadership and we owe him a deep debt of gratitude for his exemplary service to our institution.

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When Don Burnett transitioned to the University presidency, I was honored to be selected to serve as the interim dean for the College of Law. I have been a member of the law faculty since 2006 and served as the associate dean for Faculty Affairs during the last academic year. I am enjoying my time as dean and I am happy to report we are off to a great start to the academic year. The year started on a very positive note with a 9.4 percent increase in enrollment from the previous academic year at a time when law school applications and enrollments are generally down nationwide. Less than five percent of law schools nationwide posted enrollment gains this year and the College of Law is proud to be one of them. What pleases me the most about these gains is that they signal that the message about the quality and value of a legal education at the

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College of Law is getting to and being heard by prospective students, not just in Idaho, but nationwide. I have been and continue to travel the state to meet alumni and practicing attorneys. If I have not already, I hope to see you in my future travels this year. This issue also features a story about our 104-year legacy of producing outstanding alumni. “It’s a Family Thing” features just a small sampling of some of our alumni community who have family ties to the College of Law. We know there are many more examples of multi-generational law families and I hope you will share your story on the College of Law Facebook page. We also have had several of our alumni honored during both the University and College of Law commencement ceremonies. You can learn more about these distinguished alumni on page 16. And, the good news about your College of Law continues: the College of Law was recently ranked by the National Jurist magazine as one of the most innovative law schools in the country for our third year program in Boise. We commenced our thirdyear of offering students the option to finish their


Your College of Law faculty continues to achieve and innovate in ways that hopefully make you proud to be part of our community. Professor Angelique EagleWoman was recently named one of the “Top 50 under 50” minority law professors by Lawyers of Color magazine. Professor EagleWoman, along with Professors Jack Miller and Rich Seamon all published textbooks in their respective areas of expertise over this past summer. College of Law professors also have been busy establishing, or continuing, quality educational programming for college students as well, with Professor AnneMarie Bridy and Associate Dean for Boise Programs Lee Dillion establishing an Intellectual Property component to the College’s Small Business Clinic in Boise. This is just a small sampling of the many achievements by College of Law faculty whose commitment to excellence is unparalleled and much appreciated by me.

This annual publication always highlights the names of our alumni and friends who support the College of Law with their financial contributions. In this age of fewer and fewer public dollars being allocated toward public higher education, private support is essential to our survival. I extend my personal and heartfelt thanks to all of our supporters. The University is in the final stretches of a sevenyear capital campaign – Inspiring Futures: Invest in the University of Idaho. We need all of our alumni and friends to show their support by making a gift to the campaign. No matter what your level of giving, what matters the most is that you give and that you know that your gift supports an institution with a long Idaho history and proven success of graduating outstanding lawyers and leaders.

Mike Satz Interim Dean and Professor of Law

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last year in Boise. We recently earned approval from the State Board of Education to offer a second year of study option in Boise as well, expanding our operations in the Treasure Valley and further enhancing our ability to fulfill our state-wide mission as the only public law school in the state. At the same time it gives our students vastly improved opportunities over the one-campus model of years past. We now are seeking funding approval by the governor and legislature and we are hopeful that we will get the support needed to open the secondyear program soon.

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Feature

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Don Burnett caps illustrious career by serving as University of Idaho interim president.

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“Every generation is destined to do great things, but great things aren’t always famous things.”

By Stacie Jones


As I wait at a small table tucked behind the exhibitor booths at the Idaho State Bar 2013 Annual Meeting in July, I begin to hear signs that the person I am here to interview has arrived.

“Hello, Mr. President, it’s nice to see you!”

Vandal Beginnings

“Don! How are you?”

Early in his career, Burnett attended a football game during a visit to the University of Idaho campus to give a guest lecture to law students. When the fight song played, something unexpected happened.

Eventually he rounds the corner to where I sit, also greeting me with a warm smile. Sneaking a quick sip from his orange juice, he releases a slight sigh as he settles into the seat adjacent to mine, relishing his brief break before he begins to field my questions.

“So, how’s it going?” I ask.

“Well, the metaphor drinking from the fire hose is pretty accurate,” he grins.

Burnett is just weeks into his new role as interim president of the University of Idaho. Selected for the position by the

University of Idaho Board of Regents, Burnett began work in his new post in June, following the departure of M. Duane Nellis.

“One of the striking things about work as the president is the sheer volume and velocity of the issues that come through that office,” he said. “Fortunately, I have a good provost and team of deans and vice presidents to support me.”

While his presidential duties may bring new challenges, the position seems the perfect capstone to Burnett’s long and distinguished career as practicing attorney, appellate judge, Army JAG officer, state bar president, law professor and dean of two law schools — most recently at the University of Idaho College of Law. For Burnett, the appointment to the Office of the President holds an even deeper significance.

“I was taken aback by the fact that I felt this great sense of calm and well-being when I heard the band play the Vandal fight song,” he recalled. When he later mentioned the experience to his mother, she said: ‘There’s an answer for that: When you were a baby and had trouble sleeping, your father and I would walk the halls singing: Came a tribe from the north brave and bold…,’” Burnett explained. “I guess a biologist would say I was imprinted as a Vandal.”

Burnett’s parents both came to the University of Idaho from the mining town of Wallace, Idaho, during the years of the Great Depression. In fact, a photo of Burnett’s mother, Doris ’37, hangs on the wall of the Administration Building. It’s

there not because she was a VIP, Burnett said, but because she was a student employee at the University of Idaho Library — where she felt lucky to earn 35 cents an hour. Burnett’s father, Donald Sr. ’38, hunted game to help feed his fraternity, and he interrupted his studies for a year to work in the mines at Wallace in order to pay tuition. Times were tough, but Doris and Don Sr. were determined to become first in their respective families to get a college education.

“I remember my parents telling me that during those years, nobody among the students at UI had much money, but no one felt poor,” he said. “They were all in it together. There was a great sense of purpose. For them, the University of Idaho was the gateway to the world.”

Photos above (left to right): Assistant Attorney General Burnett with Idaho Attorney General W. Anthony (Tony) Park (1974); Newly appointed Court of Appeals Judge Burnett (1982); Then Captain Burnett at Judge Advocate desk, Tactial Operations Center, Operation Reforger, Wildflecken, Germany (1988); Brandeis School of Law, Burnett at foreign exchange campus with members of host faculty, University of Montpellier, France (circa 1999).

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I peer through the groups of Idaho lawyers to see Donald “Don” Burnett making his way through the room, enthusiastically greeting those around him with handshakes and smiles. It is clear that his is a familiar face among this group.

“It is a great and humbling honor to be called to service for the whole university,” he said. “It is also an opportunity to repay what I consider to be a family debt to the University of Idaho.”

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Burnett says that, his parents’ memories of their beloved university planted in him a profound sense of gratitude and appreciation for the university.

“Everything they later became, they said they owed to the University of Idaho,” Burnett said. “Whatever my brother, Howard, and I later became, we owe to our parents, and therefore we also owe to the University of Idaho. I now have a chance to repay that debt.”

With a future in law in his sights, Burnett went on to earn his undergraduate degree magna cum laude at Harvard University and his J.D. from the University of Chicago. He returned to Idaho in 1971 to begin his career as a law clerk to the Chief Justice of the Idaho Supreme Court and as an assistant attorney general for the State of Idaho.

A Calling to Law Burnett was born in 1946 and raised in Pocatello, Idaho. His fondness for his hometown is evident as he reflects on his early years.

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He entered private practice in Pocatello in 1972; became president of the Idaho State Bar in 1981; chaired the bar’s professional conduct standards committee; served as a judge of the Shoshone-Bannock Tribal Court; and was executive director of the Idaho Judicial Council. In 1981, after nearly a decade in private practice at Pocatello, Burnett felt the pull for a change.

Burnett points to one Pocatello leader in particular for inspiring his career path. Ben Davis was a successful business lawyer whose pro bono work for the Shoshone-Bannock Tribes gave him special privileges to hunt on reservation land. One day, Davis invited then 14-year-old Burnett to join him for a duck hunt.

with Roger Swanstrom and Jesse Walters, to serve in the newly established Idaho Court of Appeals, which began operations in 1982.

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“Growing up in Pocatello was very important to both my brother and me,” he said. “We had a strong set of community leaders who made a profound impact on me during my formative years.”

“I have a strong sense of personal gratitude for Pocatello and to the state of Idaho,” he said. “There was never any hesitation when I finished law school where I was going next.”

“As we walked toward a duck blind, we came across an elderly native woman who was washing clothes in the stream. She looked up startled, saw us with our shotguns over our shoulders, and shouted, ‘No shoot!’ and hurried off,” Burnett recalled. “Mr. Davis evidently had seen this before. He turned to me and asked: ‘Donnie, what do you think just happened? What do you think this part of the country was like when she first saw a white person with a gun?” “That turned into a longer discussion about what Mr. Davis called the rule of force and the rule of law,” Burnett continued, “and why he had chosen the rule of law. I can still remember standing at the duck blind, with an Idaho sunset glowing in the distance and evening flights of ducks and geese crossing overhead, and I decided I was going to choose the rule of law, too.”

“The part of practice that I found very rewarding was the problem solving, research and writing,” he said. “So work in the judiciary beckoned to me.”

As fate would have it, Burnett was appointed by Governor John V. Evans as one of the initial appellate judges, along

“Roger and Jesse were tremendous colleagues. The three of us had a wonderful working relationship,” said Burnett, who retained his position in the court in 1986 after a statewide vote.

Burnett’s professional service also included time as a reserve officer in the Army Judge Advocate General’s (JAG) Corps. A graduate on the “Commandant’s List” from the Command and General Staff College of the U.S. Army, Burnett held the position of reserve deputy commandant and academic director of The Judge Advocate General’s School. He received the U.S. Armed Forces Legion of Merit award for career achievements when he retired as a colonel in 2001.

Photos above (left to right): Brandeis School of Law, Burnett at foreign exchange campus, University of Montpellier, France (circa 1999); Dean Burnett at College of Law Commencement Ceremony (May 2012); Dean Burnett in the College of Law Courtroom (2011); Dean Burnett with 2013 Student Bar Association President Sarah Simmers (2013).


While serving on the bench, Burnett earned a Master of Laws (LL.M.) degree from the University of Virginia School of Law. The experience gave him a taste of the thrills of working in higher education, and he wanted more. Such an opportunity arose at the University of Louisville in 1990. Burnett was enticed by the fact that the chief benefactor of Louisville’s law school was Louisville-native and former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis, whose work and innovative ideas intrigued Burnett.

“He had great ideas for legal education,” Burnett explained. “He was an exponent of pro bono service and interdisciplinary study. He also said the U.S. was distinctive as a laboratory for great ideas because the individual states could try out ideas of public policy without binding the entire nation, and that the universities and law schools would be the engines of these new ideas.” “That was all very attractive to me,” he added.

Burnett spent a total of 12 years — 10 years as dean and two years as a professor — at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law which was named for Justice Brandeis during Burnett’s deanship. Under Burnett’s leader-

ship, the school became one of the first law schools in the nation to adopt a mandatory pro bono program.

“Service of some kind, to the community or to individuals who need help, is part of our professional obligation,” he said. “The pro bono program has as its fundamental assumption that helping people in need without compensation to improve administration of justice is a responsibility of all lawyers, and it comes with the license to practice law.”

Coming Home In 2002, Burnett had the opportunity to return to his home state as dean of the University of Idaho College of Law. During his tenure, Burnett worked to make the college one of the leading small state public law schools in the nation.

In his 11 years as dean, he collaborated with the faculty to add subject areas of curricular emphasis and interdisciplinary cooperation, to raise the level of institutional support for faculty scholarship, and to establish a pro bono requirement. He was also instrumental in the expansion of legal education to the state’s capital in Boise.

“I’ve always thought in Idaho that we should shape legal education so we are delivering our instruction and doing our research and outreach at the places where we can provide the greatest comparative advantage,” he said. “Moscow and Boise have unique strengths that complement each other. We should not be confined under one roof, but should deliver legal education where distinctive benefits can be achieved.”

A recipient of the Idaho State Bar’s Distinguished Lawyer Award, Outstanding Service Award, and Professionalism Award, Burnett has dedicated his life to improving legal education and the practice of law in Idaho. During his Idaho deanship, he chaired an Idaho Supreme Court’s task force on structure and resources for the state appellate courts in the next quarter-century; chaired the University of Idaho’s Ethical Guidance and Oversight Committee; served as

a coordinating dean of university-wide interdisciplinary programs; and served on the Advisory Council for Operation Education, a scholarship program for disabled veterans. Early in his University of Idaho career, Burnett chaired the University’s Steering Committee on Diversity and Human Rights. He drew on this experience throughout his deanship to infuse diversity in the faculty and student body at the law school.

“The College of Law has become known as a leader within the university community in terms of commitment to diversity,” he said. “There is no such thing as excellence in higher education without diversity. Diversity, in all of its forms, ought to be a signature of higher education in general, but it certainly is a signature for the Idaho law school.”

Photos above (left to right): Dean Burnett with Idaho Lieutenant Governor Brad Little and Idaho Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger S. Burdick; Dean Burnett at the event to announce that the Historic Ada County Courthouse will be the “future home of the Idaho Law Learning Center;” President Burnett and Karen Burnett at Student Orientation (Fall 2013).

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Lured to Higher Education

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Secret to Success When reviewing Burnett’s lengthy and impressive vitae, one can’t help but wonder, how can one person achieve so much in just one lifetime?

“I often hear new graduates given the well-intended advice: ‘Don’t work too hard!’, but the world belongs to people who work too hard,” Burnett said. “The key is not to have a formula for work-life balance, but to instead find a balance of the imbalances. When your clients are calling, you must answer the call. But it’s important to repay that accumulated debt and invest that time back into the family as time becomes available.”

Burnett credits his father for this innate drive to work hard and recalls a specific childhood moment when he tagged along with his father, a certified public accountant, on a professional visit to a small-business family.

“I didn’t understand the technical aspects of what was being discussed, but I understood these people really depended on my dad, and he owed them every iota of his attention and his capabilities,” he said. “That made a profound impact on me. After that, if he was busy helping a family and couldn’t play catch, I understood.”

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This lesson stuck with Burnett as he, too, balanced a demanding career with fatherhood. He and his wife of nearly 44 years, Karen, raised two sons. He also has one grandchild and another on the way. Burnett credits the support

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of his family for helping to fuel his success, along with an unwavering faith that he has dedicated his life to doing exactly what he was intended to do.

“True happiness is to be dissolved into something that is complete and great . . . something that’s bigger than oneself,” said Burnett, paraphrasing novelist Willa Cather. “I think the law and the pursuit of justice represent something complete and great. True happiness is to be subsumed in them.”

Burnett will serve as interim president until a permanent replacement is hired. He hasn’t yet decided his next steps following his presidential service, but returning to the College of Law as a professor may be one option. Could retirement be another?

“I don’t know . . . I think I would flunk retirement,” he laughs.

In the meantime, Burnett will continue to give of his full self to repay the university that provided the foundation on which his parents’ built their family’s success. What would Burnett’s parents think if they could see him now?

“I think they would confirm that the University of Idaho was a place of opportunity for them, a gateway to the world, and that we should continue to work hard to build on its greatness,” Burnett said.

