UVA Lawyer

Page 1

The Business of Law



From the DEan

The Business of Law Paul Mahoney

T

he last issue of the UVA Lawyer included articles discussing the financial crisis and its potential impact on the markets and their regulation. In this issue, we

focus on a question more directly and immediately relevant to most of our students and graduates — how will the current recession affect the business of law? Legal practice has changed over the past 20 years in ways that parallel the broader economy. The largest national firms grew rapidly in lawyers and revenues. The gap in size and profitability between local and national law firms grew as well. Transactional and advisory work on complex financings and new financial products accounted for a growing share of legal billings. Law firms entered an era of free agency, where top talents could maximize earnings by an occasional well-timed move. Starting salaries for associates reached unprecedented levels. The recession has slowed or reversed each of these trends. But will it result in a permanent change in the market for legal services? One need look no further than the press coverage of law firm layoffs, deferrals, salary cuts, and billing practices to appreciate the attention lawyers and their clients are paying to these structural issues. Many commentators have declared that billing by the hour will not survive the downturn; clients will insist on flat fees for particular types of representation. Clients are also increasingly unwilling to bear the cost of training new associates, leading some to conclude that firms will aggressively reduce the entry-level payroll, either by doing less hiring or paying lower salaries. Last summer, we surveyed graduates about these and other trends. We discuss the results in this issue. I found two points particularly striking. First, despite the complaints about hourly billing, it remains the dominant pricing model and graduates largely believe it will remain so. Second, firms are paying a great deal of attention to whether the first year of legal practice should be something different in kind and not just in scope from the second, third, and subsequent years. UVA Law alumni and legal recruiters Martha Ann Sisson ’85 and Amy McCormack ’89 provide a careful look at the trends in legal practice. Their primary message, as I see it, is that individual lawyers need to think of themselves as sellers of legal services, not just a part of a larger organization that sells legal services. The Law School, of course, is also working hard to adjust to a placement market that has changed dramatically and faces an uncertain future. Our first step was to increase staffing in Career Services. Fortunately for us, we were able to persuade Kevin Donovan, a litigation partner at Morgan Lewis, to join us as the head of that office. You will enjoy reading his thoughts on the state of the placement market and the benefits of the Virginia brand in the competition for jobs. Stan Perry ’90 and Randy Urmston ’69, meanwhile, bring a note of optimism by reminding us of the enduring value of the Virginia degree and the special qualities that make our graduates so successful. ❚



Fall 2009 / Vol. 33, No. 2

Departments 1 4 40 51

The Business of Law

Features 22

Cullen Couch

Law School News Faculty News & Briefs

28

55

Class Notes

83

In Memoriam

84

In Print

87

Honor Code, Softball, and No Class Rank

Office of Career Services Responds to Market Rob Seal and Cullen Couch

Scholar’s Corner Richard Schragger

“Business of Law” Survey Paints Mixed Picture of Legal Market

32

Success in 21st Century Private Practice: Retooling for an Enterprise Culture Martha Ann Sisson ’85 and Amy Leafe McCormack ’89

34

O. Yale Lewis, Jr.: Renaissance Lawyer Randolph W. Urmston ’69

Stan Perry ’90

FIND US ONLINE FACEBOOK: law.virginia.edu/facebook YOUTUBE: youtube.com/UVALawSchool TWITTER: twitter.com/UVALaw LINKEDIN: law.virginia.edu/linkedin

Editor Cullen Couch

Never fear the want of business.

Associate Editor Denise Forster

A man who qualifies himself

Contributing Writers Rebecca Barns; Rob Seal; Mary Wood

well for his calling, never fails of

Design Roseberries Photography Tom Cogill; istockphoto; Dan Lamont; Robert Llewellyn; Rob Seal; Mary Wood

employment. —Thomas Jefferson


Law School News Best Strategy for Survival in an Uncertain World By Ellen Daniels

NTERNATIONAL dialogue

I

of norms” as crucial to keeping

of the greatest achievements of the

about the world’s oceans and seas

nations peaceful and law-abiding. As

international community. Adopted in

is crucial to keeping peace between

the largest archipelago in the world,

1982 by 150 countries, the convention

nations, Indonesia’s top diplomat said

Indonesia has a special regard for

has been the legal framework for the

at the Law School, September 30.

maritime territory and resources,

world’s oceans and seas, establishing

Wirajuda said. “The sea is life-giving

rules governing ocean space and

N. Hassan Wirajuda S.J.D. ’88

and a force for national unity and

promoting stability and peace.

emphasized the “sharing and shaping

identity …. We refer to our country as

Foreign Affairs Minister H.E.

‘My Land and Waters,’” he said. BOB TURNER

Wirajuda acknowledged that the

accelerate economic growth, social

emphasized that the importance of the

progress and cultural development

oceans and seas has not diminished.

and to promote peace and stability.

Seaborne trade accounts for almost

“Law is always vital because we must

85 percent of world trade. And

have an ordered society of individuals

one-third of the commerce from the

as well as of nations. But the law

Middle East to China, the Republic of

will never be strong enough until

Korea, and Japan passes through two

and unless it is supported by human

of Indonesia’s ten straits, accounting

values. Ethics and striving for virtue

for 60,000 vessels a year, he said. “Any

must complement law,” Wirajuda said. the Law School, the school’s Center

trade and economy,” Wirajuda said.

for Oceans Law and Policy, UVA’s

Throughout the past decades,

Woodrow Wilson Department of

Wirajuda has devoted much of his

Politics, and the J.B. Moore Society of

energy to upholding principles such

International Law. ❚

respect among nations. “Cooperation is the best strategy for survival in an

a force for national unity

uncertain world,” he said. Wirajuda sees the ratification of

and identity.”

the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which Indonesia was actively involved in shaping, as one

4 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

Wirajuda’s talk was sponsored by

would have an adverse effect on global

as peaceful coexistence and mutual

“The sea is life-giving and

Asian Nations, which aims to

world is evolving in its complexity, but

disruption to this maritime traffic

H.E. N. Hassan Wirajuda

Indonesia is one of ten countries that form the Association of Southeast


Law School News

Former NFL Commissioner: Students Should Prepare for Global Marketplace By Ashley Matthews

S

TUDENTS should be prepared as globalization breaks down

barriers in sports as well as business, former NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue said at the Law School on September 24. “The first thing I think you need to do if you’re going to be engaged as an individual or as an organization globally, is to get out there and put your shoes on and walk in the streets of their neighborhoods and on the rural roads of the countries around the world and understand

Paul Tagliabue

their culture,” said Tagliabue, whose presentation was sponsored by the players from all around the globe ….

because it is sold as a sport in which

The Giants now have a player whose

anybody can participate. If everyone

offered opportunities to overcome

grandfather was Uganda’s first prime

can do something, he said, not a lot of

racial, ethnic, and economic barriers,

minster and was assassinated by the

people want to watch.

Tagliabue said. Globalization offers the

forces of Idi Amin — that’s a long

same prospect to people worldwide.

way from the sources of talent of NFL

and a feeling of ownership are also

In addition to the free flow of capital,

players when you and I were dreaming

important elements of a successful

today’s world allows for the free

about becoming NFL players.”

spectator sport. People want to cheer for

Career Services Office. For decades, American sports have

Tagliabue said public participation

movement of talent, he said. This

What attracts people to American

athletes they know, and teams for which

movement is not only within U.S.

sports, Tagliabue said, is the idea that

they have ownership. They do not, he

teams, where an increasing number

the athletes are superhuman. People

said, want to watch outsiders battle.

of international athletes play football,

want to worship great athletes as gods,

basketball, and baseball. Tagliabue

as they have since the days of the

careers will be competing with people

said the world’s movement to embrace

ancient Greek Olympics. “Muhammad

from all over the world, and Tagliabue

soccer, which was formerly dominated

Ali and Joe Frazier, their fights were

encouraged students to travel widely,

by European players, is another

watched by a billion people around

learn languages, and embrace the

example of dissolving borders. Some

the world,” he said. “It wasn’t because

cultures that will inevitably become

of the world’s best teams and players

there was mass participation in

part of the American sports scene.

are from South America and Africa.

boxing. It was because they were the

People who want to pursue sports

People all over the world are

only two people in the world who

ready to compete and succeed, he

the NFL, Tagliabue said, they’re not just

were willing and able to do what they

said. “They all are pursuing the same

talking about “the Drew Breeses and

were doing.”

types of dreams, the same types of

When people talk about talent in

the Eli Mannings and the Tom Bradys, but the Osi Umenyioras and other

On the other hand, he said, soccer has not caught on in the United States

ambitions and interests that you all are pursuing,” he said. ❚

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

|5


Law School News

Leading Lawyers Debate Gun Case Ramifications

T

which path the court will take to do so.”

off recently at the Law School

acknowledged it’s likely the Supreme

during an event co-sponsored by the

Court will agree to hear a case that

Federalist Society and the American

requires it to address incorporation.

OP lawyers from either side of

the gun control debate squared

Constitution Society.

Henigan disagreed, though he

“I guess I’m here to tell you ‘Not so

On one side was Alan Gura,

fast,’” Henigan said. “I do believe that

who argued the landmark District

there are credible arguments against

of Columbia v. Heller case, in which

incorporation, even given the reality

the Supreme Court struck down as

of the Heller decision.”

unconstitutional a ban on handguns in Washington, D.C. His opponent at the debate was

Gura said the real question is whether the court will incorporate the right to bear arms using the privileges

Dennis Henigan ’77, the vice president

and immunities clause of the 14th

for law and policy at the Brady Center

Amendment, or by using the due

to Prevent Gun Violence.

process clause.

The pair took issue over whether,

Alan Gura

If the Court uses the due process Henigan agreed that the decision

in the wake of Heller, the Supreme

clause — which Henigan said is the

Court is likely to incorporate the right

only likely avenue through which it

on whether to incorporate the right

to bear arms at the state level, where it

would consider incorporation — the

to bear arms could come down to an

would affect local gun laws.

Court would need to look at three

analysis of the nature of the right to

“I’m fairly confident that the

things: whether the right to bear arms

bear arms.

Supreme Court will incorporate the

is rooted in legal tradition, whether it’s

Second Amendment right,” Gura said.

represented by existing state law, and

be a very strong argument against

“The only question that’s up in the air is

the character and quality of the right

incorporation,” Henigan said.

itself.

“Because despite Alan’s rhetoric about

The third issue is the most Dennis Henigan ’77

personal autonomy and all these other

important, as the Second Amendment

phrases that he used, the fact of the

is firmly rooted in the right to self

matter is, the Heller right is grounded

defense, Gura said. He pointed to

in the common law right of self

other cases in which the Court has

defense,” which is not the same as the

considered the quality of other rights,

right to bear arms, he said.

including an abortion case in which

“If you look at the nature of the

he said the Court affirmed the right to

interest protected by the right as

“define your own concept of existence.”

delineated in Heller, it is an interest

“If you have the right to define

long held to be within the province

your own concept of existence by

of the states,” which makes it unlikely

choosing to end a pregnancy, certainly

that the Supreme Court would force

you would have the right to define

the issue on the states, he said.

your own concept of existence by having arms with which to repel violent criminal attack that would end your existence,” he said.