One thing is certain: They would be brimming with Vandal pride.


Impact tomorrow

Romeo “Kade” Beorchia spends much of his free time in a study carrel at the Idaho Law Library in the UI Boise Center where the third-year law student says he spends eight to 12 hours a day preparing for his law degree. “It can be taxing, but every day when I look out the window I am reminded why I am here and where I am headed,” says Beorchia regarding the view of several of the top Boise law firms visible from the fifth-floor view at UI Boise. He credits the College of Law faculty, staff and alumni for helping provide student opportunities to network with successful, practicing attorneys — “experience I know will prove invaluable when it comes time to start my career in law,” he said. “When I first enrolled with the UI College of Law I had a narrow view of my future,” he said. “The rigors and demands of the UI law program have taught me that I am capable of much more than I thought. I learned to set higher goals for myself — I didn’t have to be afraid to dream big.”

For more information on how to establish a student scholarship at the College of Law, contact: Terri L. Muse Director of Development College of Law (208) 364-4044 tmuse@uidaho.edu

Kade was admitted to a number of other law schools, but scholarship support is why he chose to become a Vandal. “I have been fortunate to receive the Langrois Scholarship, the Albert R. Menard Jr. Scholarship, the Frank A. Shrontz College of Law Scholarship and the Thomsen Stephens Law Firm Student Scholarship,” he said. “Your gift makes it possible for me to focus on my passion for studying law. I’ve made the Dean’s List each semester, and I’m proud to be ranked in the top ten percent of my class.”

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Law school is expensive for the father of three. “Every day I am motivated by my wife, our three children, and my desire to provide them a stable life. The best way for me to justify their many sacrifices is to study hard and prepare for a successful career. Your generous support of my tuition and books allows me to focus on my studies and my family. Thank you.”

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Family Thing For many families, the College of Law is a tradition that runs deep.

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By Stacie Jones

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The Stellmon Legacy

“The University of Idaho and the College of Law have been in the Stellmon bloodlines and running through our veins for a long time,” said Tanner’s father, John Stellmon ’84.

It is a tradition that began more than 85 years ago with Tanner’s great-grandfather, Elbert A. Stellmon ’28. Elbert began his legal career in his hometown of Nezperce, Idaho, at the Lewis County Prosecutor’s Office, where he was the youngest prosecuting attorney in the nation at the time. He later opened a practice in Lewiston, Idaho, where he etched a name for both his family and his beloved university.

“My granddad was a proud Idahoan and Vandal,” John said. “He was so steeped in the University of Idaho legacy and its heritage and history. In a lot of ways, he was there from the beginning. To him, there was not another university out there.”

Elbert’s son, William Stellmon ’60, followed suit and joined his father’s law firm after he graduated from the University of Idaho College of Law.

“He was your classic, small-town lawyer, sometimes accepting payment in the form of cookies, used tires and old cars,” Tanner said about his grandfather. “When I asked him once about accepting payment of that sort, he just said: ‘These people need the kind of help I can give them.’”

On par with tradition, John Stellmon ’84, William’s son, also earned his law degree at the University of Idaho. He practiced alongside his father in Lewiston for seven years before launching a successful corporate career with Regence Blue Shield of Idaho, where he climbed to the position of president and CEO.

“My path has always been mine to forge,” agreed Tanner, John’s son. “When I was finishing my undergraduate degree, my dad told me: ‘It occurs to me that you may feel some type of pull or pressure to be a lawyer, but don’t do it because you think someone expects you to.’

“A year later I ended up in law school. It may have been reverse psychology,” he joked.

Tanner recalls a conversation in which his grandfather lightheartedly “double-dog dared” him to break from tradition and become a dentist instead.

“Grandpa told me there would be more money in dentistry and more free time to fish, but I’ve always found the law interesting. It was a logical choice for me,” Tanner said.

While Tanner may have attended law school of his own accord, his family undoubtedly inspired his career choice.

“I felt like the best way to contribute to my community was to better myself through my education and to pursue a career that would enable me to make a difference,” he said. “I saw my grandfather do that, my dad do that, and it was something I aspired to do.”

Tanner is now prosecuting attorney for Ada County and father to his two-year-old son, Gavin. Whether or not Gavin will become the fifth generation to attend the College of Law remains to be seen, but the Stellmon legal legacy will certainly live on — thanks to a scholarship Tanner’s grandmother, Marlene, established in the college in honor of her late husband, William.

“The University of Idaho law school experience played an influential role in their lives and in dad’s career,” John said of his parents. “Mom thought that dad would really enjoy having his name attached to the facilitation of a young law student being helped financially to realize their career dreams.”

Photos from pages 10 and 11 (left to right): Tanner Stellmon ’06 and John Stellmon ’84 at the College of Law in Boise (2013); Elbert A. Stellmon ’28; William Stellmon ’60).

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Tanner Stellmon ’06 holds the distinction of having his picture displayed twice among the hundreds of alumni photos that adorn a Menard Building hallway on the University of Idaho College of Law campus. One image depicts him as a four-year-old boy, standing next to his young-lawyer father; the other captures Tanner as a 24-year-old new law graduate, proudly becoming the fourth-generation of his family to earn a Juris Doctorate (J.D.) degree from the University of Idaho College of Law.

“I never felt pressure from my dad to do anything than what I felt what was right to do,” John said. “He encouraged me to stand on my own two feet, and he got out of the way. He wanted me to find my own path. That’s the way he was taught, the way I was taught, and the way I tried to teach my children.”

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“In some ways, I hesitated to go to law school because I wanted to forge my own path and do my own things,” she explained. “I wasn’t sure I was doing it for the right reasons, or if I was just falling into that path because I was familiar with it.”

Fortunately, Karin said, the University of Idaho and the legal field were both a good fit. Today, she is an associate attorney at a law firm in Seattle, Wash. For Anne, having her daughter return home to become a second-generation University of Idaho law graduate was a rewarding experience that required a delicate balance between providing Karin support and encouraging her independence.

Anne Dwelle and Karin Jones As an eight-year-old girl perched at the kitchen table while her mother prepared her favorite chicken dinner, Karin Jones ’03 got her first glimpse at the legal world.

“I remember helping my mom study for her torts and contracts classes as she cooked,” Karin said. “We would use flashcards with hypothetical situations to quiz each other. The puzzle solving was a lot of fun for me. It was like a game.”

At the time, Karin’s mother, Anne Dwelle ’88, was in her first year in the University of Idaho College of Law after more than 10 years as a stay-at-home mom of two. Watching her mother juggle parenting with the demands of full-time law school — and subsequently begin a successful law practice in Moscow, Idaho — left a lasting impression on Karin.

“Seeing her succeed at law school and then in her legal career made me feel like it was something I could do, too,” Karin said. “I think it’s inspiring to see your mom succeed in any professional career.”

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After completing her undergraduate degree in 2000 at Whitman College, Karin returned to her hometown of Moscow, Idaho, to begin her own law school journey, but not without a few reservations.

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“I was delighted that she chose the University of Idaho because I knew she was going to get the same caliber of education that I received,” Anne said. “But I tried to stay clear so she could chart her course and do it her own way. She was way smarter than I was, so I had no doubt that she could do it.”

A few years ago, Anne and Karin once again found themselves gathered around a table discussing the law, but this time as attorneys collaborating on an adoption case for a lifelong family friend.

“I just never thought I’d see my name side by side with my daughter’s at the bottom of pleadings,” Anne said. “It gave me an incredible charge. That case was wonderful on so many levels.”

Many families have seen multiple generations of family members earn law degrees at the University of Idaho. If your family has had a multigenerational experience in the College of Law, we invite you to share your story on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ uidaholaw.


Many families have seen multiple generations of family members earn law degrees at the University of Idaho. If your family has had a multi-generational experience in the College of Law, we invite you to share your story on Facebook at [list college of law facebook address.]

Trudy and Taylor Fouser Taylor Fouser’s legal career began to take root as early as elementary school.

Trudy said her influence in Taylor’s decision to practice law was unintentional.

It was no surprise when Taylor proclaimed in junior high that he was going to practice law some day. Now, in his third year of law school, he is well on his way to achieving his goal of becoming a litigation lawyer. Next spring, Taylor will become the fourth member of his family to earn a degree from the University of Idaho College of Law, following in the steps of his mother, Trudy Fouser ’81, his father, Scott Fouser ’82, and his stepfather, Jack Gjording ’66. Taylor points to his mother, Trudy, a prominent Idaho trial lawyer at Gjording Fouser in Boise, for helping to shape his career path.

“I can remember being six years old at the dinner table and my brother, sister, and I would pretend we were jurors while my mom would try to persuade us in her client’s favor... with us, she always won,” Taylor said. “As I grew older, I never stopped being her pretend juror and would watch her during trial whenever possible. It just happened to be what really interests me.”

“We joke that he must have been the only one of our children that we forgot to warn because it can be a very challenging profession,” she said. “But he really seems to thrive doing it.”

For Trudy and Taylor, who both earned their undergraduate degrees outside of Idaho, returning to their home state to attend law school was a strategic choice.

“I had lived some place else and knew I wanted to come back to start my career,” Trudy said. “If you want to practice in Idaho, I think you gain a huge competitive advantage if you go to the University of Idaho. You come out immediately with a great professional network.”

Growing up in the shadow of a lawyer family has taught Taylor a lot about the legal profession, including one important lesson that will surely guide him as he embarks on his own career.

“I’ve learned that you don’t try to be someone you’re not, especially as you go through trials,” he said. “Find out who you are, find your own style, believe in what you’re doing, and do it in an ethical manner. It has seemed to work well for all of them, and I’m sure it will work well for me.”

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“When he was in the third grade, he wrote his first contract that set the limits of when and where I could hug him,” chuckled Taylor’s mother, Trudy Fouser. “He amended it in the sixth grade so that I couldn’t hug him in the state of Idaho.”

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commencment

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Commen

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Judge Candy W. Dale ’82, Chief U.S. Magistrate Judge for the District of Idaho, presented the commencement address to the graduating class of 2013. Judge Dale spoke about the ways in which our lives are sometimes defined by numbers — weight, height, GPA, and LSAT score. She encouraged the graduates to let their lives instead be “paint by number” and not let just one number define their lives.

encement Referencing the book, “The Art of Possibility: Transforming Professional and Personal Life” by Rosamund Stone Zander and Benjamin Zander, Judge Dale suggested that graduates think about their lives as “being a contribution.” “When you think about what your contribution will be, I hope you will reflect on your education at the University of Idaho College of Law.” She complemented the graduating class for completing and exceeding the pro bono hour graduation requirement. She ended her address by noting the legacy of Don Burnett and his 11 years as dean of the College of Law.

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President M. Duane Nellis made opening and closing remarks and conferred the degrees. Provost Douglas Baker presented the candidates for degree. Additional remarks were made by Student Bar Association President Sarah Simmers and Dean Don Burnett. Participating in the commencement were University of Idaho Alumni Hall of Fame award recipient John Rosholt ’64 and Faculty Award for Legal Merit honoree Dennis Wheeler ’67.

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Honors and Recognition Alumni Awards University of Idaho Hall of Fame John Rosholt ’64 John Rosholt, College of Law ’64, was honored with the 2013 University of Idaho Hall of Fame award at May commencement. John is known and respected around the West for his leadership on water rights law. He attended the University of Idaho and earned an undergraduate degree in political science in 1959 and his LL.B. in 1964. John is the founding partner of the Twin Falls firm of Barker Rosholt & Simpson, LLP. He has served as corporate counsel for the Twin Falls Canal Company, North Side Canal Company and the American Falls Reservoir District for more than 40 years. John played a major role in the legislative effort to replace the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation dams at American Falls and Jackson Lake. He has represented clients in matters involving the Snake River Adjudication, Endangered Species Act and Clean Water Act. John has been recognized by the Idaho State Bar with the Professionalism Award in 1997 and as the Distinguished Lawyer of the Year in 2004. John served as a member of the College of Law Advisory Council from 1997 to 2000 and was the Council’s chairman in 1999. He is the past recipient of the Jim Lyle Award and the College of Law Award of Legal Merit. John and his wife, Karen are lifelong Vandal supporters and served as members of the University of Idaho Campaign for Idaho committee from 2000 to 2003.

College of Law Faculty Award of Legal Merit Dennis Wheeler ’67

IDAHO

The College of Law faculty awarded alumus Dennis Wheeler ’67 with the 2013 Faculty Award of Legal Merit at the May commencement ceremony. Dennis recently retired from the Coeur d’Alene Mines Corporation (COEUR) where he was chairman of the board, president, and chief executive officer. Both Dennis and Coeur d’Alene Mines have supported the College of Business and Economics Excellence Fund, the Coeur d’Alene Mines Faculty Fellowship, renovations to the ASUI-Kibbie Acitivity Center and a recruiting scholarship at the College of Law.

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sion. The award decision is made by a vote of the faculty and is based on demonstrated standards of integrity, competence, service and leadership through work as a legal practitioner, and service to business, state and/or national interests.

University of Idaho Honorary Degree Harry Bettis Harry Bettis is a rancher and partner in Black Canyon Partners LLC. He owns thousands of acres and has 1,500 plus head of cattle. He has been a partner in an oil distribution business and helped construct three dams for irrigation purposes. He is the president of the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation, Inc., which provides support to many Idaho nonprofit organizations and scholarships for students throughout Idaho. The foundation has made a major gift to support the College of Law in its statewide mission of legal education. He is a member of the Peregrine Fund National Center. Harry received his undergraduate degree from Stanford University and is a friend and major donor to the University of Idaho.

University of Idaho Legacy of Leading Award Frank Shrontz ’54 The Legacy of Leading Award is presented to individuals who have made significant contributions in leadership to their communities, the state of Idaho or society in general. The University of Idaho bestowed the award on College of Law alumnus Frank A. Shrontz ’54 at a gala in his honor on May 30, 2013 in Boise, Idaho. Frank served as the chairman of Boeing from 1988 to 1997 and as chief executive officer from 1986 to 1996. He also served as Assistant Secretary for the Air Force for installations and logistics, and as Assistant Secretary of Defense. He currently is part of the Seattle Mariners Baseball Club ownership group and serves on the group’s board of directors. He previously served on the board of directors for Boise Cascade Corporation, ChevronTexaco, 3M and Citicorp. He is a regent emeritus of The Smithsonian Institution and active in numerous civic and charitable organizations.

Dennis served on the College of Law Advisory Council and as chairman of the council. He and his wife Jacqueline, currently serve as cabinet members for the University’s capital campaign. Dennis was the 2012 University of Idaho Silver and Gold Award recipient.

He was inducted into the University of Idaho’s Alumni Hall of Fame in 1986 and, in 1992, he was awarded an honorary doctorate of law degree. Frank was given the Business Achievement Award in 1996 and in 1998 he received the College of Law Faculty Award of Legal Merit.

The Faculty Award of Legal Merit recognizes the outstanding The award recognizes the outstanding contribution of an Idaho law graduate whose career exemplifies the best in the legal profes-

Frank and his late wife, Harriet, have been generous supporters of the University of Idaho. They have created scholarship funds for students in law and in the arts.