6 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

“That’s where I think there may

Listen to the entire debate online at: law.virginia.edu/news. ❚


Law School News

Constitutional Law Scholar Joins Faculty

S

AIKRISHNA PRAKASH, a

national antecedents of the president

prominent constitutional law

such as governors and the king,”

scholar, joined the Law School faculty

Prakash said. “It will also shed light

this fall as David Lurton Massee,

on Washington’s understanding of his

Jr., Professor of Law and Sullivan &

constitutional powers.” The original interpretations of

Cromwell Professor of Law. Previously, Prakash was Herzog Research

presidential powers have changed

Professor of Law at the University of

significantly over the past two

San Diego School of Law. He was a

centuries, he said. “The president

visiting professor at Virginia during

has more military power today than

the spring 2008 semester.

they understood him to have back in

“Sai Prakash is a scholar of the first

1789, but has less authority over law

rank — rigorous, creative, insightful and

execution today than he did at the

prolific,” said Professor Caleb Nelson.

founding, so it’s a mixed bag. People

“He is also a wonderful person.”

today tend to think that we have an

Prakash has written on topics that range from the removal of federal

Saikrishna Prakash

imperial presidency, and that’s true with respect to certain powers. But the conventional understandings of things,” Ortiz said. “The way he says

“He wades into very controversial areas and comes

it and the strength of his analysis convinces people.”

out saying something new in a way that doesn’t

Prakash, who relocated to Charlottesville this summer with his

seem to be politically charged.”

wife and daughters, said he is happy to return to the community and the Law School. “I thought the faculty and the

judges to the scope of federal power

regarding other powers, the presidency

students were amazing when I visited,

over Native American tribes, but said

seems somewhat imperiled.”

and I really enjoyed their company

his current research interests focus on

The past few years have been a ripe

both in the classroom and outside,” he

constitutional law, and specifically on

time for the study of constitutional

said. “We’ve found Charlottesville to

presidential powers. “That includes

law, and though his book will have

be a very pretty place, especially in the

everything from his control of law

a primarily historical focus, Prakash

spring time.”

execution and removal of executive

said he is hopeful it will have some

After graduating from Yale Law

officers to war powers and military

contemporary resonance. “This has

School in 1993, Prakash clerked for

powers,” he said.

been quite an interesting and exciting

Judge Laurence H. Silberman of the

time for people in the field,” he said.

U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington,

Professor Dan Ortiz said Prakash

D.C., from 1993 to 1994, and for U.S.

Currently, Prakash is working on a book that will examine the historical origins and meanings of the

has a talent for tackling contentious

Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas

president’s constitutional powers.

and divisive issues. “He wades into

from 1994 to 1995. He practiced in New

“It’ll examine what I think the

very controversial areas and comes

York for two years, and has also taught

Constitution meant with respect to

out saying something new in a way

at the law schools of the University of

executive powers in 1789 by looking

that doesn’t seem to be politically

Illinois and Boston University. ❚

at the English, colonial, state and

charged, and which often overturns

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

|7


Law School News

International Law Faculty Expands

P

IERRE-HUGUES VERDIER,

Verdier, who grew up in a town north of Montreal, speaks French

a scholar of international law,

global governance, and financial

and English. He has clerked for the

regulation, joined the Law faculty

Supreme Court of Canada, worked

this fall.

at a New York law firm, and served as a researcher for the Committee on

Verdier, who this last year served

Capital Markets Regulation.

as a visiting assistant professor at

He holds an LL.M. from Harvard,

Boston University School of Law, is teaching international law and

a diploma in public international

banking regulation. “Most of my

law from the Hague Academy of

research focuses on the realities and

International Law, and law degrees

prospects of effective international

from McGill University. He expects

governance on matters of finance

to receive his S.J.D. from Harvard

and economic relations between

next year.

countries,” Verdier said. “There is an

Pierre-Hugues Verdier

“I knew from day one that I wanted to teach,” said Verdier. “I

abiding and very significant tension

thought it would be useful, given

inherent in attempts to create effective international governance — that

international law, from environmental

the areas I am interested in, to have

is, between national autonomy and

issues to human rights.

real-life experience and some direct

effective international norms.” “Pierre’s scholarship challenges

Verdier’s paper was recently published in the Yale Journal

hands-on knowledge of how things operate in practice.” Verdier is now turning his

the core ideas of some of the most

of International Law. “It argues

prominent scholars in the field

that there are very significant

scholarship toward proposing an

of international law,” said School

limitations on the effectiveness of

alternative system to the idea of

professor Barry Cushman ’86,

that kind of governance and these

international regulatory networks.

who chaired the entry-level faculty

limitations are caused by a number

appointments committee. “His work

of factors, including administrative

recognition by different states of

displays a remarkable level of scholarly

accountability mechanisms, pressures

each others’ regulatory regimes, as

rigor, an impressive command of

that arise from domestic politics

contrasted with attempts to harmonize

a variety of highly technical legal

and formal limits on the role that

substantive rules, and it would also

subjects of great significance, and a

domestic regulators can play on the

be based on regional cooperation,

sure-footed mastery of both the big

international stage,” Verdier said.

or cooperation between states that

Verdier said the recent global

have similar levels of regulation or

picture and the complex nuances of factual and institutional detail.” In his most recent scholarship, Verdier questioned the widespread

“The emphasis will be on mutual

financial crisis suggests that current

similar economic systems, rather than

regulatory networks are not enough.

universal networks or institutions.”

“My own impression is that these

Verdier is happy to join the Law

endorsement — by scholars as

events will confirm the skepticism

School’s faculty. “I was very impressed

prominent as Anne-Marie Slaughter —

that I and others have expressed about

with the breadth of the faculty’s

of international regulatory networks

international networks like the Basel

interests and just how many of them

as being key to effective global

Committee on Banking Supervision

were working on issues that speak

governance. Slaughter argued that

and their capacity to make and enforce

to the kind of work I do myself,” he

informal regulatory networks

rules that effectively control the risk of

said. “It just seemed like an ideal

could help govern in many areas of

financial crises internationally,” he said

environment for my research.” ❚

8 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Law School News

Tax Expert Yale Joins Faculty

E

THAN YALE, a visiting professor who specializes in

“In terms of policy

tax law and policy, has accepted a permanent faculty position. Yale,

changes, I think we’re

who taught courses on international and federal income tax law and a

going to see a lot of

tax policy seminar during the spring semester, joins the Law School from

new and interesting tax

Georgetown University Law Center, where he has taught since 2004.

legislation.”

Professor Daniel Ortiz said Yale’s work on subjects such as deferred compensation challenged conventional thinking and presented the “big picture and nitty-gritty

Ethan Yale

together.” “We’re very happy and lucky to have him,” Ortiz said. “His students

system for greenhouse gases and

two discrete policy choices, auction

really love him and his scholarship

federal income tax law.

permits or give them away for free. But

is both very technical and very

“The paper pointed out that

I will show that policymakers could

the interaction between the federal

combine tax rules and gratis allocation

income tax law and cap-and-trade

of pollution permits in certain ways

including the introductory federal

regulation could produce some

that would allow the government to

income tax class, as well as advanced

distortions which could interfere with

capture some fraction of the revenue it

courses on subjects such as corporate,

the cost effectiveness of that form of

would raise through a permit auction.

partnership, and international tax.

regulation, which is thought to be its

The main point is that by creatively

He said the subject appeals to him

chief advantage,” he said.

shaping the tax rules that apply to

important at the same time.” Yale plans to teach tax law,

because tax law impacts nearly

Yale is currently in the beginning

pollution permits, policymakers could

every other area of the law, and

stages of a second paper on the topic,

essentially hit any intermediate spot

because there are almost always new

which would address the ways that

between auction and gratis allocation.”

developments emerging.

credits for the cap-and-trade system

Prior to Georgetown, Yale was an

are distributed. Academics tend to

acting assistant professor at New York

we’re going to see a lot of new and

conclude that an auction system in

University School of Law. He was also

interesting tax legislation,” Yale said.

which businesses bid for credits in

an associate at New York law firm

“For example, the estate and gift tax

the cap-and-trade system would be

Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, and a

is set to expire at the end of 2009, and

the best solution. “But that never

clerk for Judge Jacque L. Wiener Jr. on

most people don’t think that is going

happens,” Yale said. “For political

the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

to happen. So we’re going to have

reasons, they are always given to the

He earned his JD at Tulane University

some new legislation, and the form of

firms for free.”

School of Law. ❚

“In terms of policy changes, I think

that is quite uncertain.” Yale’s past research includes a

However, Yale will argue that gratis allocation need not be as costly

paper on the relationship between a

as some believe. “Up until now,

proposed cap-and-trade regulatory

most have considered there to be

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

|9


Law School News

New Professor Unites Study of Public Law, Economics

T

combines theoretical sophistication,

did not know the results of the cases,

decisions is one of the most pressing

empirical skills, and an informed

whether a proposition involved more

issues in the legal system, and Michael

understanding of legal institutions,”

than one subject. He then compared

Gilbert is approaching it in a new way.

said Professor Barry Cushman ’86. “His

their responses to the decisions of

“My research suggests that politics

dissertation has the virtue of focusing

the judges, who did know the policy

matters, but that law matters more, at

with analytic care and rigor on a very

consequences of their ruling.

least in the specific circumstance that I

important topic in the neglected

examined” said Gilbert, who joined the

field of state constitutional law. We

that judges adhere to outcome-

Law School faculty this fall. “Most of

were impressed by its intelligence,

neutral principles in cases involving

the time, judges are doing a pretty good

thoughtfulness, thoroughness, and

the single-subject rule. From this,

job of applying the rule I studied.”

lucidity. We’re delighted that he’ll be

Gilbert suggested that judges probably

joining the faculty.”

follow such principles in other

HE question of whether judges show political bias in their

Gilbert, who received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley’s

“Mike is a first-rate lawyer who

Gilbert’s scholarship has focused

cases. He asked the students, who

Gilbert’s survey results suggested

areas of the law involving clearer

Jurisprudence and Social Policy

on the “single-subject” rule in state

rules and less-controversial topics.

Program and graduated first in his law

constitutional law, a widespread

“It raises interesting institutional

school class at Boalt Hall, has been

state-level constitutional provision

questions about the role of courts

examining the intersection between

limiting constitutional amendments,

in a democracy, which makes it an

law and economics and public law.

legislation and ballot propositions

interesting topic to study,” Gilbert said.

“I am interested broadly in

to one subject. The single-subject

“I’m trying to make a contribution

legislation and issues in election law

rule, while not widely studied, is

there with this survey technique.”

and administrative law,” Gilbert said.

important because almost every state

“More specifically I have written about

constitution has it, Gilbert pointed

studied at Tulane University as an

direct democracy and judicial decision-

out. “It has generated hundreds or

undergraduate and worked for the

making in legislative processes.”

even thousands of cases,” he said.

Federal Reserve for three years before

In the past few years voters

Michael Gilbert

pursuing a teaching career. His

have, for example, passed several

doctoral degree combines his interest

propositions on statewide ballots

in economics and political science. He

across the country banning same-sex

is currently clerking for Judge William

marriage and same-sex civil unions.

Fletcher on the 9th U.S. Circuit Court

Elected state judges have to decide

of Appeals.

whether a proposition that forbids

Gilbert said he is thrilled to join

both of those practices covers one

Virginia’s faculty. He is teaching

subject or two.

legislation this fall and election law

“The question, in other words, is

and a seminar on judicial decision-

whether marriage and civil unions are

making in the spring. “I’ve never

the same subject,” Gilbert said. “A lot

taught law students before and I

of people think judges are deciding

expect to be somewhat intimidated by

these cases based on their politics.”

it,” joked Gilbert, who has taught his

Gilbert conducted a series of

share of undergraduates. “I’m looking

surveys of law students to evaluate

forward to taking this next step with

the comparative effects of law and

law students.” ❚

politics on outcomes in single-subject

10 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

A Montana native, Gilbert


Law School News

Law School Offers Family Alternative Dispute Resolution Clinic

S

TARTING this fall, the Law

adjudicated in court. Emery recently

they’ve learned the skills,” Emery

School offers a clinic designed to

designed training for local family law

added. “They’ve also seen how one

help low-income families resolve legal

attorneys so they could assist in such

type of alternative dispute resolution

issues through mediation or other

cases free of charge.

may be better than another.”

options outside of a courtroom. The yearlong Family Alternative Dispute Resolution Clinic focuses

In addition to a seminar in the

Balnave said by the end of the

fall that trains students to handle

course students will be able to

such cases, students will receive 20

compare options for families in

primarily on custody, divorce, visitation, and support issues. The clinic began in 2008 as a pro bono pilot project funded by a grant from the Jessie Ball duPont Fund. “The family law pro bono cases are the most difficult to place,” said clinic instructor Kimberly Emery ’91, assistant dean for pro bono and public interest. “The need for family law representation is extreme.” The clinic partners with the Mediation Center of Charlottesville, which takes court-referred cases from the juvenile, domestic relations and circuit courts. “We expect most of the

Richard Balnave and Kimberly Emery ’91

cases we are going to get are going to deal with child custody and visitation issues, parenting-plan questions,

“The family law pro bono cases are the most difficult

probably child-support calculations and possibly spousal support,” said

to place. The need for family law representation is

clinic instructor Richard Balnave. The clinic also may tackle some

extreme.”

issues in divorce cases. “We can help people in mediation work out a lot of the details of the separation.” Students

hours of mediation skills training

litigation, collaborative law, and

in the clinic co-mediate with the

through a program approved by the

mediation settings. “We’re going

Mediation Center’s “experienced and

Supreme Court of Virginia. “All year

to have people who really want to

certified family mediators,” he said.

long, students are going to be given

have an amicable dissolution of the

opportunities to observe mediations

relationship and that’s going to be

Central Virginia Legal Aid Society to

and collaborative practice cases,

really satisfying for our students to

accept referrals for collaborative law

and to actually participate in those,”

work on — to help people through

cases, in which clients retain their

Balnave said.

that difficult time,” he said.

The clinic also works with the

own lawyer, but in a less-adversarial setting than a typical family law case

“Even for students who are not planning to go on to family law,

With the new clinic, the Law School now offers 20 clinical courses. ❚

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 11


Law School News

No Financial Institution Is Too Big to Fail, Mahoney Tells Congress F Congress passes laws that allow

I

to reduce moral hazard is to ensure

the government to deem some

that economic agents bear the costs of

financial institutions “too big to

their own mistakes,” he said.

fail,” taxpayers will continue to bear

Mahoney suggested that the

the brunt when those institutions

banking crisis was not just a

falter, Dean Paul G. Mahoney told

temporary liquidity problem, but a

lawmakers during a congressional

result of sharp declines in real estate

hearing in July on Capitol Hill.

and other asset values. “A bailout can

“The identification of particular firms as too big to fail and, therefore, the beneficiaries of an implicit

redistribute those losses to taxpayers, but it cannot avoid them,” he said. Creditors ensured by the

government guarantee, is a bad

government would likely anticipate

idea,” Mahoney told the U.S. House

that they would be able to shift losses to

Committee on Financial Services. “It

taxpayers, and may not charge enough

is not clear that the magnitude of the

for the capital they provide. In turn,

problem is sufficient to justify the

the financial institution would not pay

scale of government intervention that

a sufficient price for taking risks. “The

we have seen in the past year.”

result is a dangerous feedback loop,”

President Barack Obama’s

Mahoney said. “Large banks have access

administration has proposed handling

to cheap capital, which causes them to

“Tier 1 Financial Holding Companies,”

grow even larger and more systemically

or Tier 1 FHCs, to different regulatory

important while taking excessive risks,

and oversight standards. The

all of which increases the probability of

administration has proposed creating

a crisis.”

a special resolution regime outside the

Mahoney argued that once a firm

normal bankruptcy process that would

has been designated a Tier 1 FHC,

be triggered when the stability of the

other financial institutions will view

financial system is at risk.

it as having an implicit government

“A credible threat that failure

guarantee, as they did for Fannie Mae

will lead to a resolution proceeding

and Freddie Mac. Risks transferred

in which the marginal loss will fall

to Tier 1 FHCs “will be in effect

on creditors, not taxpayers, will do a

transferred to the federal government.”

better job of disciplining risk-taking

“Any institution that can keep its

Dean Paul Mahoney

“The identification of particular firms as too big to fail and, therefore, the beneficiaries of an implicit government guarantee, is a bad idea.”

Risk: Are Some Institutions Too Big

than the combination of oversight and

gains while transferring catastrophic

to Fail and If So, What Should We

an implicit government guarantee,”

losses to the government will find a

Do About It?” Three committee staff

Mahoney told committee members.

way to engage in excessive risk-taking

members are Virginia Law graduates:

and expansion, and the financial

Jim Clinger ’87, senior counsel;

financial institutions to go through

system as a whole will suffer more

Thomas Duncan ’78, general counsel;

bankruptcy proceedings, so costs may

frequent financial crises.”

and Adam Trost ’07, counsel.

Mahoney suggested allowing

be appropriately passed to creditors rather than taxpayers. “The best way

12 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

The committee asked Mahoney to speak at the hearing, “Systemic

Mahoney’s Testimony may be viewed at law.virginia.edu/news. ❚


Law School News

Class of 2012 Most Qualified, Diverse on Record HE Class of 2012 was chosen

T

percent the previous year. The new

worked at law firms as paralegals and

from the largest applicant

class also has the second-highest

interns, others gained insight into the

pool in Law School history, and

percentage of females in school

law working at institutions such as

set new records for both academic

history, at 47 percent.

European Parliament, the World Bank,

qualifications and diversity, according to admissions data.

“This is the most qualified and most diverse class on record,” said

The Hague, the U.S. Supreme Court, Congress and the White House.

About 27 percent identify themselves as minority students …. The new class also has the second-highest percentage of females in school history.

One new student is a competitive

The 368 enrolled students have

Jason Wu Trujillo ’01, senior assistant

a median LSAT score of 170 and a

dean for admissions and financial aid.

rifle shooter with extensive international

median undergraduate GPA of 3.85,

“The Class of 2012 truly has no equal

competition experience and Olympic

up from 3.8 for the previous class.

in the history of this law school.”

aspirations. Another is a philosophy

About 27 percent identify themselves as minority students, up from 16

The students bring a wealth of experience with them. Though many

professor who decided to return to school mid-career to study law.

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 13


Law School News

“Most people I knew who wanted to volunteer thought they could only

made me want to come to law school

go to the inner city or go abroad,”

even more.”

Braxton said. “They didn’t realize that

Eileene Braxton

“It was a lot of fun,” she said. “It

Braxton wasn’t alone in taking

there are small pockets within the

some time off between undergraduate

United States that are rural and have

study and law school. Her classmates

higher levels of poverty, illiteracy, and

averaged about two years between the

domestic violence than many inner-

two, and only 38 percent of the class

city communities.”

came directly from college.

While in Mullins, Braxton helped community service workers identify

ILEENE BRAXTON spent

E

the area’s most pressing needs, and

much of the year prior to law

helped a proposed women’s center

school working in the rural mountain

take the first steps toward becoming

community of Mullins, W.Va.

a reality. Braxton said she saw her

After graduating from Duke in

role not as an outsider with all the

2008, Braxton knew she wanted to take

answers, but as someone who could

a year off and do some community

help residents aid their community

service work. She decided on Mullins

in ways they deem most needed and

after doing research on nonprofits

beneficial.

through AmeriCorps’s VISTA program.

“It was up to me to help them determine what they wanted to happen and help get that off the ground, and

Andrew Peach

it’s up to the community to keep it

FACTS & FIGURES

community service and volunteerism

E

Median LSAT: 170

as individual responsibilities the more

school was longer than most. To join

fortunate have to others.

the Class of 2012, Peach took a leave

running,” said Braxton, who views

25%-75% LSAT: 165–171 Median GPA: 3.85 25%–75% GPA: 3.54–3.92

Braxton is of Cherokee and Thai

VEN by those standards,

Andrew Peach’s path to law

of absence from Providence College in

descent and spent her early childhood

Rhode Island, where he is an associate

in a rural Appalachian community in

professor of philosophy.