Faculty and Student Awards Peter E. Heiser Award for Excellence in Teaching Professor Richard Seamon The 2013 Peter E. Heiser Award for Excellence in Teaching was awarded to Professor Richard Seamon. Professor Seamon has been the recipient of this award multiple times. The award selection is made by a vote of students in the graduating class and recognizes outstanding dedication to students at the College of Law.

Faculty Award of Legal Achievement Jennifer Meling-Aiko Jensen

Pro Bono: Above and Beyond Award Maria D. “Lola� Velazguez Spirit of the Clinic Matthew Starr and Neal Koskella Spirit of the Class Sara C. Simmers Outstanding Student Service Award Sara C. Simmers

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This award is presented to the graduating student with the highest cumulative grade point average. It honors outstanding dedication and success in the pursuit of academic excellence during legal study at the College of Law.

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I continue to be amazed and gratified to see the level of support the College of Law receives annually from our alumni and friends. On behalf of our law school community, my sincere thanks to all of our donors. Your gifts demonstrate your commitment to the College and to our mission to provide quality, affordable, public legal education in the State of Idaho. Without your support, we simply could not sustain our mission and continue to provide legal education excellence. I am honored to recognize in our magazine all who have made a profound difference in the lives of our students during the past fiscal year through their gifts to the College of Law. During the final months of the University’s Inspiring Futures campaign, I hope you will consider making a gift to the College of Law.

Terri L. Muse Director of Development (208) 364-4044 tmuse@uidaho.edu

Terri L. Muse Director of Development

L aw A d v i s o r y C o u n c i l The Law Advisory Council members are graduates and friends of the University of Idaho College of Law. Established in 1996, members assist and advise the dean regarding programs, student recruitment and career placement and play an important role in our development and outreach efforts.

Council members • Promote the college to various constituency groups; • Identify and acquire additional financial support and resources; • Serve as advocates for the college both within the university and in the outside community; • Provide advice on college programs; and • Assist with student recruitment and career placement.

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Members

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Dwight Baker ’71 of Baker & Harris, Blackfoot Tore Beal Gwartney ’93 of Cosho Humphrey LLP, Boise Hon. Larry Boyle ’72 of the U.S. District Court, Boise Meghan Sullivan Conrad ’04 of Elam & Burke PA, Boise Theodore O. “Ted” Creason ’73 of Creason, Moore, Dokken & Geidl PLLC, Lewiston Dennis Davis ’77 of Witherspoon Kelley, Coeur d’Alene Margaret “Peg” Dougherty ’99 of the Office of the Idaho Attorney General, Boise Hon. Daniel T. Eismann ’76 of the Idaho Supreme Court, Boise Thomas High ’79 of Benoit, Alexander, Harwood and High LLP, Twin Falls

Charles Allen Homer ’74 of Holden, Kidwell, Hahn and Crapo PLLC, Idaho Falls Danielle J. Hunsaker ’04 of Larkins Vacura LLP, Portland, Oregon Hon. Juneal Kerrick ’81 of the District Court Third Judicial District, Caldwell Charles R. Kozak ’68, Reno, Nevada David Leroy ’71 of Leroy Law Offices, Boise Representative Lynn Luker ’80 of the Idaho House of Representatives, Boise Kenneth McClure ’80 of Givens Pursley LLP, Boise Dennis McLaughlin ’67 of Dennis McLaughlin and Associates PS, Spokane, Washington James Daw Ruchti ’01 of Ruchti & Beck Law Offices, Pocatello J. Walter Sinclair ’78 of Stoel Rives LLP, Boise John Stellmon ’84 of Athlos Academies, Boise; Stellmon ADR and Consulting Services LLC, Eagle P. Craig Storti of the Washington Division of the URS Corporation, Boise Hon. Lonny R. Suko ’68 of the U.S. District Court for Eastern Washington, Yakima, Washington Connie Taylor Henderson ’93 of Henderson Law Firm PLLC, Vancouver, Washington Hon. Lawrence Wasden ’85 of the Office of the Idaho Attorney General, Boise William “Bud” Yost III ’69 of Yost & Metcalf PLLC, Nampa


New A d v i s o r y C o u n c i l M embers In 2013 three new members joined the council; please join us in welcoming them. Meghan Sullivan Conrad Associate, Elam & Burke, PA – Boise, Idaho B.A., Colgate University, ’99; J.D., University of Idaho, ’04 Meghan Sullivan Conrad has practiced with Elam & Burke, PA since 2006. After graduating from law school, Meghan served as a law clerk for the Honorable James C. Morfitt, District Judge, Third Judicial District of Idaho. She has provided extensive representation to several urban renewal agencies throughout the state on issues regarding statutory construction, interpretation and compliance; plan creation; litigation and appeals; and impact analysis of proposed legislation. Her additional practice areas include banking and third-party insurance defense. Meghan is a member of the Idaho Women Lawyers and the Idaho Association of Defense Counsel. She was raised in Boise, is married and has two young sons.

J. Walter Sinclair Partner, Stoel Rives LLP – Boise, Idaho B.A., Stanford University, ’75; J.D., University of Idaho, ’78 J. Walter Sinclair is a partner of the firm Stoel Rives LLP. He is a trial lawyer focuses on business and commercial litigation. His practice regularly includes complex contract disputes, product liability matters, antitrust issues, securities and class actions. Walt is a Fellow in and the state chair of the International Academy of Trial Lawyers and he is a Fellow in and previously served as a national foundation board member and officer and past state chair of the American College of Trial Lawyers. He is a past president of International Association of Defense Counsel, the Lawyers for Civic Justice, the Idaho chapter of the American Board of Trial Advocates, and the Boise chapter of the American Inns of Court. In 2012, he was awarded the E.I. DuPont “Golden Eagle” Award for excellent legal services.

Regional Medical Center Strategic Initiatives Committee, and as a member of the Board of Trustees and Executive committee of the Idaho Shakespeare Festival. He previously served as the chairman of the National Board of Directors of the American Heart Association and is currently on the Idaho AHA board of directors. He previously served as a director and president of the Magic Valley Regional Medical Center Foundation, Inc. In 2004, he was awarded the American Heart Association’s national Gold Heart Award.

John Stellmon President, Athlos Academies – Boise, Idaho; Stellmon ADR and Consulting Services LLC - Eagle, Idaho B.A., University of Idaho, ’81; J.D., University of Idaho, ’84 John Stellmon is the founder and principal of Stellmon ADR and Consulting Services LLC. He is currently the president of Athlos Academies, a Boise firm that builds and manages charter schools. He is the former CEO of Regence Blue Shield of Idaho, where he worked for more than 20 years. He also served as vice president and general counsel, director of human resources, and manager of all aspects of the clinical programs sponsored by Regence across the Northwest. After graduating from University of Idaho College of Law in 1984, he worked for several years in private practice and focused on family, estate and personal injury law. He is a Northwest Institute for Dispute Resolution certified civil mediator. John is a past chairman of the Lewiston Chamber of Commerce and board member of the Boise Chamber of Commerce. He previously served as chairman of the Idaho Guaranty Association, the Idaho Make a Wish Foundation, as co-chair of the Treasure Valley YMCA Strong Kids Campaign, and as a board member of the Blue Cross/Blue Shield Association. He also served on the Governor’s Committee on Health Reform and as president of the Idaho Association of Health Plans. He enjoys spending time with family; he and his wife, Donna, are proud parents of five children and eight grandchildren.

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Walt is an active member of his community. He currently serves as the Idaho State Membership chair of the U.S. Supreme Court Historical Society, as a member of the St. Luke’s

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donor roll

d o n o r

UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO COLLEGE OF LAW LIFETIME DONORS We, at the College of Law, express our continued gratitude to the following individuals and organizations for their exceptional generosity to the College of Law with lifetime gifts in support of the students, faculty and programs of the College of $50,000 or more.

LIFETIME GIFTS OF $1,000,000 or more Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation, Inc. Burton F. † ’29 ’33 and Dee H. † Ellis L. Weldon Schimke † ’31

John Albert Jr. ’80 and Christine B. Bailey Walter H. ’65 ’68 and Sherry B. ’65 Bithell Randall C. ’76 and Rebecca Budge Coeur d’Alene Mines Corporation James M. ’66 ’73 and Gail D. ’66 English Donald J. ’70 ’73 and Geridee Farley J. Dennis ’60 ’62 and Michael Beglan ’60 Faucher Anna N. Graham Richard E. ’66 and Tonya A. ’68 Hall Clarence J. Hamilton † ’48 Holland and Hart, LLP

Edward D. ’68 ’71 and Teri L. Ahrens

Holden Kidwell Hahn and Crapo PLLC

Bernice Bacharach †

Idaho Coalition Against Sexual and Domestic Violence

Sherman J. Bellwood † ’38

Idaho Law Foundation, Inc.

Hamer H. † ’36 and Jeanne K. Budge

State of Idaho Supreme Court

Donald L. Jr. and Karen Trujillo ’09 Burnett

J. Bruce Kennedy

John A. ’66 and Cyndee C. Church

Michael E. ’60 ’63 and Kathryn M. McNichols

Fred† and Dorothy Dyott † Clagett

Diane K. Manweiler ’56

John Ford ’78 and Jean M. ’78 Elsaesser

Hon. Kathryn A. Mautz ’52

William E. Folz †

Nancy Marie Morris ’83

Jeker Family Trust

Marcus W. ’74 and Eva Nye

Muriel H. Kirk †

William D. Olson

William H. † ’21 HON ’79 and Gladys † Langroise

Racine Olson Nye Budge and Bailey Chtd

Estate of Kathryn Daly Ramseyer Trust † ’38

June V. Simmons †

James E. HON ’04 and Beverly B. Rogers

Jody and Eugene C. † HON ’86 Thomas

John A. ’59 ’64 and Karen R. ’64 Rosholt

Lucinda Weiss ’73

Harriet A. † ’54 and Frank A. ’54 HON ’92 Shrontz

Dennis E. ’66 ’67 and Jacqueline R. Wheeler

Jean A. Sullivan †

James E. ’70 ’73 and Kathryn A. ’73 Whistler

Bonita R. Wallis † ’34

Gordon Lee Williamson ’02 and Helen H. Copple-Williamson

IDAHO

Lifetime gifts of $50,000 or more

LIFETIME GIFTS OF $100,000-$999,999

J. A. Wedum Foundation / Gary D. Slette ’84

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r o ll

indicates deceased


COLLEGE OF LAW ANNUAL GIVING We are grateful to the following donors for their generous gifts to the College of Law from July 1, 2012 to June 30, 2013.

Distinguished Partners

Dennis T. ’73 and Sharon L. Hopwood

Individuals ($20,000 and more) and Organizations ($50,000 and more)

State of Idaho Supreme Court

Donald L. Jr. and Karen Trujillo ’09 Burnett Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation, Inc. Roy Lewis ’74 ’78 and Miren Eguzkine Eiguren

Individuals ($10,000-$19,999) and Organizations ($20,000-$49,999) Walter H. ’65 ’68 and Sherry B. ’65 Bithell John Ford ’78 and Jean M. ’78 Elsaesser Donald J. ’70 ’73 and Geridee Farley Karen Elaine ’81 ’84 and Kimbal L. ’81 ’84 Gowland Richard E. ’66 and Tonya A. ’68 Hall John A. ’59 ’64 and Karen R. ’64 Rosholt J. A. Wedum Foundation James E. ’70 ’73 and Kathryn A. ’73 Whistler

Michael E. ’60 ’63 and Kathryn M. McNichols Angela Rose Morgan ’01 ’97 William A. ’54 ’57 and Beverly A. ’54 Parsons Shan B. Perry ’93 Jennifer May ’00 ’03 and Thomas Michael Schindele Krista Dawn Thiry ’00 ’97 Hon. Linda J. Copple Trout ’73 ’77

Dean’s Counselors ($2,500-$4,999) Gary L. Cooper ’72 ’75 Cooper & Larsen, Chartered Samuel Toevs ’06 ’09 and Christine M. Creason Theodore O., Jr. ’70 ’73 and Marsha C. ’73 Creason Creason Moore Dokken & Geidl, PLLC James Christopher ’82 and Hon. Candy W. ’82 Dale

Individuals ($5,000-$9,999) and Organizations ($5,000-$19,999)

M. Francine Dingel ’60

American International Group, Inc.

Tod Dallas ’95 ’98 and Anna Geidl

Dwight E. ’71 and Ali T. Baker

Idaho State Bar Real Property Section

James A. Bevis ’74

Reed W. Larsen ’85

Bevis, Thiry & Schindele, PA

J. Frederick ’69 ’72 and Mona Lynn ’83 Mack

Coeur d’Alene Tribe

Diane K. Manweiler ’56

James M. ’66 ’73 and Gail D. ’66 English

Christopher Joseph ’75 ’89 and Pam S. Moore

Robert E. ’66 ’69 and Annette D. Farnam

Thomas Arthur Newlon ’77

Fourth District Bar Association

Hon. Jim D. ’77 and Julie J. Pappas

David D. ’69 ’72 and Anne Moree ’69 Goss

James Walter Sinclair ’78 and Kristin M Hoff Sinclair

Holden Kidwell Hahn & Crapo, PLLC

John Michael ’81 ’84 and Donna L. Stellmon

Holland & Hart, LLP

Stoel Rives, LLP

David E. ’79 ’82 and Susan Dokken

Charles A. ’74 and Marci S. ’74 Homer

You may view this list at any time online at www.uidaho.edu/law/alumniandfriends/donorroll

2013

View the Donor Roll online! FALL 21


donor roll Senior Law Fellows ($1,000-$2,499) Matt Richard Bohn ’96 ’99 Boise State University Foundation, Inc. Robert P. ’62 ’64 and Marjorie C. ’63 Brown John Arthur ’85 ’88 and Kathryn H. Bush Patricia Ann Cervenka ’83 Merlyn W. ’64 and Sandy Clark David Emerson ’76 and Anne Comstock Comstock & Bush, Attorneys Cosho Humphrey, LLP Dennis M. Davis ’73 ’77 and Kathryn Marie Canfield-Davis ’87 Pamela Leslie Jacklin ’78 and Leonard Girard Jerry J. ’72 ’76 and Judithe K. Goicoechea Tore Ann Beal-Gwartney ’93 and J. Mike Gwartney ’63 Tore Beal-Gwartney, PA Matthew Jonathan ’87 and Elizabeth C. Hedlund Joann H. ’71 ’73 and Clinton J. ’55 ’72 Henderson John C. and Bonita A. Hepworth Hepworth Janis & Kluksdal, Chartered Hon. Jim C. ’63 ’66 and Tommye Herndon Idaho Association of Defense Counsel Idaho State Bar Commercial Law & Bankruptcy Section John Joseph ’86 and Catherine Jo ’76 ’76 Janis John Thomas ’77 and Bonnie Lezamiz Kenneth R. ’80 and Sally W. McClure Louise M. McClure ’50 HON ’11 Joseph M. and Brenda G. Meier Briane Nelson Mitchell ’78 John B. ’55 and Shirley A. ’59 Parker Philip A. Peterson ’69 ’79 Jesse Carl Trentadue ’75 and Rita Therese Reusch ’75 Anthony J. Riposta Esq. ’79 Riposta, Lawyers, LLC Hon. N. Randy and La Dean E. Smith Robert W. ’73 and Myrna Anne ’74 Stahman Hon. John Robert ’82 and Laurie Kirsten Elgee ’91 Stegner Bradley Jay ’80 ’83 and Catrin Elizabeth ’93 Stoddard P. Craig ’68 and Tanya A. ’70 Storti Hon. Lonny R. ’68 and Marcia A. Suko Jody Thomas Stephen R. and Maureen A. Thomas Thomsen Stephens Law Offices, PLLC Thomas George Walker, Jr. ’76 Stanley W. Welsh ’76 David E. ’72 ’76 and Susan B. ’72 Wishney William F. Yost, III ’66 ’69 Yost Law, PLLC

IDAHO

Law Fellows ($500-$999)

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Eugene and Joan Agee J. Kelley ’61 and Diane J. Arnold John Albert, Jr. ’80 and Christine B. Bailey

Katherine Cecilia ’02 and James Keith, Jr. ’96 Ball Kelvin Patrick Hartwell-Beal ’96 ’98 Michael Sean Breen ’92 Norman D. ’67 and Joan Kay Brock Stephen C. ’74 and Anne F. Brown Brock Law Firm Hon. Barbara Ann Buchanan ’80 ’83 and Richard S. Dalessio ’79 ’93 ’06 Randall C. ’76 and Rebecca Budge Gregory Allen ’94 and Cindi J. Byron Jonathan Paul ’79 and Laura Carter Blaine Thomas ’90 and Kellie L. Connaughton Connaughton Law Office Michael Douglas Currin ’84 and Mardi L. Salisbury Currin Scott Paul Ennis John O., II ’86 ’90 and Laura Fitzgerald Mary Rita Giannini ’84 and Arthur A. Harlow Gregory Raphael Giometti ’82 Goicoechea Law Offices Robert B. Hancock ’95 Ralph M. ’54 and Mary Lynn Hartwell John J. Hasko Jeffrey G. ’74 and Susan L. Howe Danielle Jo ’01 ’04 and Morgan Lee ’00 ’04 Hunsaker Rory Rolland ’79 ’82 and Lisa Jane ’79 ’83 Jones Ron ’72 ’75 and Kathy ’71 Kerl Hon. Karen L. Lansing ’72 John Thomas Schroeder ’81 and Mary Margaret Lezamiz ’82 A. Kent ’75 and Tyana ’75 Lyons Mark Howard Manweiler ’83 Manweiler Breen Ball & Davis, PLLC Albert ’80 ’85 and Susan ’80 ’80 ’80 Matsuura James Alan ’78 and Margaret A. Miller Patrick Eugene ’75 and Renee B. Miller Brian Clayton Wonderlich ’02 ’07 and Megan E. Mooney ’07 Barbara J. Mosman Nez Perce Tribe Marcus W. ’74 and Eva Nye William D. Olson Parker Investment Account Don Floyd Pickett ’85 Racine Olson Nye Budge & Bailey, Chartered Herbert W. Rettig ’57 Stephen C. ’75 and Julie Roberts Rice Ronnie B. ’63 ’65 and Jean A. Rock Ann Ryan Ian Wheeles ’07 Orin Leroy Squire † ’85 Phyllis Ann Squire † Dale Thomas Wagner ’89 Law Office of Dale Wagner, PS Hon. Jesse R. ’61 ’63 and Harriet Walters Lucinda Weiss ’73 Paul Larry ’66 ’68 and Mary C. Westberg Craig Marvin Young ’96 Robert C. Youngstrom ’57 ’61


Leon ’93 and Suzanne M. ’93 ’94 Aberasturi Sarah Elizabeth Davis ’05 and Cullen Anderson Richard John Armstrong ’96 Robert E. ’54 ’56 and Lurlene Bakes Howard Aye Belodoff ’78 Stanley Jerome Cieslewicz ’82 Eric Robert Clark ’92 Hon. Russell Arthur ’84 and Karen Comstock Curtis Brent Coulter ’87 Lee B. Dillion Carma R. Elam Lana V. ’04 and Mark Joseph Elliott Bill F. Gigray, III ’69 ’72 Dennis Eugene Goff ’75 James T. Hopkins ’74 John R. Hutchinson ’87 Idaho State Bar Water Law Section Idaho Women’s Charitable Foundation Lance Eric ’04 and Jennifer ’04 Joanis Mary V. Kennedy ’71 ’01 Maureen E. Laflin Hon. Mikel H. ’69 and Lorette M. ’70 Williams Tim ’84 ’87 and Charlotte ’89 Malarchick Lori Mann ’85 John C. ’84 ’87 and Julie McCreedy Richard L. McFadden ’51 Deborah ’80 ’91 and Daniel Brodie ’80 McIntosh Michael R. McMahon ’74 Jeffrey Joseph Messerich ’88 Microsoft Corporation Katherine Lucile ’91 and Thomas P. Moriarty Hon. Robert Calvin ’90 and Rhonda Jean ’91 Naftz Mary Michaela O’Leary ’94 and Neil D. McFeeley William R. Platts ’69 ’74 John Stephen ’75 and Sherry A. Ritchie Maxine L. Rowett ’59 Michael Anthony Sasser ’99 Sasser Law Office, PLLC David and Meghan Shrontz Marilyn T. Shuler HON ’00 Richard King Smith ’50 ’58 Fred Hamilton Snook ’71 Hon. Randy J. Stoker ’72 ’75 Jordan Eriksen Taylor ’09 Peter T. and Suzanne Wyckoff

Senior Associates ($100-$249) Anthony Christopher ’82 and Mary Kay Anegon Sylvia A. Baggs ’68 Susan Elaine Baker ’79 Robert Donald Barclay ’91 Michael L. ’73 ’76 and Christine M. Bayless Mark A. ’74 and Laurie L. Beebe Kevin Curtis Belew ’00 John H. ’54 and Marilyn Pond ’66 Bengtson Joel Don Berrett ’80

Joel D. Berrett, Attorney at Law Stephen J. ’72 ’76 and Ann Blaser The Boeing Company Greater Boise Auditorium District Boise Centre Hon. Henry R. ’72 ’75 and Debbie Boomer James David ’91 and Elizabeth C. Bradbury Preston B. ’51 and Betty P. Brimhall Cathrynn Novich ’85 and Michael R. Brown Laura Burri Brown ’86 Blaine S. ’57 and Barbara Butler George David and Jean Carey Victor M., Jr. ’94 and Dawn Marie † ’93 Cardoza John L. Child ’61 ’63 Cecilia Marie Clynch ’83 and James David Albert Hon. Linda Jean Cook ’73 Frank Thomas Cordell, Jr. ’79 Patrick Daniel Costello and Donna Kay Fladager ’05 ’07 Charles Henry ’75 ’78 and Lori L. Creason Tanya Marie Madison Cunningham ’92 ’93 ’96 and Chris Cunningham V. Dean and Kathleen Dalling David E. ’74 and Kay E. Duskin Anna Elizabeth ’07 and Donald R., Jr. ’08 Eberlin Hon. Daniel T. Eismann ’73 ’76 Christine Pelky Ellis ’81 Darrel R. ’72 and G. Charlene Ellis Donald L. ’74 and Diane English John Phillip Evans ’79 R. Brett ’08 and Shannon Lynn Evanson Harold W. ’66 and Carol Leonardson † ’66 Felsted Gregory Charles ’00 and Korrie Foley James A. ’85 and Chandra Zenner ’88 ’95 Ford Wallis W. ’56 and Sue C. Friel Darcy Alan Frownfelter ’79 Lance Ludwig Fuisting ’07 Patrick Dennis Furey ’76 ’79 Larry L. Goins ’74 ’78 Alan C. ’81 and Peggy Goodman Elizabeth D. ’85 ’88 and Brian D. Goudreau Bill T. ’80 and Cathy A. Graham William C. ’73 and Peggy Lee ’00 ’01 Hamlett Roseanne Rene Hardin ’69 ’84 Hon. Joel David Horton ’85 and Hon. Carolyn Marie Minder ’85 Quentin F. ’67 ’72 and Katheryn A. Harden Ronald Merlin ’76 and Kathleen J. Hart Mary L. Hartung H. Craig ’87 and Anita Kay Haukaas Daniel Everett ’90 and Linda O. Huffman Joseph H. ’00 and Deanna Jardine Hon. Patricia Gay Young ’78 L. Lamont Jones † ’58 Thomas Jones James F. Kile ’73 William Michael Killen ’76 Barton L. ’73 and Linda J. Kline Hon. Frank Paul Kotyk ’80

2013

Partners of Menard ($250-$499)

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donor roll Jack D. ’71 ’78 and Diane R. Leaverton Lamont C. Loo ’95 Patrick Eugene ’95 and Jennifer Susan ’95 Mahoney D. James, Jr. ’67 and Sharon L. ’68 Manning Patrick David McBurney, Jr. ’92 Diane Lynn ’89 and Robert H. McDaniel Hon. Peter D. ’68 and Sandra R. McDermott Hon. Pat R. ’79 ’85 and Cathleen Diane ’86 McFadden Ben Patrick McGreevy ’11 Scott Duncan McGregor ’82 Brenda McKinney Albert R., III and Anne D. Menard Manderson L. Miles ’72 Louise F. Miller ’83 Leslie Glenn ’68 ’84 and Joyce M. Murray Terri L. Muse M. Neal Newhouse ’61 Sonyalee R. ’00 and Patrick F. Nutsch Linda Louise Blackwelder-Pall ’85 Dara Labrum Parker ’05 Zurlinden L., Jr. ’57 and Elizabeth A. ’57 Pearson J. Clinton ’51 and Patricia ’51 Peterson Steven Dean ’86 and Jo Ann ’86 ’96 Peterson Terri R. Pickens ’98 Pickens Law, PA Seth Craig Platts ’93 ’96 and Heather Marie States-Platts ’96 Gary C. ’61 ’64 and Sharon A. Randall Hon. Michael John ’85 and Jill M. Reardon Mack A. ’61 ’67 and Nancy J. ’65 Redford Ray W. Rigby ’48 ’50 Lee Philip Ritzau ’95 Brian Keith ’93 and Melanie Elizabeth ’93 Sanderson Frank Scott Scheibner ’75 Ronald D. ’71 and Mary Lynne Schilling Martin Robert ’83 and Beth Ann Schwarz Hon. John R. ’68 and Sherilyn Sellman Bradley S. Shannon Donna K. Shepard Robert Alan Simeone ’81 Curtis Reed ’93 and Kristine C. Smith Scott Dwight ’90 and Laure L. Spears Todd Michael Stamm ’86 and Melanie I. Tyler Susan Fisher Stevens ’82 Clive J. Strong ’74 ’78 Hon. H. Roger ’53 ’56 and Yvonne C. Swanstrom Claire Samson Tardiff ’90 Kathryn Toffenetti ’85 Anthony and Lucretia Jane Trevino Grant R. Walden Ellwood V. Werry ’51 ’62 Andrew T. White ’99 ’04 ’10 Karen Beth ’78 ’81 and David C. ’79 Wiggum W. Allen Willis ’62 ’64 Witherspoon Kelley Davenport & Toole Sarah Lynn ’97 and Todd T. ’88 ’97 ’97 Wixson Hon. Robert L. Zagelow ’71

IDAHO

Associates (up to $100)

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Aetna Foundation, Inc. Kevin Ray Briggs ’95 Susan Kay Chaloupka ’78 and Thomas James McCabe ’80

Christian C. Christensen ’07 P. Kent ’58 ’60 and Patricia H. Church William R Connors Marc Ryan ’08 and Marisa Sue ’02 ’08 Crecelius Eva Lou ’86 and E. Boyd Diebel Michael Edward ’85 and Glenda M. Duggan Jessica Gudmundsen Eby ’08 ’13 Frank Alwin Edgar, Jr. ’92 and Ann D. Darden Edgar Andrew Norman John Ellis ’01 Kevin Alan Griffiths ’09 Gemma Diane and Michael W. Gaudette Jenny Crane ’00 and James William Grunke Brady James Hall ’00 ’00 ’00 ’04 and Julianne Elizabeth Slayton Hall ’04 Andrew M. Harrington ’59 Leonore F. Heavey ’93 Paul F. ’73 and Roberta J. Horton Willis L. Hubler Mark David Huddleston ’79 Forrest W. and Susan Z. Hunter John Ryan ’04 ’07 and Regan Christine ’05 ’08 Jameson M. Gens Johnson James Elliott Johnson ’01 Brett Best ’06 ’09 and Erika Lynn ’05 ’05 ’09 Judd Robert Daniel ’97 and Dragica Kelly Janice Louise ’81 and Ronald F. Koch S. A. ’63 and Donna A. Kolman Monte Max ’82 and Dawna Kramer Timothy Charles Krsul ’94 and Shannon M. Zetah Robert and Linda Kuster Corey J. ’02 and Kristy Ann Larson Ron K. and Nancy Lechelt Iver J. Longeteig, III ’62 ’65 John Baker ’87 ’90 and Janet Lothspeich Henry Darrell Madsen ’87 ’91 James Chris ’76 ’79 and Cherie W. Meservy David Charles Moon ’79 and Joan M. Kelley Brian D ’05 and Christine M. Naugle Jeffrey Daymon ’90 and Mary Bernadette ’02 ’02 Neumeyer Boyd I. ’75 and Leta Nisson William Warren ’54 ’56 and Judy Ann Nixon William Lawrence ’60 and June Nungester Milo W. ’61 and Gayl ’61 Pope Elizabeth Marie Allen ’71 ’96 and Vic R. Racicot Jon C. and Karen J. Riggs Raymond Blaine ’87 and Cindy E. Rounds Lynne Mary Sabatiuk ’86 Ernesto G. Sanchez ’72 and Kathleen Hobdey-Sanchez Amanda M. Schulz ’98 ’98 ’01 Sheila Rae ’91 ’94 and Paul Lawrence ’90 Schwager Katherine G. Aiken ’73 and Joseph M. Schwartz Luverne Eugene Shull ’96 James W. Sweeney ’60 Mont Evan ’90 and Amy Michelle Tanner Brian D. ’93 and Glenda Thie William E. Thoms Hon. Steven Crawford Verby ’76 Verby Ventures, Chartered Wayne Leonard Weseman ’73 ’01 Hon. Eric Jay ’94 and Rebecca Wildman Dorothy L. Wiley ’80 Williams, Meservy & Lothspeich, LLP

You may view this list at anytime online at www.uidaho.edu/law/alumniandfriends/donorroll


2013 alumni giving by class Year

Class of 1951: Preston B. Brimhall ’51 Richard L. McFadden ’51 J. Clinton Peterson ’51 Class of 1954: John H. Bengtson ’54 Class of 1956: Robert E. Bakes ’54 ’56 Wallis W. Friel ’56 William Warren Nixon ’54 ’56 Hon. H. Roger Swanstrom ’53 ’56 Class of 1957: Blaine S. Butler ’57 William A. Parsons ’54 ’57 Zurlinden L. Pearson, Jr. ’57 Herbert W. Rettig ’57 Class of 1958: L. Lamont Jones † ’58 Richard King Smith ’50 ’58 Class of 1959: Andrew M. Harrington ’59 Class of 1960: P. Kent Church ’58 ’60 William Lawrence Nungester ’60 James W. Sweeney ’60 Class of 1961: J. Kelley Arnold ’61 M. Neal Newhouse ’61 Milo W. Pope ’61 Robert C. Youngstrom ’57 ’61 Class of 1963: John L. Child ’61 ’63 S. A. Kolman ’63 Michael E. McNichols ’60 ’63 Hon. Jesse R. Walters ’61 ’63 Class of 1964: Robert P. Brown ’62 ’64 Merlyn W. Clark ’64 Gary C. Randall ’61 ’64 John A. Rosholt ’59 ’64 W. Allen Willis ’62 ’64