North Carolina, where she developed a

Peach found himself drawn to

Average Age: 24 (range is 18 to 45)

fascination with the culture. Her next

the law as his teaching and research

stop after West Virginia, however, was

interests in philosophy trended

368 students enrolled from

anything but rural.

toward practical areas such as ethics in

among 7,880 applicants

She participated in a Sponsors for

biomedicine and business. “It became

194 men (53%), 174 women (47%)

Educational Opportunity program

increasingly clear to me that my

for rising law students from diverse

direction was leading toward where

98 identify themselves as

backgrounds who have been accepted

logic meets life, as they say about the

to top law schools. The program

law,” Peach said. “It just naturally

brought her to New York City,

opened the door to law school.”

minority students (27%)

141 directly from college (38%) Average number of post-college years: 2

44 have graduate degrees (12%)

14 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

where she worked in the pro bono

He wanted an education that

department at Shearman & Sterling

would leave all potential doors open

on cases involving issues ranging from

to him after graduation — including

the Violence Against Women Act to

academia, private practice and public

political asylum.

service — and said he felt drawn


Law School News

to UVA Law in part because of its excellence in all those areas. Peach said both the Law School

he said. “It’s quite impressive.” Peach isn’t the only member of his class to enter with impressive

really talented. They exaggerated a bit, but I spent the next few years working to improve my skills,” she said.

and Charlottesville communities have

academic credentials; 43 of his

been welcoming and accommodating

classmates already have a graduate

offer for competitive shooting, one

since he moved to Virginia with his

degree. Many others previously served

of only two collegiate sports in which

wife and three children over the

in the military or worked for federal

men and women compete against

summer. “What I heard over and over

agencies or think-tanks. Only one,

each other. Morrill has also been

again is that UVA is the place to get

however, is an Olympic hopeful in

part the U.S. national team, and

a humane legal education,” he said.

competitive air rifle shooting.

traveled extensively for international

Her efforts led to a scholarship

“Charlottesville is a fantastic place to

competitions. Last year, she competed

raise children and have a family life.”

in World Cup events in South Korea,

The transition from teacher to

Italy, China and Germany. “I racked up the frequent flyer miles,” she said.

pupil has been a smooth one so

In international competition,

far, Peach said, and he’s found that his classmates make a significant

which is separated by gender, Morrill

contribution to the quality of the

competes both in small-bore rifle — or

in-class discussion.

.22 caliber — and her specialty, air rifle. Though she joking refers to her air rifle

“Even though my colleagues are younger than I am, and in some ways

as a “glorified BB gun,” it’s anything but

I have life experience that they don’t,

childlike. Custom built in Germany, her

I find them to be remarkably talented

Feinwerkbau rifle uses compressed air to propel a .177 caliber pellet. Air from

young people. I’ve already changed my mind in class on judgments based

Meghann Morrill

a SCUBA tank fills the air rifle cylinder, and contestants wear suits specially

upon what students have said.” turned to concepts developed by

M

philosophers during the Middle Ages.

the University of Nevada, Reno, who

“The medievals distinguished between

hopes to continue her competitive

Beijing Olympics, and after three

what they called ratio and intellectus,”

rifle shooting career while obtaining

days of competition finished sixth in

he said. “Intellectus is the ability to

her law degree.

her event out of a field of about 70.

To describe his classmates, Peach

EGHANN MORRILL was

designed to neutralize any influence the

an NCAA Division I athlete at

shooter’s pulse could have on trajectory. Morrill tried out for the 2008

Members of the Class of 2012 come from 10 foreign countries and 40 different states, as well as Washington, D.C.

grasp a fundamental insight or pearl

Morrill began shooting BB guns

Only the top finisher made the team.

of wisdom. Often, the latter takes more

with her dad in the back yard when

Unsatisfied with the outcome, she

life experience. Ratio is more like the

she was six, but didn’t start competitive

plans to continue training while in law

ability to move from insight to insight.”

shooting until she noticed her high

school in the hopes of securing a spot

school’s rifle team at an activities fair for

for the 2012 games.

To Peach’s eye, his fellow students in the Class of 2012 have ratio in spades.

incoming freshmen. “I picked up a flier,

Morrill said she has always felt

“They can move all around the avenues

and I went and tried out for it because it

drawn to the law, and that she decided

of these arguments with great fluidity,”

was a winter sport. They told me I was

on Virginia after visiting several law

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 15


Law School News

schools during the spring break of her

researched and wrote on the growth

senior year in college. “I visited here,

of the power of judicial review from

and I took one of the student-guided

the founding of the country through

tours and sat in on a class,” she said.

the present. “So I looked back on

“The students sold me on the school;

the eminent domain paper, the self

it felt like home. The students who

defense paper and the judicial review

gave the tour were really friendly,

tome, and it was kind of obvious that

and even during the class four or five

I was going to law school,” he said.

students came up and asked if I was a

After graduation, he worked

prospective student. They said ‘You’d

Ben Massey

for over a year as a paralegal in the

really like it here.’ It just felt like it was

B

EN MASSEY is originally from

Washington, D.C., office of a law firm

Atlanta, and worked for a variety

that was among the victims of the

a good fit for me.”

of law firms in Washington, D.C., before

economic downturn. After being laid

as an undergraduate, and said she’s

beginning law school this fall. Despite

off, Massey found himself working for

interesting in areas such as tax,

this, no one could have convinced him

a libertarian public interest law firm

estate planning and corporate law.

during his junior year at Princeton

on an issue close to his heart from his

As for shooting, she’s already made

that law school was in his future.

undergraduate days: eminent domain.

“At that time, law school was

He worked to help educate community

Morrill majored in accounting

arrangements to train at a nearby rifle range — she uses a special electronic

explicitly crossed off my list of activities

members opposed to their state or local

target that uses sound to pinpoint

after graduation,” he said. “Part of it

government’s plan to seize land.

impact location— and plans to begin a

was this image of lawyers as ambulance

five-day per week training regimen this

chasers, or people who use slimy

organize and help them learn the law

fall in anticipation of an international

technicalities to get around things. But

of the state, county or city, and help

competition later this year.

I think what converted me to a more

them figure out what the process is

“We’d go through and help them

The Class of 2012 was chosen from the largest applicant pool in Law School history, and set new records for both academic qualifications and diversity.

“There’s no doubt that it’s going

positive view of the legal industry

to be challenging, but I like being busy

was the connections I made in my

and I like being involved in different

and help them fight it,” he said. When searching for a place to study

independent work on political issues.”

law, Massey said he was interested in

activities. When I get tired of the books,

A political enthusiast, Massey

finding a top school where he would

I can go shooting. And when I get tired

found himself drawn to the legal

get a quality education, but also be able

of shooting, I can go back to the books.”

underpinnings of policy arguments.

to work and learn in a friendly and

Morrill’s fellow members of the

As an undergraduate, he researched

collegial atmosphere. “One of the things I wanted to find

Class of 2012 come from 10 foreign

and wrote independent papers on

countries and 40 different states, as

the government’s power to seize land

in a law school was an environment

well as Washington, D.C.

through eminent domain and on a

that was cooperative, friendly and

Florida law that repealed the duty to

congenial, a place where people work

retreat, a principle of self-defense law

together,” he said. “After a visit, I

that requires the victim to flee in the

thought ‘If I come here, I’ll be happy

face of a potentially deadly attack.

for the next three years,’ even with the

Then, for his senior thesis, Massey

16 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

rigors of law school.” ❚


Law School News

Clerkships for 2009–2010 Term * All are members of the Class of 2009 unless otherwise noted. Emily Alexander ’08

Andrew Black

Marshal Bozzo ’04

The Honorable Ronald L. Gilman

The Honorable Rhesa Barksdale

The Honorable Lawrence M. McKenna

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York

Stephen Anthony

Jeremy Bloor

Joshua Bradley

The Honorable Rebecca Beach Smith U.S.

The Honorable George Kendall Sharp ’63

The Honorable Robert R. Beezer ’56

District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

U.S. District Court, Middle District of Florida

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

Ian Atkinson ’08

Ellen Bognar

Orran Brown

The Honorable Edith Brown Clement

The Honorable Angel Cortinas

The Honorable Richard Williams ’51

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

Florida Third District Court of Appeals

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

John Bennett

Andrew Bosse ’08

Emily Buckley

The Honorable Will Garwood

The Honorable Edith Brown Clement

The Honorable Lance M. Africk

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Louisiana

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 17


Law School News

Donald Burke ’08

Katherine Foss

Brian Johnson

The Honorable Raymond M. Kethledge

The Honorable Raymond Jackson ’73

The Honorable Terrence O’Donnell

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

Ohio Supreme Court

Katie Burke ’08

Sarah Fritsch

Elizabeth Katz

The Honorable Gerald Tjoflat

The Honorable Cynthia Rufe

The Honorable Frederick Motz ’67

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania

U.S. District Court, District of Maryland

Catherine Byrd

Ross Goldman ‘08

Sarah Klapman

The Honorable Robert Doumar ’53, LL.M. ’88

The Honorable Dennis Jacobs

The Honorable Charles Pannel

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit

U.S. District Court, Northern District of Georgia

Thomas Henry Camp

Brandon Graves

Vikas Kumar

The Honorable C. Ashley Royal

The Honorable J.L. Edmondson LL.M. ’90

The Honorable Robert G. Mayor

U.S. District Court, Middle District of Georgia

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit

U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Eastern District of Virginia

Jennifer Carpenter-Everett ’08

Jennifer Greenlief ’08

Elizabeth Anne Laningham

The Honorable Thomas C. Wheeler

The Honorable Thomas E. Johnston

The Honorable Lynn Hughes LL.M. ’92

U.S. Court of Federal Claims

U.S. District Court, Southern District of

U.S. District Court, Southern District of Texas

West Virginia Meghan Casey ’08

Colin Lecroy

The Honorable Norman Stahl

Preston Hartman

The Honorable Sidney Fitzwater

U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit

The Honorable Laurie Ann Booras

U.S. District Court, Northern District of Texas

Colorado Court of Appeals Katie Cole ’07

Josephine Liu ’08

The Honorable Richard D. Bennett

James Harvey ’08

The Honorable Beverly Martin

U.S. District Court, District of Maryland

The Honorable Gilbert Merritt

U.S. District Court, Northern District of Georgia

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit Robert Derise

Bridget Mayer

The Honorable Norman K. Moon ’62, LL.M. ’88

Mark Hiller

The Honorable Margaret Seymour

U.S. District Court, Western District of Virginia

The Honorable Robert D. Sack

U.S. District Court, District of South Carolina

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Samuel Doran

Amber Moran

The Honorable Curtis Gomez

Colin Holmes

The Honorable Michael Schneider LL.M. ’01

U.S. District Court, Virgin Islands

The Honorable Frederick Martone

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Texas

U.S. District Court, District of Arizona Alicia Nicole Ellington ‘08

Paul Mysliwiec

The Honorable Paul V. Niemeyer

Christine Ives

The Honorable Maurice M. Paul

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

The Honorable Rebecca Beach Smith

U.S. District Court, Northern District of Florida

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia Jordan Feirman ‘07

James Nelson

The Honorable Eric Nicholas Vitaliano

Marissa Jenkins

The Honorable Jerry Smith

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York

The Honorable Liam O’Grady

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

18 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Law School News

Matthew Nicholson

Amy Saltzman

Justin Torres ’08

The Honorable J. Harvie Wilkinson ’72

The Honorable F. Bradford Stillman ’76

The Honorable Edith Brown Clement

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

Christopher Norfleet

Jeffrey Schmitt ’07

James Tysse ’06

The Honorable Sidney Fitzwater

The Honorable Susan Harrell Black LL.M. ’84

The Honorable Karen LeCraft Henderson

U.S. District Court, Northern District of Texas

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit

U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit

Sinead O’Doherty ’08

Scott Schwartz

Tom Valente ’01

The Honorable Robert B. King

The Honorable Anthony John Trenga ’74

The Honorable Peter W. Hall

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit

Rob Painter

Nitin Shah

William Vigen

The Honorable Danny J. Boggs

The Honorable Thomas Selby Ellis

The Honorable M. Blane Michael

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

James Parker ’08

Aaron Shephard

Charles Weinograd

The Honorable Keith Watkins

The Honorable James Gwin

The Honorable Beverly Martin

U.S. District Court, Middle District of Alabama

U.S. District Court, Northern District of Ohio

U.S. District Court, Northern District of Georgia

TJ Parnham

Jason Shyung ’08

Cleland Welton

The Honorable Louise W. Flanagan ’88

The Honorable Catharina Haynes

The Honorable Charles R. Simpson III

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit

U.S. District Court, Western District of

North Carolina

Kentucky Caitlin Stapleton

Lee Peifer

International Court of Justice

The Honorable Phyllis Kravitch U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit

Jasmine Yoon ‘06 The Honorable James Cacheris

Bryan Starrett

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

The Honorable Norman K. Moon ’62, LL.M. ’88 Noah Peters

U.S. District Court, Western District of Virginia

The Honorable David Katz U.S. District Court, Northern District of Ohio

James Stern

SUPREME COURT CLERKS

The Honorable J. Harvie Wilkinson ’72 Kelly Phipps ’08

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit

The Honorable Martha C. Daughtrey U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit

Winn Allen ’08 The Honorable Samuel Alito

Jeffrey Sullivan The Honorable Terrence Boyle

Pamela Bookman ’06

Brian Rabbit ’08

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of

The Honorable Ruth Bader Ginsburg

The Honorable Thomas Hardiman

North Carolina

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit

Jamie McDonald ’08 Andrea Surratt ’08

Franklin Tom Reece ’06

The Honorable Debra Ann Livingston

The Honorable James Cacheris

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit

U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia

The Honorable John Roberts

Katherine Twomey ’08 The Honorable Antonin Scalia

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 19


Law School News

COMMENCEMENT 2009

Evan Thomas ’77 Urges Graduates to Embrace Humility URING commencement in

D

second letter to apologize and explain

broken families. It’s easy to become a

May, Newsweek editor-at-large

his embarrassment, but repeated his

slave to pride.

Evan Thomas ’77 encouraged the

request for a meeting. The editor

Class of 2009 to balance confidence

replied, “Dear Mr. Thomas, you also

become the servants of pride, their

and pride, traits he said could be

misspelled the word ‘embarrassed.’”

own pride and the pride of their

virtues or vices for new attorneys.

Though Thomas never did work

“I think lawyers too often have

clients. Back in the day, there was

for the Wall Street Journal, he has

an expression, ‘A good lawyer is a

about humility, because I think it

been a staff member at Newsweek

lawyer who keeps his client out of

has become an underrated virtue,

since 1986, where he has served as

court.’ I don’t hear that so much

and because I think it is sometimes

Washington bureau chief and assistant

anymore,” Thomas said. “It seems to

misunderstood. Humility is too

managing editor. From 1977 to 1986,

me there’s more emphasis now on

often associated with meekness and

he was a writer and editor at Time

combat, on battling the other side,

self-doubt. I see it in a different way.

magazine. He has won numerous

words of fighters, warriors. The idea

I see humility as a true measure

journalism awards, including a

is to overwhelm, to grind down the

of confidence,” Thomas told the

National Magazine Award in 1998 for

opposing party.”

graduates.

Newsweek’s coverage of the Monica

“I want to talk to you today

Thomas said he was full of pride as he ended his third year of law school. He aspired to write for the

Thomas also told the rising attorneys

Lewinsky scandal. He is also the

to see beyond their roles as advocates and

author of six books.

embrace the role of wise counselor.

Pride, Thomas told the graduates,

“There’s a tendency for lawyers to

Wall Street Journal, and sent a letter

is a virtue when it leads people to

become ‘yes-men’ and ‘yes-women,’

to the editor requesting a meeting.

“work harder, stand up straighter and

to tell their often high-paying clients

Afterward, he realized he’d called the

be the best that you can be.” However,

what they want to hear — that they

editor by the wrong name. He wrote a

he said, pride also leads to wars and

can do whatever it is they want to do,”

20 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Law School News

Thomas said. “Where, you might ask,

“Instead of facing the impending

were the lawyers in the Enron scandal

uncertainty with fear, let’s view it as

or the endless debacles that have

an opportunity. Times like these are

engulfed Wall Street? Where were the

when citizen lawyers are needed most,

lawyers who said ‘no’ to their clients,

not just in the legal profession, but in

who worked with clients to help them

every profession,” Quillian said. “Now

see the weakness of their case?”

is when the cooperation, integrity and

It takes a truly confident attorney

community involvement we learned

to stand up to clients and offer advice

here is of the utmost importance.

concerning not only what is legal, but

Using the skills that UVA taught us,

what is right. A good attorney, he said,

we have the opportunity over the

tells a client what he needs to hear, not

course of our careers to remake the

just what he wants to hear. A good

practices and institutions of this

attorney is a peacemaker, not a gladiator.

country for the better.” ❚

“The truly confident people I know are self-knowing enough to be humble,” Thomas said. “They are not just smart, but wise. They have a true appreciation of the pitfalls and limits of human nature.” After Thomas spoke, 404 J.D. graduates, 30 LL.M. graduates and one S.J.D. graduate received their diplomas. Law School Dean Paul Mahoney reminded class members to remember the many skills they learned in law school, including the importance of leadership.

2009 GRADUATION AWARDS

“You have been trained to be leaders, and you will be in your careers, in

Margaret G. Hyde Award

Rebecca Dopkins Vallas

your communities and, in some cases,

James C. Slaughter Honor Award

Douglas Matthew Andre

in appointed or elected government

Thomas Marshall Miller Prize

Susan Joyce Ruggero

service,” Mahoney said. “I do not

Z Society Shannon Award

Matthew Brian Nicholson

doubt that at some future reunion of

Law School Alumni Association Best Note Award

Elizabeth-Ann Dater Katz

the Class of 2009, we all will marvel in

Robert E. Goldsten Award for Distinction in the Classroom

James David Nelson

the variety of ways in which you have

Roger and Madeleine Traynor Prize

James David Nelson

succeeded in the intervening years.” Outgoing Student Bar Association

James Yarbrough Stern Herbert Kramer/Herbert Bangel Community Service Award

Phillip Thomas Storey

President Ryan Quillian commented

Mortimer Caplin Public Service Award

Rebecca Dopkins Vallas

on his peers’ overwhelming support

Edwin S. Cohen Tax Prize

Daniel Joseph Walter

for the class gift, to which 93 percent

Earle K. Shawe Labor Relations Award

Olushola Ayanbule

of the students contributed. Quillian

Eppa Hunton IV Memorial Book Award

Benjamin Ryan Sachs

reminded his classmates that even in

Virginia Trial Lawyers Trial Advocacy Award

Joseph Barlow Warden

a time of uncertainty caused by the

Virginia State Bar Family Law Book Award

Elizabeth-Ann Dater Katz

economic downturn, the Class of

Stephen Pierre Traynor Award

Lee Alexander Peifer

2009 is dedicated to becoming not just

Daniel Rosenbloom Award

Matthew Brian Nicholson

lawyers, but citizen lawyers.

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 21


“BUSINESS OF LAW” MIXED PICTURE


SURVEY PAINTS OF LEGAL MARKET By Cullen Couch

A

MID-SUMMER ONLINE SURVEY of UVA

something akin to “a hotel approach where you pay for X

Law alumni shows that the economic downturn is

number of rooms for Y number of nights and get an overall

clouding the business and culture of the nation’s

discount off the rate for the rooms.”

law firms and in-house legal departments. Its intensity depends largely on the size of the firm or company, and to a lesser degree the size of the city in which the firm or company is based. National and international firms are faring worse than their local and regional counterparts, and publicly-traded entities are struggling more than privately-

BILLING RELATIONSHIP WITH OUTSIDE COUNCIL Non-profit

Privately-held

Publicly-held

held companies and non-profits. Over 95% of all legal employment sectors report moderate to severe impacts.

100%

100% 91.4%

89.3%

TRADITIONAL HOURLY RATE STILL DOMINATES

80%

Although national and international firms report that clients have begun renegotiating fee arrangements and 60%

demanding discounts, the traditional hourly rate structure remains dominant in law firms of all sizes and locations. “The hourly rate, for all its faults, does provide a measure of the difficulty and effort required,” says a

40%

respondent from a national firm in a large metro area. “It provides a good standard for pricing services, particularly on the defense side.” However, the respondent also notes 20%

that “on the plaintiff side, where litigation is designed to create new wealth for a client, there is a greater opportunity

8.6%

to vary from the hourly rate.” An international firm reports

10.7%

that it is “doing away with block billing” and offering

0% Retainer, hourly rate

Set fee by job

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 23


“The hourly rate, for all its faults, does provide a measure of the difficulty and effort required.”

“Partners seem to completely lack a realistic understanding of how

Smaller firms seem to feel less pressure on fees, possibly

“We negotiated a flat blended rate with one firm, a

because of greater competitive stability in smaller markets.

discount with another firm, a set fee by job, and have still

“Our clients compare our rates to those of the national

paid hourly rates,” says one respondent in a privately held

firms and know that they are getting a bargain, and have

company. “We are trying to move more outside counsel to

told us so,” says a regional firm. Another regional firm

alternative fees,” says counsel in a publicly-held company,

respondent agrees, reporting that “[w]e have turned away

“but find it difficult to do so where firms continue to

more prospective clients and argued more and more why

measure productivity and profitability based on the billable

we should be allowed to be paid for work done.” But a small

hour. Firms have been more willing to move certain

firm attorney admits that the firm is “willing to entertain

types of matters (e.g., some IP and labor matters) to

alternative rate structures” as needed.

fixed-fee arrangements — where the level of work is more routine and predictable. In the M&A arena, firms are very

On the client side, corporate counsel continue grudgingly to accept the hourly rate structure. Although

resistant to fixed-fee arrangements — they say because of

55% say they are looking for set fee arrangements to replace

unpredictability of deals (some truth to this) — but also

hourly rates, over 90% of them report that they still use

because this is a highly profitable area for law firms and

hourly billing arrangements with outside counsel but are

they don’t want to harm the golden goose.”

seeking lower billable rates. Even with those few who are experimenting with alternative fee arrangements, the hourly rate still resonates.