Class of 1965: Iver J. Longeteig, III ’62 ’65 Ronnie B. Rock ’63 ’65

Robert W. Stahman ’73 Lucinda Weiss ’73 James E. Whistler ’70 ’73

Class of 1966: Harold W. Felsted ’66 Hon. Jim C. Herndon ’63 ’66

Class of 1974: Mark A. Beebe ’74 James A. Bevis ’74 Stephen C. Brown ’74 David E. Duskin ’74 Donald L. English ’74 Charles A. Homer ’74 James T. Hopkins ’74 Jeffrey G. Howe ’74 Michael R. McMahon ’74 Marcus W. Nye ’74 William R. Platts ’69 ’74 Myrna Anne Stahman ’74

Class of 1967: Norman D. Brock ’67 D. James Manning, Jr. ’67 Mack A. Redford ’61 ’67 Class of 1968: Sylvia A. Baggs ’68 Walter H. Bithell ’65 ’68 Hon. Peter D. McDermott ’68 Hon. John R. Sellman ’68 Hon. Lonny R. Suko ’68 Paul Larry Westberg ’66 ’68 Class of 1969: Robert E. Farnam ’66 ’69 Hon. Mikel H. Williams ’69 William F. Yost, III ’66 ’69 Class of 1971: Dwight E. Baker ’71 Ronald D. Schilling ’71 Fred Hamilton Snook ’71 Hon. Robert L. Zagelow ’71 Class of 1972: Darrel R. Ellis ’72 Bill F. Gigray, III ’69 ’72 David D. Goss ’69 ’72 Quentin F. Harden ’67 ’72 J. Frederick Mack ’69 ’72 Manderson L. Miles ’72 Ernesto G. Sanchez ’72 Class of 1973: Hon. Linda Jean Cook ’73 Theodore O. Creason, Jr. ’70 ’73 James M. English ’66 ’73 Donald J. Farley ’70 ’73 William C. Hamlett ’73 Joann H. Henderson ’71 ’73 Paul F. Horton ’73 James F. Kile ’73 Barton L. Kline ’73

Can’t find your name? The Donor Roll recognizes gifts made between July 1, 2012 and June 30, 2013. If you made a gift after the end of the 2013 fiscal year, it will be listed in the 2014 Donor Roll. Every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of this list. If your or your spouse’s name is not listed or has been listed incorrectly, please contact Terri Muse, director of development (208364-4044, tmuse@uidaho.edu) so that we may make the correction.

Class of 1975: Hon. Henry R. Boomer ’72 ’75 Gary L. Cooper ’72 ’75 Dennis Eugene Goff ’75 Ron Kerl ’72 ’75 Patrick Eugene Miller ’75 Boyd I. Nisson ’75 Rita Therese Reusch ’75 Stephen C. Rice ’75 John Stephen Ritchie ’75 Frank Scott Scheibner ’75 Hon. Randy J. Stoker ’72 ’75 Jesse Carl Trentadue ’75 Class of 1976: Michael L. Bayless ’73 ’76 Stephen J. Blaser ’72 ’76 Randall C. Budge ’76 Hon. Daniel T. Eismann ’73 ’76 Jerry J. Goicoechea ’72 ’76 Ronald Merlin Hart ’76 William Michael Killen ’76 Thomas George Walker, Jr. ’76 Stanley W. Welsh ’76 David E. Wishney ’72 ’76 Hon. Steven Crawford Verby ’76 Class of 1977: Dennis M. Davis ’73 ’77 John Thomas Lezamiz ’77 Hon. Jim D. Pappas ’77 Hon. Linda J. Copple Trout ’73 ’77 Class of 1978: Howard Aye Belodoff ’78 Susan Kay Chaloupka ’78 Roy Lewis Eiguren ’74 ’78 John Ford Elsaesser ’78 Larry L. Goins ’74 ’78 Pamela Leslie Jacklin ’78 Jack D. Leaverton ’71 ’78 James Alan Miller ’78

Briane Nelson Mitchell ’78 James Walter Sinclair ’78 Clive J. Strong ’74 ’78 Charles Henry Creason ’75 ’78 Hon. Patricia Gay Young ’78 Class of 1979: Susan Elaine Baker ’79 Jonathan Paul Carter ’79 Frank Thomas Cordell, Jr. ’79 John Phillip Evans ’79 Darcy Alan Frownfelter ’79 Patrick Dennis Furey ’76 ’79 Mark David Huddleston ’79 James Chris Meservy ’76 ’79 David Charles Moon ’79 Philip A. Peterson ’69 ’79 Anthony J. Riposta ’79 Class of 1980: John Albert Bailey, Jr. ’80 Joel Don Berrett ’80 Bill T. Graham ’80 Hon. Frank Paul Kotyk ’80 Thomas James McCabe ’80 Kenneth R. McClure ’80 Dorothy L. Wiley ’80 Class of 1981: Christine Pelky Ellis ’81 Alan C. Goodman ’81 Janice Louise ’81 John Thomas Schroeder ’81 Robert Alan Simeone ’81 Karen Beth Wiggum ’78 ’81 Class of 1982: Anthony Christopher Anegon ’82 Stanley Jerome Cieslewicz ’82 Hon. Candy W. Dale ’82 James Christopher Dale ’82 David E. Dokken ’79 ’82 Gregory Raphael Giometti ’82 Rory Rolland Jones ’79 ’82 Monte Max Kramer ’82 Mary Margaret Lezamiz ’82 Scott Duncan McGregor ’82 Hon. John Robert Stegner ’82 Susan Fisher Stevens ’82 Class of 1983: Hon. Barbara Ann Buchanan ’80 ’83 Patricia Ann Cervenka ’83 Cecilia Marie Clynch ’83 Mona Lynn Mack ’83 Mark Howard Manweiler ’83 Louise F. Miller ’83 Martin Robert Schwarz ’83 Bradley Jay Stoddard ’80 ’83

2013

Class of 1950: Ray W. Rigby ’48 ’50

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donor roll Class of 1984: Hon. Russell Arthur Comstock ’84 Michael Douglas Currin ’84 Mary Rita Giannini ’84 Karen Elaine Gowland ’81 ’84 Kimbal L. Gowland ’81 ’84 Roseanne Rene Hardin ’69 ’84 Leslie Glenn Murray ’68 ’84 John Michael Stellmon ’81 ’84 Class of 1985: Cathrynn Novich Brown ’85 Michael Edward Duggan ’85 James A. Ford ’85 Hon. Joel David Horton ’85 Reed W. Larsen ’85 Lori Mann ’85 Albert Matsuura ’80 ’85 Pat R. McFadden ’79 ’85 Hon. Carolyn Marie Minder ’85 Linda Louise Blackwelder-Pall ’85 Don Floyd Pickett ’85 Hon. Michael John Reardon ’85 Orin Leroy Squire † ’85 Class of 1986: Laura Burri Brown ’86 John Arthur Bush ’85 ’88 Elizabeth D. Goudreau ’85 ’88 John Joseph Janis ’86 Cathleen Diane McFadden ’86 Steven Dean Peterson ’86 Lynne Mary Sabatiuk ’86 Todd Michael Stamm ’86 Class of 1987: Curtis Brent Coulter ’87 H. Craig Haukaas ’87 Matthew Jonathan Hedlund ’87 John R. Hutchinson ’87 Tim Malarchick ’84 ’87 John C. McCreedy ’84 ’87 Raymond Blaine Rounds ’87 Marie T. Tyler ’87

Class of 1989: Diane Lynn McDaniel ’89 Christopher Joseph Moore ’75 ’89 Dale Thomas Wagner ’89 Class of 1990: Blaine Thomas Connaughton ’90 John O. Fitzgerald II ’86 ’90 Daniel Everett Huffman ’90 John Baker Lothspeich ’87 ’90 Hon. Robert Calvin Naftz ’90 Jeffrey Daymon Neumeyer ’90 Scott Dwight Spears ’90 Mont Evan Tanner ’90 Claire Samson Tardiff ’90 Class of 1991: Robert Donald Barclay ’91 James David Bradbury ’91 Henry Darrell Madsen ’87 ’91 Deborah McIntosh ’80 ’91 Katherine Lucile Moriarty ’91 Class of 1992: Michael Sean Breen ’92 Eric Robert Clark ’92 Frank Alwin Edgar, Jr. ’92 Patrick David McBurney, Jr. ’92 Class of 1993: Leon Aberasturi ’93 Tore Ann Beal-Gwartney ’93 Leonore F. Heavey ’93 Brian Keith Sanderson ’93 Curtis Reed Smith ’93 Brian D. Thie ’93 Class of 1994: Gregory Allen Byron ’94 Victor M. Cardoza, Jr. ’94 Timothy Charles Krsul ’94 Mary Michaela O’Leary ’94 Sheila Rae Schwager ’91 ’94 Hon. Eric Jay Wildman ’94 Mary V. York ’94

Class of 1995: Kevin Ray Briggs ’95 Robert B. Hancock ’95 Lamont C. Loo ’95 Jennifer Susan Mahoney ’95 Patrick Eugene Mahoney ’95 Lee Philip Ritzau ’95 Class of 1996: Richard John Armstrong ’96 James Keith ball, Jr. ’96 Tanya Marie Madison Cunningham ’92 ’93 ’96 Seth Craig Platts ’93 ’96 Elizabeth Marie Allen ’71 ’96 Luverne Eugene Shull ’96 Craig Marvin Young ’96 Class of 1997: Robert Daniel Kelly ’97 Sarah Lynn Wixson ’97 Class of 1998: Kelvin Patrick Hartwell-Beal ’96 ’98 Tod Dallas Geidl ’95 ’98 Terri R. Pickens ’98 Class of 1999: Matt Richard Bohn ’96 ’99 Michael Anthony Sasser ’99 Class of 2000: Kevin Curtis Belew ’00 Gregory Charles Foley ’00 Jenny Crane Grunke ’00 Joseph H. Jardine ’00 Sonyalee R. Nutsch ’00 Krista Dawn Thiry ’97 ’00 Class of 2001: Andrew Norman John Ellis ’01 James Elliott Johnson ’01 Mary V. Kennedy ’71 ’01 Angela Rose Morgan ’97 ’01 Amanda M. Schulz ’98 ’98 ’01 Wayne Leonard Weseman ’73 ’01

Class of 1988: John Arthur Bush ’85 ’88 Elizabeth D. Goudreau ’85 ’88 Jeffrey Joseph Messerich ’88

IDAHO

View the Donor Roll online!

26 LAW

You may view this list at anytime online at www.uidaho.edu/law/alumniandfriends/donorroll

Class of 2002: Katherine Cecilia Ball ’02 Corey J. Larson ’02 Class of 2004: Lana V. Elliott ’04 Brady James Hall ’00 ’00 ’00 ’04 Julianne Elizabeth Slayton Hall ’04 Danielle Jo Hunsaker ’01 ’04 Jennifer Joanis ’04 Lance Eric Joanis ’04 Andrew T. White ’99 ’04 ’10 Class of 2005: Sarah Elizabeth Davis ’05 Brian D Naugle ’05 Dara Labrum Parker ’05 Class of 2007: Christian C. Christensen ’07 Anna Elizabeth Eberlin ’07 Lance Ludwig Fuisting ’07 John Ryan Jameson ’04 ’07 Megan E. Mooney ’07 Ian Wheeles ’07 Brian Clayton Wonderlich ’02 ’07 Class of 2008: Marc Ryan Crecelius ’08 Marisa Sue Crecelius ’02 ’08 R. Brett Evanson ’08 Regan Christine Jameson ’05 ’08 Class of 2009: Samuel Toevs Creason ’06 ’09 Kevin Alan Griffiths ’09 Brett Best Judd ’06 ’09 Erika Lynn Judd ’05 ’05 ’09 Jordan Eriksen Taylor ’09 Class of 2011: Ben Patrick McGreevy ’11 Class of 2013: Jessica Gudmundsen Eby ’08 ’13


e n d o wme n ts Endowments provide a consistent source of income for the College of Law upon which we rely for things such as scholarships, faculty support, and programs such as the annual Bellwood Lecture Series. The College of Law thanks the creators of these endowments and those they honor for their gifts of perpetual support to the College of Law. If you are interested in establishing an endowment to support the College of Law, please contact Terri Muse, Director of Development, at tmuse@uidaho.edu or (208) 364-4044.

Program and Faculty Endowments

Sherman J. Bellwood Lectures Endowment Judge J. Blaine Anderson Memorial Scholarship Endowment Laurence S. Bogert Memorial Lecture in Law and Business Bernice Bacharach College of Law Scholarship Justice Alfred Budge Visiting Jurist Endowment Leland D. Beckman Foundation Law Scholarship Endowment William H. Clagett Memorial Endowment Herbert A. Berman Memorial Scholarship Endowment College of Law Centennial Endowment Robert H. Copple Memorial Scholarship Endowment Hopwood College of Law Endowment John S. Cushman Scholarship Endowment Idaho Law Review Endowment Charles H. Darling Endowment Judge Ray McNichols Memorial Fund Endowment John H. Daly & Kathryn Daly Ramseyer Scholarship Endowment John and Karen Rosholt Law Endowment M. Allyn Dingel Memorial Law Scholarship Allan G. Shepard Distinguished Professorship Endowment Paul B. Ennis Memorial Scholarship Endowment Lucinda Weiss College of Law Student Opportunities Endowment Felton Family Law Scholarship Endowment Whittenberger Foundation/Dean E. Miller Memorial Endowment William and Carolyn Folz Scholarship Endowment James E. Wilson Memorial Endowment Fund Chester and Blanche Graham Scholarship Endowment C.J. and Janice O. Hamilton Law Scholarship Endowment Peter E. Heiser, Jr. Memorial Scholarship Endowment Judge Faye C. Kennedy Memorial Scholarship Endowment Langroise Law Scholarship Endowment Judge Hardy C. Lyons Memorial Scholarship Endowment MacLane Law Scholarship Howard I. Manweiler Scholarship Endowment Anton F, Katherine, and Kathyrn Ann Mautz Law Scholarship Endowment Albert R. Menard, Jr. Law Scholarship Endowment L. Edward Miller College of Law Scholarship Endowment Richard A. Minas Law Scholarship Endowment Anthony A. Nelson Scholarship Endowment William J. and Eva Jane Nixon College of Law Scholarship Endowment Philip and Jeanne Peterson Law Scholarship Endowment Edward “Ted� A. Pike Memorial Scholarship Endowment A.J.G. Priest Law Scholarship Endowment Larry. D. Ripley College of Law Scholarship Endowment John and Karen Rosholt Endowment Judge Harold L. Ryan Law Scholarship Endowment Judge Charles and Audrey Scoggin Memorial Scholarship Endowment Frank A. Shrontz College of Law Scholarship Endowment J. Lael Simmons Law School Endowment Gary D. Slette College of Law Scholarship Endowment Nick Speropulos Memorial Scholarship Endowment Willis E. Sullivan, Sr. Memorial College of Law Scholarship Endowment Judge William Stellmon Memorial Law Scholarship Endowment Randall Wallis Law Scholarship Endowment George T. Warren Law Scholarship Endowment

2013

Scholarship Endowments

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FACULTY FOCUS

WELCOME

New Faculty

Sarah C. Haan Associate Professor of Law B.A. Yale College J.D. Columbia Law School Professor Haan earned her baccalaureate degree in history from Yale College, where she received the Edwin W. Small Prize and the Clarence W. Mendell Prize and her Juris Doctor degree from Columbia University where she was the editor of the Columbia Law Review. Prior to joining the College of Law, she was in private practice in New York City and held a teaching position at Pace University Law School in New York. Professor Haan teaches professional responsibility, business associations and other business-related courses.