FIRM LAYOFFS, SALARIES, AND CHANGING ROLES FOR NEW GRADUATES

National (53%) and international (66%) firms are laying off lawyers at roughly twice the rate of regional firms (34%). LAWYER LAYOFFS Local

Regional

In contrast, local firms (5%) have largely avoided layoffs. Just National

21% overall report that associate salaries have been reduced,

International

with a full one-third of national firms reporting associate salary reductions. As a result, some associates have ill feelings.

100% 94.9%

“Partners have forgotten that their role is as partners, not employees — that theirs is the economic risk of both upturn and downswing,” says an associate at an

80% 65.7%

international firm affected severely by the economic

66%

downturn. “That they have cut associate salaries in lieu of taking drastic pay cuts themselves is contrary to the format

60%

of a legal partnership. Furthermore, partners seem to completely lack a realistic understanding of how deeply a

52.5% 47.5%

10% pay cut affects associates.” In contrast, a regional firm in a mid-size city

40% 34.3%

34%

reports that it is the partners — even the non-equity partners — not the associates, who feel the downturn most. “So far associate salaries have not been cut. However, 10%

20%

of income partners’ pay now is being held back [in addition to the usual 20% budget holdback for equity partners]….

5.1%

The income partners will not receive any of the amounts held back until the equity partners also do.”

0% Yes

24 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

No


deeply a 10% pay cut affects associates.” “We are trying to move more outside counsel to alternative fees.” “Firms will likely reduce their hiring of new lawyers.”

On the hiring front, the good news is that a majority

Law associates need not be so concerned, but lower-

of international (84%), national (74%), and regional

ranked schools’ graduates have reason to be concerned

(63%) firms are still hiring new graduates. The difference

that traditional lucrative partnership-track jobs are

is that 74% of them are hiring fewer new graduates than

disappearing.”

in the past. In contrast, although only 26% of local firms

“Firms will likely reduce their hiring of new lawyers,”

are hiring this year, two-thirds report that they will hire

says another. “Some firms will try and keep their mid-level

the same number (in some cases zero) of new lawyers as

associates busy by having them perform work that younger

were hired last year. Of those firms that are hiring, only the

lawyers might have done in the past. This may cause new

international and national firms show a majority deferring

hires to do work that might previously have been done

start dates.

by paralegals. In other cases, firms may have let mid-level

Most respondents in all law firms (61%) believe that

lawyers go, which would have the effect of increasing the

firms will continue to hire new graduates, although many

substantive demands on new hires (while at the same time

believe the current reductions may last for some time. In

removing lawyers that might have previously served as

addition, there is widespread agreement across all sectors

mentors).”

that new hires must expect significantly lower starting “There will be different tiers of associates in most firms,” predicts a national firm respondent. “Virginia

HIRING NEW GRADUATES Local

Regional

National

A respondent from an international firm observes that “clients are less willing to pay first year lawyers a

salaries and become more productive sooner.

high hourly rate for them to learn. What is more likely to develop is lower billing rates for first-year lawyers, coupled

ASSOCIATE SALARIES REDUCED International

Local

Regional

National

International

100%

100% 95.8%

83.8%

82.3%

80%

80% 74.3%

75.1%

73.8% 67.1%

63.1%

60%

60%

40%

40%

36.9% 32.9% 25.7%

26.2%

24.9%

20%

20%

17.7%

16.2%

4.2%

0%

0% Yes

No

Yes

No

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 25


“With the soaring student loan debt, “The halcyon days, with yearly salary bumps and escalating starting salaries, are history.”

“Some practice areas (and firms) will abandon the first-year market.” with lower salaries and, one would hope, a less crushing

A CHANGING PARADIGM IN THE BUSINESS OF LAW?

hours requirement.” The respondent praises what could “be a shift towards a more sustainable model, where a new

More than half of all respondents (53%) believe that

lawyer’s focus for the first year is to learn. It could be viewed

the economic downturn will fundamentally change the

as analogous to medical interns, a real hands-on year of

business of law going forward. In predicting what kind

learning that is paid somewhat.” Another agrees that client

of change that might be, respondents cited the decline of

demands and economic realities mean that “some practice

mega-firms and the rise of smaller firms, greater reliance

areas (and firms) will abandon the first-year market.

on experience and training, and lower billing rates and

Training first-years will become an issue, an issue that law

alternative fee structures. Some also believe that changes in

schools should address (by more practice oriented training

the business of law will filter down to law school curricula,

in the third-year of laws school).”

requiring schools to reduce tuition, provide more practical training, and/or do away with the traditional three-year degree program in favor of an intensive two-year, year-

IN-HOUSE COUNSEL: PUBLICLY-HELD CORPORATIONS HIT HARDEST IN LAWYER LAYOFFS

round version. An international firm respondent further estimates that we will see “[fewer] junior lawyers being billed out (they

In the corporate counsel survey, 32% of all respondents reported lawyer layoffs. Hardest hit were publicly held

will be interns with lower salaries while they train) and less leverage (clients will want more experienced lawyers).” The

corporations where 46% experienced layoffs. But layoffs are not the only concern for in-house counsel: 74% of the respondents reported they were cutting costs by handling more matters in-house, with 53% saying they were not allowed to hire more staff if needed. To further cut costs, close to half of non-profits and three-quarters of private

DEFERRED ASSOCIATE START DATES Local

Regional

National

International

and publics have negotiated lower billable hour rates with outside counsel.

100%

97.4%

A majority of corporate counsel respondents (59%) do not believe the economic downturn will change how corporations view the role of their legal departments. Those

80%

who do believe it will change think inside counsel will have greater governance responsibilities, maintain tighter control

69.8%

71%

on legal expenses, and keep more work in-house. 60%

“There obviously is more pressure to cut outside costs and bring more work in-house, where control is better,” says

50%

50%

one counsel. “[T]hose things don’t easily reverse. But apart from that, there is also more realization that legal costs can

40%

be better controlled with counsel involved at the outset,

31.1%

29%

rather than being sought ought only to solve problems that have already occurred. The benefit of in-house assistance is

20%

that it’s already in the budget.”

2.6%

0% Yes

26 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

No


something’s gotta give.” “2009 will go down as a year where you just did the best you could to survive.” “Perhaps the huge Big Law firms will shrink …”

same individual theorizes that “perhaps the huge Big Law

enable law firms to pay incoming associates $80-100,000

firms will shrink (to reduce overhead costs to compete with

instead of the ridiculous amounts paid now.” In addition,

top boutiques or ‘mid-size’ firms).” Another believes “you

the respondent predicts that “law firms are going to adopt

have two things at work—laid off lawyers are starting small

different programs for different types of lawyers, giving

shops, and larger regional firms are still trying to become

each one a different status. Some will be associates on the

national firms, often through merger: fragmentation and

partner track; others will be contract attorneys that are

consolidation at once. It may be that eventually we end

paid much less. Finally, I think law firms will eventually

up looking more like the accounting profession, with a

shed lock-step for good and go to a pure profitability and

handful of dominant national/international firms and

merit-based formula. I can’t envision things staying as they

then a bunch of small firms with really not much name

are forever.”

recognition, as opposed to 7– 8 ‘AmLaw 100’ firms in each

A regional firm respondent agrees that change is on the horizon, but believes “any change will be more incremental

middle-market city.” A respondent in a regional firm is convinced that “with

than fundamental. Large companies continue to hire

the soaring student loan debt, something’s gotta give. I

‘brand name’ large firms (and pay ridiculous hourly rates

think the law schools that start trimming the number of

for inexperienced associates) because decision-makers

required years at school are the ones that will lead us into

view that as a safe path — no one is going to second-guess

a balance. Two years of school and $80,000 of debt makes

your decision to hire Cravath if things don’t work out.”

more sense than three years and $120,000. This would

Nevertheless, the respondent concludes that “the halcyon days, with yearly salary bumps and escalating starting salaries, are history.” And finally, a respondent in a national firm sums it all up. “A very tough year to be a lawyer. Lots of depressing

IN-HOUSE COUNSEL LAYOFFS Non-profit

Privately-held

news. I am fortunate that I’ve been really busy this year, but I know folks who lost their jobs, and the overall atmosphere

Publicly-held

about law firms has been very negative. I am, however, optimistic about the second half of 2010 and all of 2011.

100%

2009 will go down as a year where you just did the best you

91.5%

could to survive.” The survey was emailed in July to 10,500 UVA alumni,

80%

yielding almost 1200 responses for an 11.5% response 82.4%

rate. About one-third of the responses came from alumni in international firms, with the remaining two-thirds

60% 54.5%

split equally among local, regional, and national firms. Two-thirds of the responses came from alumni in a “large metropolitan area,” 28% from a “mid-size city,” and 5.5%

45.5%

from a “small town.”

40%

In the corporate counsel survey, 11% of the responses came from non-profits, 29% from privately-held firms, and 61% from publicly-held corporations. ❚ 20%

17.6% 8.5%

0% Yes

No

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 27


Office of Career Services Responds to Market By Rob Seal and Cullen Couch

F

ACING ONE OF THE MOST DIFFICULT JOB MARKETS in recent memory, the Law School hired Kevin Donovan, a former litigation partner at Morgan, Lewis & Bockius in Philadelphia, to serve as head of the Office of Career Services. “Kevin Donovan combines managerial skills with a detailed knowledge of the law firm world,” said Law School Dean Paul G. Mahoney. “I’m very pleased that he will be here to help our students during a difficult time in the market for legal services.” Donovan, who began his post as senior assistant dean for career services this month, was a litigator at Morgan Lewis for 18 years and served as the firm’s pro bono chair from 2003–08. At the firm he was heavily involved in recruiting and helped run three summer associate programs. Donovan’s practice focused on complex tort cases, including class actions and national serial litigation. He also was involved in commercial litigation, bankruptcy litigation and intellectual property litigation. He clerked for U.S. District Judge Frank J. Battisti in the Northern District of Ohio after graduating from the University of Pennsylvania Law School. Donovan said he was excited to bring his experience in career services to the University of Virginia.


UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 29


THIS IS A MARKET THAT FAVORS VIRGINIA

at employers of all types and all sizes. We’re involved in direct outreach to

GRADUATES because many law firms know our

employers to try to get the best sense of how the market is changing, and

graduates have the basic workplace competencies that

of where jobs are available. We’re focusing heavily on clerkships and

go beyond good lawyering and make someone a very

public service opportunities and we’re tracking very carefully the data that’s

successful associate or partner candidate.”

available on what’s happening with the market and with the availability of jobs. So we’re trying to get as much

“I had been doing the same type of litigation for pretty

information together as possible so that we can help people

much my whole career, and I had always thought that I

to find the jobs that are out there in the markets and cities in

would like to work in an academic setting,” said Donovan.

which they’re looking.

“I was at a point in my career where I was ready for something different. So the last two or three years my wife

What can students expect from the Career Services

and I made the decision to start looking and, if the right

Office?

opportunity came along, we were going to seize it. In my

We try to help students on all levels of the job-search

18 years of working at Morgan Lewis, I had only applied for

process and so we will look at their resumes, help them with

one job, and that was this job. This is a great town, a great

cover letters, and help them think through the process of

institution, the community has been incredibly welcoming,

self-assessment, in which they try to think through what

and I couldn’t be more impressed with the students.”

types of jobs would be the most fulfilling for them. We

Donovan recently discussed some of the issues facing

help them assess geographic markets, different law firms,

students, alumni and the legal profession in a challenging

different clerkships, to find the opportunities that fit best

job market.

with their particular backgrounds and credentials.

What are your goals for Career Services? My goal is that we would be a resource to and an advocate for the students as they go into this very challenging job market — that we give them real value in their job searches, help them to think through the options that are out there, to selfassess and to think about where they would be happy and fulfilled in a job. How is Career Services responding to challenging economic conditions? We are looking more broadly at the legal services industry. We’re looking

30 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


How are you preparing students for today’s job market? Our advice to students right now is to think about

else is an open question. I think that the smart and the nimble, as in all eras, will benefit during this time as well.

where they would like to be, to think about what legal skills they enjoy using and what types of jobs would employ

What was your experience with Virginia graduates

those — but then to look more broadly than they might have

during your career in private practice?

in the past. Some students may need to reach out beyond

Excellent. That was why I was interested in this job in the

on-Grounds interviews to firms of different sizes, if they’re

first place — my experience with Virginia alums over the

looking at firms. The clerkship market also is going to be very

years. One, it was the character and caliber of people who

competitive. Along those lines, we have created a new Office

came out of here, but it was also the way they spoke in such

of Judicial Clerkships headed by Ruth Payne ’02. The office

glowing terms about the institution. It reminded me more

will be working with students to focus their search efforts

of how people speak of their undergraduate experience,

and to maximize their likelihood of success. To increase their

which is relatively rare for a graduate school. That really

flexibility, we also have expanded the number of clerkship

intrigued me about the possibility of working here. We

applications that students can make through the Law School.

also saw that Virginia people tended to be those who were involved in the fabric of the firm, the life of the firm. They

What do you tell alumni who are looking for jobs?

were recruiters, leaders, took on additional roles.

We tell them to stay positive. People who come from this school are fabulously qualified and they have a great deal to

What feedback did you get from the recent round of

offer employers in the legal services market. The first-rate

on-grounds interviews?

legal education and practical skills development that the Law

The students were exceptional. They showed fortitude;

School provides puts graduates from this school in a uniquely

they worked very hard to get ready. The employers almost to

strong position. So we help alumni find the employers

a person said that this was one of the best prepared groups

who are still hiring and to make the best possible case for

that they had seen. The students spent time researching the

themselves as they market their services to employers.

firms and came into the interview very educated about the firms and the firm culture.

How will the legal profession be affected by the changing economy? The legal profession is changing. Clients in the private

This is a market that favors Virginia graduates because many law firms know our graduates have the basic workplace competencies that go beyond good lawyering and make

sector are more reluctant to have matters handled by

someone a very successful associate or partner candidate. So,

attorneys who are junior and don’t have an established

I think when it gets really tough and firms have to cut back,

skill set. So for employers to be able to sell the services of

we’re a school that’s difficult to cut back on. We had a number

junior lawyers, they need people who they can credibly say

of interviewers tell us that they had cut back on other schools

have the type of skills that they need to practice. So there is

but had chosen not to cut back on interviewing at Virginia.

more of an emphasis on developing practical skills as part

Overall, the recruiters seemed guardedly optimistic.

of the process of legal education. Fortunately, Virginia is

We’re not out of the woods, yet, but a number of firms

well ahead of the game with its many clinical programs, its

reported that things are moving in the right direction. It

pro bono program, and its well-established Law & Business

remains to be seen; many firms are maintaining a cautious

Program. All of those things tend to put Virginia graduates

and conservative approach to hiring this year. Certainly the

in the vanguard of the marketplace with a higher level of

big trends I see are a number of firms moving away from

practical skill than many of their peer schools.

lock-step to give them more flexibility in their compensation

People ask, ‘Will these jobs come back?’ I think the

systems and many firms focusing on getting meaningful

answer is: The jobs will come back, but whether they will all

experience for their associates. Virginia is well positioned to

come back with the same firms or end up landing someplace

address that. ❚

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 31


Success

in 21st Century Private Practice: Retooling for an Enterprise Culture By Martha Ann Sisson ’85, Garrison & Sisson, Inc. and Amy Leafe McCormack ’89, McCormack Schreiber Legal Search

A

TANGIBLE BUT ELUSIVE era of change

the associate and partner levels. Successful partners began

is emerging in how private sector lawyers

to operate as free agents. If the needs of their practice,

provide services and receive compensation.

their personal economic shares, or their management

The very definition of success — what it

goals were being stymied in their present firms, they could

will look like, how it will be measured, and

enter a hiring environment that rewarded movement and

the feasibility of annually replicating it — are in flux. This article is written from the perspectives of two former

change. Firms accepted the premise that someone who had not thrived in one firm could succeed in a different

practicing attorneys who are now legal recruiters. Our goal

environment. And, if things did not work out in the new

is to identify the qualities necessary to achieve success in

firm, profitability really was not affected, and the attorney

21st century private practice. We believe, at a minimum,

would simply move on.

these qualities will include the initiative, innovation, and responsibility required by an “enterprise culture.” Until twenty years ago, it was easy to measure success:

The emerging world of private practice since mid-decade provides a sharp contrast to those days. Law firms now define success by economic contributions made by members

attend a prestigious law school, get a clerkship that leads

in much the same manner as their commercial clients

to employment at one or two AmLaw 200 firms, and

examine sales figures. In short, “What have you done for me

become a partner or member of a Fortune 500 legal

this quarter?”

department. You used your legal skills to get work from

The current obsession with immediate return has

(and develop relationships with) the firm’s longstanding

crowded out long-term planning. In time, the need for

institutional clients. In the corporate world, the guarantee

immediate returns and investment in the future will

of uninterrupted employment with a stable and growing

balance; individuals and institutions will be more agile,

company fostered avenues of career diversification. This was

able to respond to economic challenges and opportunities

the path for many UVA Law alumni.

in a manner more reflective of successful businesses.

The paradigm changed in the early 1990s when the onset of vibrant economic growth and greater financial

Achieving and maintaining success in 2010 and beyond requires a new approach.

transparency in law firm economics caused a major upheaval. The American Lawyer’s annual publication of the AmLaw 200 and its analysis of profits per partner awoke a sleeping

Creating an “Enterprise Culture”

giant. Grumbles arose from the ranks of law firm attorneys who wanted to share in the wealth they helped create in

Historically, firm affiliation branded the quality and

emerging growth companies. In-house attorneys questioned

nature of work performed by its lawyers. With increased

whether the trade-off in lower pay for more predictability in

lateral hiring and firm mergers, however, this quality-by-

schedule and job security seemed naïve in the aftermath of

association branding has been diluted, resulting in the

corporate failures, relocations, and industry consolidations.

current client trend of hiring individual lawyers based

In the 1990s and continuing until the last few years, law

on their professional reputations rather than their law

firms and corporate entities grew through lateral hiring at

32 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

firm affiliations. We believe that specialized expertise


will continue to be in

we have heard many lawyers muse that they would have

demand, but that individual

attended business school if they were not math-phobic.

lawyers must now identify

Achieving success, however, requires overcoming old

and market to clients

fears and perceived deficiencies. Law firms are businesses,

the transferability and

and lawyers must understand that the current economic

relevance of their experience

distress and instability have brought renewed focus on “the

rather than rest on the

numbers.” Weak demand for legal services, overcapacity

accomplishments of their

in head count, unpredictable and often declining rate

firms. This means that

structures, lowered profitability, and personal productivity

attorneys need to approach

measured against cost have all affected the bottom line,

their career development as

and firms are focusing on managing costs as clients request

a special enterprise, an effort nurtured by their law firms but created and directed by each attorney individually. Indeed, although experience has always been recycled

lower or outcome-based fee structures. Businesses routinely face competitive pressures and disadvantages and react according to normal business

or expanded for new engagements, creating an “enterprise

principles; they dust themselves off, cut where they can, and

culture” within a firm or practice group is one of the most

make do with what they have while positioning themselves

promising ways an attorney can obtain specialized skills,

for what lies ahead. Lawyers and law firms must mimic their

practice diversification, and client exposure. This “enterprise

successful clients’ nimbleness. Those who do will reclaim

culture” describes an environment that encourages and

or expand market share. Clients face these daily pressures

rewards the initiative and commitment that are critical to

themselves, and if you seek the role of valued advisor and

every lawyer’s professional growth and success.

business partner, you need to walk the walk.

To create an enterprise culture, attorneys need to become more self-reliant by seeking out new skill-building assignments and client interactions. Such singular focus does

Conclusion

not necessarily eliminate a collaborative or teaching culture, but requires active initiative in mastering necessary skills and

An in-house practice offers an attorney the opportunity

taking control of one’s own professional development. While

to benefit from the efforts of a larger enterprise. Internal

a firm may try to be all things to all clients, the “enterprise”

counsel understand (more than their highly compensated

lawyer and her team will proactively identify and offer a

outside counsel) that it is a good thing to be viewed by the

skill set tailored to fit each client’s individual needs. We are

company as a business resource capable of adding strategic

unable to predict whether these skills will appeal more to

value, reducing costs, and generating revenue.

mid-market, regional, global, or boutique firms, but the trend toward customized skills is clear. Personal and professional accountability to clients and

The same holds true within a law firm. In this current economic environment, developing an enterprise culture and the skills that encourage success requires going beyond

one’s professional growth needs to take the place of passive

what is comfortable and safe. Law firms must foster the

acceptance of the law firm’s traditional way of training

elements of entrepreneurship and individual “enterprise

attorneys and bringing them into the client fold. A successful

zones” within a practice. Providing legal advice is merely one

personal enterprise culture will yield happy clients, happy

component of the value attorneys contribute. They cannot

law firms, and satisfying personal professional paths.

remain above the mundane practicalities of price structures and competitive economic positions and still partner with clients as strategic advisors. To remain vibrant, law firms and

On Thinking — and Acting — Like the Client

legal departments must understand their clients’ unrelenting business pressures and respond in kind. Lawyers, firms,