Kristina J. Running Assistant Clinical Professor B.A. College of Idaho J.D. University of Idaho College of Law magna cum laude Professor Running earned her baccalaureate degree in business/international political economy and history from the College of Idaho summa cum laude and her Juris Doctor degree from the University of Idaho magna cum laude. Prior to joining the faculty, Professor Running clerked for Idaho Supreme Court Justice Roger Burdick and was an associate attorney for the Boise firm, Elam and Burke. She teaches legal research and writing, and is the adviser for the moot court competition teams.

Brooke Hardy Associate Clinical Professor B.A. University of Florida J.D. University of Florida Levin College of Law Professor Hardy received her undergraduate degree in linguistics from the University of Florida and her Juris Doctor, magna cum laude, from the University of Florida Levin College of Law. After law school, she clerked for U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit Judge Ed Cames and then Judge Adalberto Jordan. Prior to joining the College of Law, she was in private practice with two national firms in Atlanta, Georgia. Professor Hardy will teach legal writing and research.

Sunil Ramalingam

IDAHO

Assistant Clinical Professor and Director of Externships and Pro Bono Programs B.A. California State University Sacramento B.A. University of California, Davis J.D. University of Idaho

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Professor Ramalingam completed two bachelor degrees at the University of California, Davis and California State University Sacramento before earning his Juris Doctor at the University of Idaho. Prior to joining the College of Law, he was the Contract Review officer for the University of Idaho in the Office of Research and Economic Development and prior to this position was in private practice in Moscow, Idaho. Professor Ramalingam oversees the externship and pro bono programs.


publications 2012-13

Faculty Scholarship – 2012-13 Ben Beard: D. Benjamin Beard, Uniform Electronic Transactions Act, Hawkland, Uniform Commercial Code Series. Volume 10 (Thomson/West Pub., February, 2007), together with Annual Supplements 2008-2013. Annemarie Bridy: Annemarie Bridy, Online Piracy (SOPA), in Issues and Controversies in Science and Politics, Brent S. Steel, ed. (CQ Press, forthcoming 2014). Annemarie Bridy, ACTA and the Future of Access to Knowledge in the Digital Environment: US Enforcement Trends as a Global Predictor, in The Plurilateral Enforcement Agenda: The Genesis and Aftermath of ACTA, Pedro Roffe, ed. (Cambridge Univ. Press, forthcoming 2013). Annemarie Bridy, Graduated Response American Style: “Six Strikes” Measured against Five Norms, 23 Fordham Intell. Prop., Media, Ent. L.J. 1 (2013). Annemarie Bridy, Copyright Policymaking as Procedural Democratic Process: A Discourse-Theoretic Perspective on ACTA, SOPA, and PIPA, 30 Cardozo Arts & Ent. L.J. 153 (2012). Annemarie Bridy, Coding Creativity: Copyright and the Artificially Intelligent Author, 2012 Stan. Tech. L. Rev. 5 (2012). Donald L. Burnett: Donald L. Burnett, Jr., A Global Theatre of Justice? O.J. Simpson and Gutenberg’s Second Wave, BRANDEIS MEETS GUTENBERG: GERMAN-AMERICAN CONVERSATIONS ON LAW 1991-2011, published in English and German by Res Publica/Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main, 2012. Barbara Cosens: Green, O. O., B. A. Cosens, and A. S. Garmestani. 2013. Resilience in transboundary water governance: the Okavango River Basin. Ecology and Society 18(2): 23. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-05453-180223. Cosens, B. Legitimacy, adaptation, and resilience in ecosystem management. 2013. Ecology and Society 18(1): 3. http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ ES-05093-180103. Barbara Cosens and Craig Stow, Resilience and Water Governance: Addressing Fragmentation and Uncertainty in Water Allocation and Water Quality Law, Resilience and Law, Craig Allen and Ahjond Garmestani eds. (Columbia University Press forthcoming 2013). Cosens. B. ed. The Columbia River Treaty Revisited: Transboundary River Governance in the Face of Uncertainty, A Project of the Universities Consortium on Columbia River Governance (Oregon State University Press, 2012). Bankes, N. and Cosens, B. The Future of the Columbia River Treaty, research project for the Program on Water Issues, Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto, October 2012, available at http://munkschool.utoronto.ca/research/the-future-of-the-columbia-river-treaty/. Saito, L., Fiedler, F., Cosens, B. and Kauneckis, D. A Vision of Interdisciplinary Graduate Education in Water and Environmental Resources in 2050. Toward a Sustainable Water Future: Visions for 2050 (American Society of Civil Engineers 2012). Cosens, B. and J. Royster eds. The Future of Federal and Indian Reserved Water Rights: The Winters Centennial 2012 (University of New Mexico Press). Chapter: The Legacy of Winters v. United States and the Winters Doctrine, One Hundred Year Later. Barbara Cosens, Resilience and Law as a Theoretical Backdrop for Natural Resource Management: Flood Management in the Columbia River Basin, 42 Environmental Law 241 (2012). Cosens, B. A. and M. Kevin Williams. 2012. Resilience and Water Governance: Adaptive Governance in the Columbia River Basin. Ecology and Society 17 (4): 3. [online] URL: http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/ vol17/iss4/art3/.

Wendy Gerwick, Couture: Wendy Gerwick Couture, The Collision Between the First Amendment and Securities Fraud, __ Ala. L. Rev. __ (forthcoming). Wendy Gerwick Couture, The End of the Vexatiousness Rationale, __ Sec. Reg. L.J. __ (forthcoming). Wendy Gerwick Couture, Opinions Actionable As Securities Fraud, 73 La. L. Rev. 381 (2013). Wendy Gerwick Couture, Securities Regulation As Gap-Filler: The Example of Hydraulic Fracturing, 41 Sec. Reg. L.J. 207 (2013). Wendy Gerwick Couture, Criminal Securities Fraud and the Lower Materiality Standard, 41 Sec. Reg. L.J. 77 (2012) Wendy Gerwick Couture, The Falsity-Scienter Inference, 40 Sec. Reg. L.J. 303 (2012). Angelique EagleWoman: Angelique EagleWoman, MASTERING AMERICAN INDIAN LAW (with Stacy Leeds). Carolina Academic Press, forthcoming Fall 2013. Angelique EagleWoman, “Wintertime for the Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate: Over One Hundred Fifty Years of Human Rights Violations by the United States and the Need for a Reconciliation Involving International Indigenous Human Rights Norms,” 39 Wm Mitchell L. Rev. 486 (2013). Angelique EagleWoman, Bringing Balance to Mid-North America: ReStructuring the Sovereign Relationships between Tribal Nations and the United States, 41 U. Balt. L. Rev. 671 (Summer 2012). Ruth Funabiki: Funabiki, Ruth Patterson, Using Idaho’s Court Assistance Publications to Enhance Public Library Service, 63(1) Idaho Librarian (2013). Funabiki, Ruth Patterson, Getting Bombed in Boise: Yarn Bombing and Libraries, 62(1) Idaho Librarian (2012). Baker, Kate, Eisler, Melody Sky, Funabiki, Ruth, Marker, Gena, Seborg, Liesl, Vecchione, Amy, Splat Unconference Report: Top 10 Idaho Library Trends, 60(2) Idaho Librarian (2012). Diana Gleason: Diana Gleason, Can I Bring My Gun? A Fifty State Survey of Firearm Laws Impacting Policies Prohibiting Handguns in Public Libraries, Public Library Quarterly, (forthcoming). Diana Gleason, Think Before you Plea: Juvenile Collateral Consequences in the United States, available at: www.beforeyouplea.com/or. Dale D. Goble: Vicky J. Meretsky, Lynn A. McGuire, Frank W. Davis, David M. Stoms, J. Michael Scott, Dale D. Goble, Brad Griffith, Scott E. Henke, Jacqueline Vaughn, and Steven L. Yaffee, A State-Based National Network for Effective Wildlife Conservation, 62 BioScience 970-976 (2012). Dale D. Goble, John A. Wiens, J. Michael Scott, Timothy D. Male, & John A. Hall, Conservation-Reliant Species, 62 BioScience 869-873 (2012). Carol I. Bocetti, Dale D. Goble, and J. Michael Scott, Using ConservationManagement Agreements to Secure Post-Delisting Perpetuation of a Conservation Reliant Species: The Kirtland’s Warbler as a Case Study, 62 BioScience 874-879 (2012). George F. Wilhere, Lynn A. Maguire, J. Michael Scott, Janet L. Rachlow, Dale D. Goble, & Leona K. Svancara, Conflation of Values and Science: Response to Noss et al., 26 Conservation Biology 943-944 (2012). John A. Wiens, Dale D. Goble, & J. Michael Scott, Time to Accept Conservation Triage, 488 Nature 281 (2012) (correspondence). Maile C. Neel, Allison K. Leidner, Aaron Haines, Dale D. Goble, & J. Michael Scott, By the Numbers: How Is Recovery Defined by the U.S. Endangered Species Act?, 62 BioScience 646-657 (2012). Michael Greenlee: Michael Greenlee and Robert McCoy, To Develop Righteous Law and Promote Justice: The University of Idaho College of Law 1909-2009, (2013). John Hasko: John Hasko, Idaho State Law Library and UI College of Law Provide Access to HeinOnline Redux (2), The Advocate, Oct. 2012, at 30. John Hasko, New Kid on the Block: Bloomberg Law Makes a Debut at UI College of Law, The Advocate, May 2013, at 61.

2013

Mark D. Anderson: Mark Anderson, The Enigma of the Single Entity, University of Pennsylvania Journal of Business Law. (forthcoming).

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publications 2012 -13 Maureen E. Laflin: Maureen Laflin, Criminal Mediation Has Taken Root in Idaho’s Courts, The Advocate (May 2013). Maureen Laflin, Barbara Cosens, Interdisciplinary Methods in Water Resources, Issues in Integrative Studies (No. 29, pp. 118-143) (2012). Monique Lillard: Monique Lillard, Remedial and Preventive Responses to the Unauthorized Practice of Immigration Law, co-author with Prof. Monica Schurtman, accepted for publication Texas Hispanic Law Journal, 2014. Jerrold A. Long: Jerrold A. Long, Sy Adler’s Oregon Plans: The Making of An Unquiet Land Use Revolution (book review), Pacific Historical Review 82(3): 485-486 (2013). Jerrold A. Long, Local Flood Control: Using Idaho’s Flood Control District Statute to Enable Place-Based Stream Restoration, The Advocate, June/ July 2013, at 51-54 (with Samuel Finch). Jerrold A. Long, Waiting for Hohfeld: Property Rights, Property Privileges, and the Physical Consequences of Word Choice, 48 Gonzaga L. Rev. 307364 (2013). Jerrold A. Long, Overcoming Neoliberal Hegemony in Community Development: Law, Planning, and Selected Lamarckism, 44 URB. LAW. 345-398 (2012). Jean Mattimoe: Jean Mattimoe, The Death Penalty and the Mentally Ill: A Selected & Annotated Bibliography, 5 Crit, available at http://thecritui.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/spring2/Mattimoe_Final2.pdf (2012).

IDAHO

John A. Miller: John A. Miller and Jeffrey Maine, The Fundamentals of Federal Taxation, CAROLINA ACADEMIC PRESS, (3rd Ed 2013). John A. Miller and Jeffrey Maine,, Wealth Transfer Tax Planning for 2013 and (Forth coming in Issue No. 4 BYU Law Rev. 2013), SSRN Abstract Id. 2214422. John A. Miller, Sean Bleck, and Barbara Isenhour, Preserving Wealth and Inheritance through Medicaid Planning for Long Term Care Michigan State University Journal of Medicine and Law (forthcoming Winter 2012) SSRN Abstract Id. 2126111.

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Stephen R. Miller: Stephen Miller, Boundaries of Nature and the American City, in Environmental Law and Contrasting Ideas of Nature: A Constructivist Approach (Keith Hirokawa ed., Cambridge Univ. Press) (forthcoming 2013). Stephen Miller, Sustainable Cities of Tomorrow: A Land Use Response To Climate Change, in Rethinking Sustainable Development to Meet the Climate Change Challenge (Jessica Owley & Keith Hirokawa eds., Environmental Law Institute) (forthcoming 2014). Stephen Miller, Administrative Law for Idaho Local Governments, in Idaho Administrative Law (Richard Seamon ed.) (forthcoming). Stephen Miller, Field Notes from Starting a Law School Clinic, __ Clinical Law Review __ (forthcoming 2014) (peer-reviewed). Stephen Miller, Community Land Trusts: Why Now Is the Time to Integrate This Housing Activists’ Tool Into Local Government Affordable Housing Policies, __ Zoning & Planning Law Report __ (forthcoming October, 2013). Stephen Miller, Legal Neighborhoods, 37 Harvard Environmental Law Review 105 (2013). Stephen Miller, The Sustainable, Inevitably Exploding City, 43 Environmental Law Reporter 10342 (2013). Stephen Miller, Contributor, Constitutional Law Report, A.B.A. Section of Environment, Energy and Resources, 2012 Year in Review (2013). Stephen Miller, Hydraulic Fracturing and the Emergent Dormant Commerce Clause, A.B.A Section of Environment, Energy and Resources, 9 Constitutional Law Committee Newsletter 6 (Feb., 2013). Stephen Miller, The Visual and the Law of Cities, 33 Pace Law Review 183 (2013). Area of City Impact Agreements in Idaho (2012). Stephen Miller, Percent-For-Art Programs at Public Art’s Frontier, 35 Zoning & Planning Law Report 1 (May, 2012). Stephen Miller, Contributor, Constitutional Law Report, A.B.A Section of Environment, Energy and Resources, 2011 Year in Review (2012).

John Rumel: John Rumel, Back to the Future: The In Loco Parentis Doctrine and Its Impact on Whether K-12 Schools and Teachers Owe a Fiduciary Duty to Students, 46 Indiana L. Rev. 1 (2013). Shaakirrah Sanders Shaakirrah Sanders,Making the Right Call for Confrontation at Felony Sentencing, Michigan Journal of Law Reform, Winter 2014. Richard H. Seamon: Richard Seamon, Supreme Court Sourcebook (Aspen Publishers; 2013) (with Andrew Siegel, Kathryn Watts, and Joseph Thai), 625 pp. plus appedices. Richard Seamon, Strategies and Techniques for Teaching Administrative Law (Aspen Publishers 2013), 52 pages. Richard Seamon, Administrative Law: A Context and Practice Casebook (Carolina Academic Press, 2013), lx, 986 pages. Richard Seamon, Petition for a writ of certiorari in Behenna v. United States (U.S. Supreme Court, filed Jan. 2, 2013) (with co-counsel Jeffrey Fisher, Joseph Thai, and Donald Rehkopf, Jr.). Richard Seamon, “Achieving Regulatory Reform by Encouraging Consensus,” (Idaho) Advocate, p. 27 (February 2013) (with Joan Callahan). Anastasia Telesetsky: Anastasia Telesetsky, “Good Faith” Obligations to Protect and Preserve the Marine Environment: A Proposal to Create Uniform High Seas Fisheries in The Law of the Sea: Limits of Maritime Jurisdiction, Ashgate (Clive Schofield, ed. Forthcoming 2013). Anastasia Telesetsky, Ecoscapes: The Future of Ecological Restoration Law, 14 Vermont Journal of Environmental Law 4, 493-548 (2013). Anastasia Telesetsky, Fishing Moratoria and TURFs : Creating Opportunities for Marine Resource Abundance in West African Waters When International Legal Obligations Collide, Symposium Edition, __ Georgia Journal of International Law ___ (2013). Anastasia Telesetsky,, Follow the Leader: Eliminating Perverse Global Fishing Subsidies through Unilateral Domestic Trade Measures, 65 Maine Law Review 2:628-649 (2013). Anastasia Telesetsky, Restoration and Large Marine Ecosystems: Strengthening Governance for an Emerging International Regime Based on “Ecoscape” Management 35 University of Hawaii Law Review. (2013). Anastasia Telesetsky, An Emerging Legal Principle to Restore Large Scale Ecoscapes in The Rule of Law for Nature, Cambridge University Press (Christina Voigt ed.) (2013). Anastasia Telesetsky, Going Once, Going Twice--Sold to the Highest Bidder: Restoring Equity on the High Seas through Centralized High Seas Fish Auctions, Law of the Sea Institute Publication (2013) (Harry Scheiber and Moon-Sang Kwon eds.) available at http://www.law. berkeley.edu/15589.htm . Anastasia Telesetsky, Toward a Broader Concept of the Intangible Cultural Heritage, Special Issue: Art and Heritage Disputes, Transnational Dispute Management with James Nafziger (2013) available at http://www. transnational-dispute-management.com/journal-browse-issues.asp. Anastasia Telesetsky, A Tribunal Navigating Complex Waters Implications of the Bay of Bengal Case. Anastasia Telesetsky, 44 Ocean Development and International Law with Clive Schofield and Seokwoo Lee (2013) Anastasia Telesetsky, United Nations Convention on Law of the Sea and Marine Fisheries, co-authored chapter with Rebecca Bratspies, International Environmental Law Handbook, Taylor and Francis (2012). Anastasia Telesetsky, Grey Clouds or Clearer Skies Ahead? Implications of the Bay of Bengal Case Law of the Sea Reports, with Clive Schofield, Vol. III, No 1 (2012), http://www.asil.org/losreports/. Anastasia Telesetsky, Role of Transnational Corporations as Subjects in Implementing International Environmental Law, New Challenges for International Law in Globalised World (Andrew Byrnes, Mika Hayashi, and Chris Michaelsen eds.) Brill Publishers (Forthcoming 2012). Anastasia Telesetsky, Binding the United Nations: Compulsory Review of UN Disputes before the International Court of Justice, 21 Minnesota Journal of International Law, 1, 75-119 (2012). Anastasia Telesetsky, Rule of Marine Capture versus Rule of Cooperation in the East China Sea: Exploring Options for Regional Ecosystem Restoration , in Chinese (Taiwan) Yearbook of International Law and Affairs (2012).


outreach and engagement 2013

Faculty and Staff

Outreach and Engagement Activities 2013 Katie Ball UI, College of Law, Honor Court, dean’s designee for Boise Cases Ben Beard American Bar Association, Section of Business Law, Cyberspace Committee American Bar Association, Section of Business Law, UCC Committee Pro Bono Program Committee Member UI, College of Law, Ad Hoc Committee on Future Planning, Chair UI, College of Law, Admissions and Financial Aid Committee UI, College of Law, Board of Student Advocates Co-advisor UI, College of Law, Idaho Law Review Co-advisor Elizabeth Brandt American Bar Association, Family Law Quarterly, editorial board Association of American Law Schools, Juvenile and Family Law Section Listserve Manger Boise Strategic Planning & Coordination Committee Faculty Appointments Committee, Chair and Team 1 Hon. Ray McNichols American Inn of Court Idaho State Bar, Family Law Council of the Family Law Section Idaho State Bar, Second District, Family Court Service Advisory Committee Idaho Supreme Court, Child Protection Committee Idahoans for Openness in Government, Board of Directors UI, College of Law, ACLU of Idaho Student Chapter Advisors UI, College of Law, Curriculum Committee Member UI, College of Law, Executive Committee UI, College of Law, Technology Committee UI, College of Law, Women’s Law Caucus Advisor Annemarie Bridy Association of American Law Schools, Art Law Section, Executive Committee Association of American Law Schools, Internet & Computer Law Section, chair elect Freedom to Tinker, Princeton University Center for Information Technology Center for Information Technology Policy, Blogger UI, College of Law, American Constitution Society Advisor UI, College of Law, Career Development Committee UI, College of Law, Golf Club Advisor UI, College of Law, Honor Code Review and Revision Committee UI, College of Law, Intellectual Property Law Society Advisor UI, College of Law, Student Honor Court, Chief Justice Donald Burnett American Judicature Society, National Advisory Board Hon. Ray McNichols American Inn of Court Idaho Law Foundation, Board of Directors Idaho Law Foundation, IOLTA Comparable Rates Task Force UI, Chair, Ethical Guidance & Oversight Committee UI, Coordinating Dean, University-Wide Programs: Environmental Science, Water Resources & Professional Science Matters UI, Development Council UI, Interim President (eff. June 1, 2013) UI, Provost’s Council (Academic Deans) Barbara Cosens Lapwai Watershed Faculty/Student Research Team Leader Native American Water Rights Settlement E-Repository, Collaboration with University of New Mexico UI, College of Law, Environmental Science Concurrent Degree, Admissions/Coordination

UI, College of Law, Natural Resources and Environmental Law emphasis, Coordinator and Advisor UI, College of Law, Natural Resources and Environmental Law Programs, Coordinator UI, College of Law, Strategic Planning, Moderator UI, College of Law, Third Year Review Committee, Chair 2012-2013 UI, College of Law, Water Resources Program concurrent degree, Admissions/Coordination UI, Environmental Science Program, Faculty UI, Graduate Program Candidate Committees/Major Advisers UI, Waters of the West, Faculty UI, Waters of the West, Steering Committee, Curriculum Committee Universities Consortium on Columbia River Governance, UI Representative, Legal Review Team Wendy Couture Federal Defender Services of Idaho, Board of Directors Member Idaho State Bar, Business & Corporate Law Section, Governing Council Member Idaho Women Lawyers, Board of Directors Member UI, Boise Center, Faculty Senator UI, College of Law, Faculty Appointments Committee Lee Dillion Boise Strategic Planning & Coordination Committee, Chair Idaho Law Foundation Practical Skills Task Force, Member Idaho Law Foundation, Continuing Legal Education Committee, Chair Idaho Supreme Court, Judicial Education Committee Pro Bono Program Committee UI Boise, Academic Council, Member and Past Co-Chair UI, College of Law, ABA Negotiation Competition Regional Competition Coordinator UI, College of Law, Business Law Association Advisor UI, Integrated Leadership Council UI, Outreach & Engagement Council Jeff Dodge Association of American Law Schools, International Legal Exchange, Chair Elect Angelique EagleWoman Federal Bar Association, Indian Law Section, 38th Annual Indian Law Conference, presenter Idaho State Bar Association, Indian Law Section, Advisory Member Idaho Supreme Court, Idaho Tribal-State Court Forum Consultant UI, College of Law Professionalism Planning Committee Member UI, College of Law, Annual Native American Law Conference, Coordinator UI, College of Law, Diversity Committee, Chair UI, President’s Task Force on Diversity, Equity and Community, Member Ruth Funabiki American Association of Law Libraries, Cataloging & Classification Committee American Association of Law Libraries, TS/OBSIS Joint Research Grant Committee Ex Libris Users of North America, Voyager Law Special Interest Group, Co-Chair Idaho Commission for Libraries, Library Services and Technology Act Advisory Council Idaho Library Association, Idaho Book Award Committee, Chair UI, Auditorium Chamber Music Series, Advisory Board Member UI, College of Law, Faculty Affairs Committee UI, College of Law, Technology Committee

2013

Mark Anderson UI, College of Law, Faculty Appointments Committee, Member UI, College of Law, Curriculum Committee Member, Chair

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outreach and engagement 2013 Dale Goble Center for Progressive Reform, Member Scholar Idaho State Journal, Administrative and Regulatory Law News Idaho State Reporter Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation, Trustee Scientific Misconduct Committee UI, Bioregional Planning UI, College of Law, Curriculum Committee Member UI, College of Law, Natural Resources and Environmental Law Emphasis Advisor UI, College of Law, Standing Committee on Tenure and Promotion, Chair UI, Environmental Science Program UI, Natural Resources and Environmental Law Symposium UI, Philosophy Department UI, Water of the West Program Western Legal History (Ninth Circuit Historical Society publication) Editorial Advisory Board Member Michael Greenlee Idaho Commission for Libraries, Libraries Linking Idaho Steering Committee Idaho Library Association, Legislative Committee Co-chair Idaho State Bar, Diversity Section, Love the Law Committee John Hasko UI, Campus Planning Advisory Committee, Chair UI, College of Law, Technology Committee UI, Faculty Senate, Representative UI, President’s Athletic Advisory Council, Member Maureen Laflin American Bar Association, Advisory Panel American Bar Association, Section on Dispute Resolution Mediator’s Ethical Guidance Committee Federal Defenders Services of Idaho, Inc., Board of Directors Idaho State Bar, Alternative Dispute Resolution Section Governing Council Idaho Supreme Court, Criminal Mediation Committee The Grail, Personnel Committee UI, College of Law, Litigation & Appropriate Dispute Resolution Emphasis Advisor UI, College of Law, Northwest Institute for Dispute Resolution, Director UI, College of Law, Pro Bono Program, Chair UI, College of Law, Tenure and Promotion, Regular Faculty Alternate Monique Lillard Association of Law American Law Schools Employment Discrimination Section Executive Committee, Member Association of Law American Law Schools Labor and Employment Law Section Executive Committee, Member Catholic Charities of Idaho Board of Directors, Secretary UI, College of Law, American Constitution Society Advisor UI, College of Law, Faculty Appointments Committee, Chair UI, College of Law, J. Reuben Clark Society Co-Advisor UI, College of Law, Tenure and Promotion Committee UI, College of Law, Women’s Law Caucus Co-Advisor

IDAHO

Barb Lock Idaho State Bar Taxation, Probate and Trust Law Section governing council member Idaho Statesman Business Insider, Columnist UI, College of Law, Library Committee UI, College of Law, Student Engagement and Climate Committee

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Jerry Long City of Moscow, Board of Adjustment Palouse Bicycle Racing, Founding Board Member and Treasurer Palouse Clearwater Environmental Institute, Board of Directors UI, Academic Hearing Board UI, Ad Hoc Committee on Law School Planning UI, Bioregional Planning and Community Design Program, Faculty UI, College of Law, Diversity Committee UI, College of Law, Natural Resources and Environmental Law Emphasis Advisor

UI, College of Law, Natural Resources and Environmental Law Symposium UI, Environmental Science Program, Faculty UI, Graduate Program Candidate Committees/Major Advisors UI, Leadership Academy UI, Water of the West Program, Faculty Jean Mattimoe American Association of Law Libraries, ALL-SIS Collection Development Committee American Association of Law Libraries, Guide to Fair Business Practices Revisions Task Force UI College of Law, Library Committee UI, Safety and Loss-Control Committee Deborah McIntosh UI, College of Law, Honor Code Review and Revision Committee UI, College of Law, Student Honor Court John A. Miller Law School Admission Council (LSAC ) Audit Committee, Chair LSAC Board of Trustees, Member LSAC Executive Compensation Committee, Member LSAC Board of Trustees Nominating Committee, Member Stephen R. Miller Idaho NEXT: Economic Development in Idaho and the Mountain West, Editor (www.idahonext.com) Idaho Smart Growth, Urban Policy Working Group Member Idaho Statesman Business Insider, Columnist Joyce Ivy Foundation, Board Member Land Use Prof Blog, Co-editor (www.lawprofessors.typepad.com/land_ use) John Rumel Idaho State Bar, Advisory Committee Concerning Revisions to ISB CLE Requirements, Committee member Idaho Trial Lawyers Association, Tricks of the Trade Conference, Presenter UI, College of Law, Bellwood Lecture Panel Discussion, Co-moderator UI, College of Law, Early Welcome Program for entering students, Instructor UI, College of Law, Intraschool Mediation Competition, Mediator/Judge UI, College of Law, Intraschool Negotiation Competition UI, College of Law, National Latina/o Law Student Moot Court Competition, Team Coach/Advisor UI, College of Law, National Moot Court Competition, Judge UI, College of Law, Orientation Program for entering and transferring students, Instructor UI, College of Law, Prince Memorial Evidence Moot Court Competition, Team Coach/Advisor UI, College of Law, Professional Committee, faculty member UI, College of Law, Raymond C. McNichols Intramural Moot Court Competition, Judge UI, College of Law, Student Honor Court, Judge UI, College of Law, Trial Advocacy Competition, Juror Shaakirrah Sanders ACLU of Idaho, Board Member Michael Satz UI, College of Law, Black Law Students Association Advisor UI, College of Law, Critical Legal Studies Journal Club UI, College of Law, Diversity Committee, Co-Chair UI, College of Law, Faculty Appointments, Team 3 UI, College of Law, Interim Dean UI, College of Law, Multi-Cultural Law Caucus Advisor UI, College of Law, the crit, Advisor UI, President’s Diversity Council Monica Schurtman American Civil Liberties Union Idaho Chapter, Legal Committee American Immigration Lawyers Association Idaho Council to End Domestic Violence/Trafficking Against Immigrants Idaho Lawyer Immigration Pro Bono Network International Opportunities, Chair National Lawyers’ Guild Immigration Project UI, College of Law, Admissions and Financial Aid Committee


Rich Seamon American Law Institute UI, College of Law, Board of Student Advocates Faculty Advisor UI, College of Law, Idaho Law Review Faculty Advisor UI, College of Law, Latino Law Caucus UI, College of Law, Phi Alpha Delta Faculty Advisor UI, Faculty Appeals Hearing Board, Member Anastasia Telesetsky UI, College of Law, Career Development Committee UI, College of Law, Curriculum Committee Member UI, College of Law, Environmental Law Society Advisor UI, College of Law, International Law Students Association Advisor UI, College of Law, International Opportunities Committee UI, College of Law, Natural Resources and Environmental Law Emphasis Advisor UI, College of Law, Natural Resources and Environmental Law Symposium UI, College of Law, Tenure and Promotion Committee UI, Water of the West Program, Faculty

Anne-Marie Fulfer– Director of Career Development Hon. Ray McNichols American Inn of Court Idaho State Bar Diversity Section Member Idaho State Bar, Professionalism and Ethics Section, Member National Association of Legal Career Professionals Development Section Member UI, College of Law Career Development Committee member UI, College of Law Diversity Committee member UI, College of Law Pro Bono Committee member UI, College of Law Professionalism Planning Committee member UI, College of Law Student Competitions Committee member Nancy Luebbert– Director of Academic Support Association of Academic Support Educators, Membership Committee Idaho Law Foundation, IOLTA Fund Committee Idaho State Bar, Diversity Section Idaho Women Lawyers UI, College of Law, Awards Selection Committee UI, College of Law, Curriculum Committee UI, College of Law, Honor Code Review and Revision Committee University of Idaho Academic Advising Association Terri Muse– Director of Development Fourth District Bar Association, Vice-President Idaho Women Lawyers Carole Wells– Interim Director of Admissions Idaho Volunteers Lawyers Program, Policy Council Member Palouse Clearwater Environmental Institute Board, President UI, College of Law, Student Engagement and Climate Committee

2013

UI, College of Law, Diversity Committee UI, College of Law, Inter-American Human Rights Moot Court Competition Advisors UI, College of Law, International Law Students Association Advisor UI, College of Law, Spanish-Speaking Law Students Association Advisor UI, College of Law, Tenure and Promotion Committee Welcoming Idaho Initiative

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IDAHOLAW

News & Notes

Law Alumnus Argues Before the U.S. Supreme Court

M

ark Walters ’00 and Dario Machleidt from the Seattle law office of Frommer Lawrence & Haug, made a presentation at the College of Law on April 22, 2013, on the U.S. Supreme Court case, Bowman v. Monsanto Co., 133 S. Ct. 1761, 185 L. Ed. 2d 931, 106 U.S.P.Q.2d. 1593 (2013). Walters and Machleidt represented the plaintiff, Mr. Bowman, pro bono. The case involved Monsanto’s patents for its genetically modified, Roundup Ready seeds. They represented an Indiana famer who bought Monsanto’s Roundup Ready soybean seed. The seed contained a gene that was inserted by Monsanto that made the plants resistance to Monsanto’s Roundup herbicide and made the plants easier to grow while killing the weeds. Monsanto sued Bowman for patent infringement. The question before the court was whether Monsanto’s first sale of the patented Roundup Ready seed “exhausts” its patent claim and prevents Monsanto from seeking royalties on subsequent, self-replicating seeds that contain the claimed gene. The Supreme Court held that the patent exhaustion does not permit a farmer to reproduce patented seeds through planting and harvesting without the patent holder’s permission.

The 2013 Idaho Law Review Symposium featured an interdisciplinary

panel of legal, scientific and business experts on the topic of hydraulic fracturing. Topics included the science and technology of hydraulic fracturing, the regulation of hydraulic fracturing environmental effects, the role of state and local governments, current legal hot topics such as the role of trespass and trade secrets, and the role of hydraulic fracturing in a clean energy future for the country. The symposium was held on April 29, 2013 at the Water Center in Boise. Professor Stephen Miller served as the faculty adviser. The 2014 Idaho Law Review Symposium will be held on April 4, 2014, and the topic will be Resilient Cities: Environment/Economy/Equity. The symposium will focus on cutting-edge, non-traditional approaches to implementing environmental and social projects that promote city resilience. The Idaho Law Symposium is a College of Law tradition that brings together a select group of scholars and professionals for an informed interdisciplinary discussion centered on a topic of growing national importance. By exposing members of the academic, business, technological and legal communities to diverse viewpoints and multifaceted experiences, the goal is to provide a forum for open discourse which will provide participants with valuable information applicable to their own business and legal situations.

The Navajo Nation Supreme Court and the Idaho Court of Appeals held back-to-

IDAHO

back oral arguments in the College of Law courtroom in Moscow during the week of March 12, 2013. The Navajo Court heard oral argument in Neptune Leasing, Inc. v. Mountain States Petroleum Corporation and Nacogdoches Oil and Gas, Inc., a case presenting issues of tribal jurisdiction and breach of commercial contract. The Justices also conducted a panel discussion on “The Operations and Principles Guiding the Navajo Nation Supreme Court.” The Navajo Court has jurisdiction over the largest tribal land base and population in the United States. Members of the Navajo Court also joined Idaho Chief Justice Roger Burdick, United States Magistrate Ronald Bush, and members of other Idaho and tribal courts in a day-long forum designed to illuminate issues of jurisdiction and legal process among the federal, state and tribal courts in Idaho..

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The Navajo Court’s visit was made possible through the sponsorship of: the law firm of Stoel Rives, LLP, University of Idaho Office of the President, University of Idaho Native American Tribal Liaison, University of Idaho Human Rights, Access and Inclusion, University of Idaho American Indian Studies Program, University of Idaho Native American Student Center, University of Idaho College of Law, and the University of Idaho College of Law student organizations: Native American Law Student Association (NALSA); the Environmental Law Society; the Women’s Law Caucus; and the Student Bar Association.


IDAHOLAW

News & Notes

Faculty Accomplishments 2013

Anne Handelman Visiting Associate Professor B.S. Florida State University J.D. University of Puget Sound Visiting Associate Professor Handelman serves as a Judge Pro-Tem for the Spokane County District Court and previously was a deputy prosecuting attorney for King and Spokane counties. She has taught law and criminal justice at Eastern Washington University, Whitworth University and North Idaho College. She will teach juvenile justice law and contracts.

Aman McLeod Visiting Associate Professor B.A. Amherst College magna cum laude Ph.D. University of Michigan J.D. University of Michigan Visiting Associate Professor McLeod has taught political science at the University of Michigan, political science and law at Rutgers UniversityCamden, and most recently at Florida Coastal School of Law. He will teach Conflict of Laws and Remedies.

Deborah Smith Visiting Associate Professor B.A. University of Cincinnati summa cum laude J.D. University of Michigan Law School Visiting Associate Professor Smith is with the State of Montana Office of the Appellate Defender and has been and adjust professor at the University of Montana School of Law. She will teach Immigration Law and direct the Immigration Law Clinic.

W

e at the College of Law are proud of our faculty and their achievements. The following are some highlights from the past year.

Professor Barbara Cosens was awarded the University of Idaho’s 2013 Mid-Career Faculty Award. This award acknowledges faculty who have demonstrated a commitment to outstanding scholarship, teaching and engagement. Recipients of the award are considered as one of the university’s most gifted faculty members who continue to serve as a role model, a source of inspiration for students, and whose scholarship or creative activities contributes to the intellectual development and lives of people in Idaho and globally. Professor Wendy Couture was selected by the Idaho Business Review as one of Idaho’s 50 “Women of the Year” for 2013. The award recognizes Idaho’s most successful women from public, private, charitable or business sectors. Associate Professor Angelique Townsend EagleWoman was selected by Lawyers of Color magazine as one of the 2013 50 under 50 most influential minority law professors 50 years of age or Younger. The selection recognizes law professors who are “making bold contributions to the legal cannon and community at large.” Professor Angelique EagleWoman published “Mastering American Indian Law” this year. The book is co-authored with Stacy L. Leeds. The book provides readers with a comprehensive overview of the field that covers tribal law, federal Indian law and tribal-state relations. Professor Monique Lillard was named as one of the University of Idaho’s 2013 “Women of the Year” by Athena. Athena is the University of Idaho’s campus organization that supports the interests of faculty and professional women. This annual award highlights excellence in teaching and service, improving the work environment for women and all employees, and providing mentorship to students and colleagues. Professor John “Jack” Miller published the third edition of “The Fundamentals of Federal Taxation” this past year. The book was co-authored by Professor Jeffrey A. Maine from the University of Maine. The publisher, Carolina Academic Press calls the book “a problem-based, transactional oriented treatment of the basics of federal taxation. It features a balanced approach toward tax planning and tax policy. The book is designed to give students an appreciation for how the law of taxation connects with everyday events of American life.” Professor Richard H. Seamon published “The Supreme Court Sourcebook” in May 2013. His co-authors are Andrew Siegel, Joseph Thai and Kathryn Watts. The book is designed for use in law school courses on the U.S. Supreme Court as an institution. The book contains multiple sources of information about the history and workings of the Court, including historical material, material from the Justices’ papers, and political scientists’ scholarly analysis of the Court’s decision-making process.

2013

Visiting Faculty

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Signature Events Kenneth Feinberg, the nation’s leading authority on mediating disputes and administering compensation in mass injury cases, was the keynote speaker for the 2012 Sherman J. Bellwood Memorial Lecture on October 3-4, 2012. Feinberg has served as the chief architect of legal compensation for the nation’s most daunting, contemporary tragedies, including 9/11, Agent Orange, the shootings at Virginia Tech, the BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill and, most recently, to administer a resolution process for claims arising from the child abuse incidents at Penn State University. He has been listed repeatedly in “Profiles in Power” as one of the 100 most influential lawyers in America, and he was selected as the 2004 National Law Journal’s “Lawyer of the Year.” The 2013 Bellwood Lecture on October 7-8 featured the national civil rights leader Morris Dees. His lecture was entitled “With Justice for all in a Changing America.” Dees is the co-founder and chief trial counsel for the Southern Poverty Law Center. He is known in Idaho for the work his center did to spearhead the legal initiatives to remove the Aryan Nation’s presence in northern Idaho. Dees founded the Intelligence Project, which monitors hate groups. He has also developed an educations program called “Teaching Tolerance,” designed to help teachers prepare a new generation to live in a diverse world. ___________________

An exhibit to honor the life and career of Sen. William E. Borah was unveiled at a reception held on March 5, 2013 at the Idaho State Law Library at the College of Law Boise campus. Lt. Gov. Brad Little ’71 made opening remarks to those in attendance. David Leroy ’71 and Marc Johnson from the Gallatin Group offered commentary on the life and times of Senator Borah. The exhibit will remain on display at the Idaho State Law Library in Boise. Creation of the legal-history focused exhibit was made possible by private donations, the University of Idaho College of Law, and by a generous grant from the U.S. District Court’s Community Outreach Grant Program.

Faculty Adopts Professionalism Requirement

Legal Needs Assessment Study Completed by College of Law

S

A

IDAHO

tudents entering the College of Law in the fall of 2014 will be required to complete a professionalism education program as part of the J.D. curriculum. The plan, adopted by the faculty in spring 2013, provides for a multi-year series of educational programs that address cultural competencies; civility and appropriate professional behaviors before courts, tribunals, and in other professional settings; law practice management; bias and thought processes; and other topics related to the development of a student’s professional conduct and identity. These learning opportunities will enhance our graduate’s readiness for future success in their career.

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study by the College of Law and the Social Science Unit at the University of Idaho conducted an assessment of the legal needs facing Idahoans in non-criminal matters. The study found that hundreds of thousands of Idahoans had unmet needs for civil legal services during the past year and found that Idahoans were most likely to need assistance in assessing public benefits and in debt collection matters. Households at or below 200 percent of the federal poverty levels were found twice as likely as the general population to have unmet legal needs. The results of the needs assessment will be used by the College of Law and other policy makers to help make decisions on how to meet the needs of the underserved populations in Idaho. For more information about the assessment, contact Maureen Laflin at mlaflin@uidaho.edu.


IDAHOLAW

News & Notes

Gifts in Honor of Allen Derr Support Pro Bono Program From Judy Peavey-Derr

T

hank you to everyone who made a gift to the Pro Bono program in honor of Allen Derr. Pro bono legal work was a cause near and dear to Allen. He believed that instilling in law students a commitment to their responsibility as lawyers to give back to the community and to promote justice by assisting the underserved and underrepresented. He was quite proud that his alma mater is one of the few law schools in the country to require that students complete a certain number of pro bono service hours in order to graduate. I hope you will consider making a gift to support the College of Law’s Pro Bono program. Contact Terri Muse, Director of Development, at tmuse@uidaho.edu or (208) 364-4044 or make a gift online at www.uidaho.edu/inspire-law.

Pro Bono Service Recognition The University of Idaho College of Law is committed to providing opportunities for law students that emphasize the value and habit of service to the community. All members of this year’s graduating class completed at least 40 hours of pro bono service in order to be graduated, and 39 graduates completed at least 80 hours. The College recognizes these graduates, listed below, with a certificate signed by the Chief Justice of the Idaho Supreme Court and the Dean of the College of Law, as well as a purple cord worn with their commencement regalia.

Pro Bono Service with Distinction (120+ hours) Wendy D. Adams

Jennifer Meling-Aiko Jensen

Casi Marie Akerblade

Adam Stanislaus Juratovac

Kimberly Bialock

Kelly S. O’Neill

Joshua A. Bishop

Jennifer Lynn Ouellette

Marc Jason Bybee

Megan Ruble

August Heil Cahill

Brian D. Sheldon

Regan Charlton

Sara Simmers

Brian Vernon Church

Robert James Taylor

Luis Cortes

Laura Christina Thompson

Nathan Cuoio

Winnie Wing Yee Tsui-Ng

Justin Abbott Facey

Molly Jane Tucker

Jonathon Douglas Frantz

Jessica L. Turner

José García Morales

Lola Velázquez

Claude J. Bermensolo ’52 Douglas P. Owens ’ 72

Jane Catherine Gordon

Sarah M. Wyatt

Blaire Rose Rios ’94 Alonzo “Lon” F. Davis ’59

Lucas M. Howarth

Philip H. Robinson ’70 Allen R. Derr ’59 Hon. John Ray Durtschi ’51 Sally Savage ’77

Extraordinary Pro Bono Service (80+ hours)

William Harry Simmons ’52 Eric Thomas Haley ’09

Katherine D. Berst

Christopher Austin Johnson

James Slavens ’91 Wiley G.Hurst ’61

Mark Francis Cecchini Beaver

Paul K. Johnson

Thomas L. Smith ’52 L. Lamont Jones ’58

Brian Dosch

Austin Ross Phillips

Orin Leroy Squire ’85 John Patrick Lukens ’73

Tanya M. Finigan

Sandra M. West

In Memoriam The following members of our alumni and law school community passed away in the last year. We extend our condolences to their family and friends.

William B. Wetherall ’37 Calvin G. McIntyre ’48

Kristina N. Fugate

Jesse Dean Mosher ’52 Alan F. Williams, Law Faculty

*We regret any omission to this list.

2013

Maj. Donald L. Nickels ’89

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Nonprofit Org. 875 Perimeter Drive MS 2321 Moscow, ID 83844-2321

US Postage PAID Permit 679

Boise, ID

Idaho Law Review Symposium 2014 Resilient Cities Environment/Economy/Equity

IDAHO

The 2014 Idaho Law Review Symposium will be held on April 4, 2014 in Boise. This year’s symposium will focus on defining city resilience as well as cutting-edge, non-traditional legal approaches to implementing environmental and social projects that promote city resilience. Local and national experts on city planning, governance and sustainability will participate in the program. For more information, contact student organizers Alexandra Grande or Tori Osler or faculty adviser Stephen Miller at millers@uidaho.edu.

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