An enterprise culture embraces market principles— one

and corporate counsel who demonstrate flexibility and

assumes responsibility for one’s professional welfare, share

innovation will be the ones considered “successful” in the

of overhead, and contribution to profits. Over the years,

21st century. ❚

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 33


34 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


O. Yale Lewis, Jr. Renaissance Lawyer By Randolph W. Urmston ’69


Y

ALE LEWIS ’69, does not remember hearing “Purple Haze” or “Are you Experienced” before 1993, the year Jimi Hendrix’s father, a retired gardener with an eighth-grade education, asked Lewis to

help restore the family as rightful owner of Jimi’s music. It turned out to be very complex litigation, involving many defendants and multiple off-shore corporations throughout the world, but Lewis succeeded. After two years of intense and often acrimonious litigation, the defendants conveyed to the Hendrix family all rights, claims, and interests to “any and all parts of the properties described generally as the Jimi Hendrix Legacy.” Long before the Hendrix litigation, Lewis had built a career and a reputation in Seattle as a lawyer who fights PHOTO BY ANTHONY P. APB/RCS

for the underdog, thirsts for intellectual challenge, shows dogged determination, and mines a deep streak of idealism. Now four decades out of Virginia, he has an active and successful practice applying these formidable talents to cases that advance the public interest and involve good and competent colleagues on behalf of worthy clients. “Actually,” says Lewis, “if you get most of these most of the time you are highly blessed.” Lewis came to the Law School with his young family after graduating with an economics degree cum laude from Harvard College in 1962. He was also a veteran submariner, having served as a lieutenant, senior grade in the U.S. Navy on the U.S.S. Blenny (SS 324). That experience later helped Lewis earn as a client Tacoma Boatbuilding Company, whose CEO was a former submarine admiral. In addition to submarines and social service, Lewis had a strong interest in railroading — he worked for the Southern Railroad between his submarine service and Virginia — and urban planning, which he almost pursued instead of law school. After his first year at the Law School, Lewis stayed in Charlottesville to direct Camp Faith, a multi-racial day

Al Hendrix, father of rock-n-roll guitar legend Jimi Hendrix, sits in a wheelchair while touring the Experience Music Project with his daughter Janie Hendrix in Seattle in 2000.

camp for inner-city youth. Hundreds of campers from the area were lured by the swimming lessons at the simple camp’s muddy pond, peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and inspired staff. The camp sat on red clay, much like

36 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


what Lewis had known growing up in Alabama playing football, camping (he was an Eagle Scout), and working in cotton mills and surveying cotton acreage allotments for the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Decades earlier, Lewis’s grandfather had almost been run out of Dothan, where as an elected official he had successfully resisted the Alabama Power Company’s efforts to acquire the local power plant and public utility. Worse for that time and place, he had represented a black woman in a contested court proceeding. For several months Lewis’s father and uncles (future lawyers) stood armed watch at night as the Ku Klux

Klan tossed burning torches at the Lewis

I WAS CONFIDENT THAT IF I FOLLOWED MY INTERESTS,

home and burned a cross on the family lawn. Such family lore, enhanced by To Kill a Mockingbird, Gideon’s Trumpet, and biographies of Adams

threw my heart and mind into those endeavors, and the

projects I pursued were successful, the monetary reward

and Jefferson — which Lewis read while deployed on the U.S.S. Blenny

would come in due course.”

— contributed to his difficult decision to leave the Navy to pursue the law. In law school, Lewis suffered from severe congenital

Lewis went on to practice with Davis, Wright, Todd,

sleep apnea (later alleviated by major surgery) and was

Riese & Jones in Seattle, learning civil litigation, corporate,

typically unable to prepare for or stay awake in class.

antitrust, banking, labor and newspaper law, as well as

Nevertheless, he often descended into the stacks in Clark

handling divorces and drafting testamentary documents.

Hall, much like he had done on the Blenny at sea, where

But when local Native Americans stormed Fort Lawton

he teamed with another service veteran, classmate Harry

in Seattle to prevent it from being surplused by the U.S.

Jennings, to win the Lile Moot Court Competition. In the

Government to the City of Seattle in the early 1970s, Lewis

final round — which involved conscientious objector status,

represented them pro bono in negotiating a truce with the

an issue in which everyone at Virginia was keenly interested

City that resulted in the construction of an Indian Cultural

in 1969 — Lewis was selected as best oralist.

Center on 20 acres. Lewis was also instrumental in forming

After graduating, Lewis headed west in his 1966

and arranging funding for other groups to provide health

blue Volvo station wagon (still running) to clerk for the

and social services for local urban Indians. Subsequently, his

Honorable Alfred T. Goodwin of the Oregon Supreme Court,

work with Native Americans provided Lewis an opportunity

whom Lewis had met the previous summer camping in

to represent Arctic Slope Eskimos in a series of cases

Oregon. While Lewis was clerking for him, Judge Goodwin

pursuing trespass claims against the State of Alaska and

was appointed to the U.S. District Court and made Lewis his

oil companies in Alaska. One of those cases, Edwardsen v.

first federal law clerk. Lewis chose well, and vice versa.

Morton, is a recognized landmark on the fiduciary duty of

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 37


the Secretary of the Interior to protect the unextinguished

General of Alaska were adversaries — resulted in Lewis

“aboriginal title” of Native Americans.

being hired to negotiate the State’s acquisition of the Alaska

Drawing on his interest in urban planning, Lewis also

Railroad from the federal government.

conceptualized a new form of quasi-governmental public

Another major railroad case came to Lewis’s attention

development authority, for which he drafted authorizing

through one of his neighbors, a lawyer for the Milwaukee

and implementing legislation that he lobbied successfully

Railroad, who was concerned about the imminent

through the Washington Legislature and Seattle City

dissolution of the railroad’s western lines. Management and

Council. In the beginning, he initially offered pro bono

the trustee of the bankrupt railroad wanted to liquidate the

service to civic leaders who had successfully waged a

railroad’s western assets. A faction in the west wanted to do

campaign in the early 1970s to prevent the city from

the opposite, and others, principally bondholders, wanted

destroying Seattle’s legendary Pike Place Market to make

to dissolve the entire company. After “a number of long

way for urban renewal. Asked how he thought such service

talks with my neighbor,” Lewis told him he would “see what

could ever pay his bills, Lewis says “I was confident that if I

he could do” to save the western lines. Shortly thereafter,

followed my interests, threw my heart and mind into those

Lewis was sworn in as a special deputy Attorney General

endeavors, and the projects I pursued were successful, the

of Montana with a commission to represent shippers,

monetary reward would come in due course,” and it did.

employees, and governors and state legislatures of states

That same public development authority model was used

along the Milwaukee’s western lines.

to revitalize other Seattle neighborhoods and important institutions, for which Lewis became the “go to” lawyer. In late 1974 Davis, Wright decided to create departments

Over the next year, which Lewis describes variously as a “spectacular quest” and the “impossible dream,” the interests Lewis represented and Milwaukee labor unions

to which all of the firm would be assigned and from which

obtained a temporary federal court injunction against any

they would get assignments and supervision. At the time,

additional liquidation of the railroad until the Interstate

Lewis was strongly opposed to specializing, which he

Commerce Commission had reviewed the situation. Shortly

felt would unduly restrict his freedom to follow his own

thereafter, at the insistence of Senators Warren Magnuson

professional and social interests. On the other hand, he had

of Washington and Max Baucus of Montana, Congress

a family with three children. After intense soul searching,

required the ICC to consider three plans for the bankrupt

Lewis concluded that he needed more independence than

railroad: (1) The plan of the group Lewis represented to

seemed possible at that firm. He thus decided, “ready or

preserve the west; (2) the trustee’s plan to preserve the east;

not,” to start his own firm and invited two colleagues, Jim

and (3) the bondholders’ liquidation plan. Subsequently,

Wickwire and Chuck Goldmark, to join him. Wickwire,

following around-the-clock efforts that drew in part on

Lewis & Goldmark soon became recognized locally and

Lewis’s experience with the Southern Railroad, the “western”

nationally as a leading law firm.

plan was presented to the ICC along with the revised plans

At Wickwire, Lewis & Goldmark, Lewis continued

of the trustee and bondholders. The trustee’s plan and the

to create and advise public development authorities

bondholders’ plan each received two votes. The western

and pursued a widely-varied civil practice that included

plan got three votes. But, unfortunately, no plan received a

important environmental, employment, and antitrust

majority, so the trustee who stayed in possession diminished

litigation. He also represented Arctic Slope Eskimos in

the west until a western reorganization became impossible.

proceedings to reduce tariffs on the Trans-Alaska Pipeline

In 1986, Lewis formed Hendricks & Lewis with his wife,

to keep well head prices and royalties high for the Natives. “I

Katherine Hendricks. The new firm was recommended to

enjoyed that litigation enormously,” says Lewis. “It combined

the Hendrix family by a number of sources. Classmates Reed

antitrust law, transportation principles, sophisticated expert

Wasson (who had also been a professional musician), Harry

testimony, and an important social component.” That case

Jennings (Lewis’s moot court partner), and the author of

and another Alaska case — in which Lewis and the Attorney

this article also worked on that extraordinarily difficult but

38 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


AP PHOTO/AL GRILLO

entirely on those issues, and market itself as an intellectual property firm. But the very next morning, after the unequivocal decision to work exclusively on intellectual property matters, Lewis received a call from a city council member who believed that a public development authority in the city was being misused to issue taxexempt bonds for a massive private development in downtown Spokane that was owned by the city’s “leading” family, which also owned much of the rest of the city, including most of its media. In spite of his decision to become The Trans-Alaska oil pipeline snakes its way across the tundra near Delta, Alaska bringing oil from Alaska’s North Slope to Valdez in this 1999 photo.

an IP specialist, Lewis simply could not resist helping the “rebel” Spokane City Council resist a mandamus action

ultimately successful case. Wasson subsequently became

by the developer. In the first round of litigation, Lewis’s clients

in-house counsel for the Hendrix family.

lost, but months later he obtained a unanimous reversal on

The success of the Hendrix litigation and Lewis’s growing reputation led to other music clients, including

a direct appeal to the Washington Supreme Court. Lewis eventually returned to intellectual property.

Anita Baker; Johnny Mulhair, producer of LeAnn Rimes’s

In addition to his well known music clients, he added

early recordings; the widow and siblings of Buddy Holly;

software developers, patent owners, other song writers

Gene Vincent’s daughter; the widow (Courtney Love) and

and performers, producers, media personalities, and

daughter of Kurt Cobain; and most recently George Clinton

photographers, including the Jonas Salk Trust, glass artist

of Funkadelic and Parliament fame. Ironically, despite

Chihuly, syndicated radio host Delilah, online games

his professional success in this area, Lewis, who is not an

publisher WildTangent, and JACO Environmental.That is

aficionado of popular music and movies, is so indifferent

now his core practice, but if someone were to call about

to entertainment industry vibes and gossip, that Courtney

another public development authority, transportation,

Love took it upon herself to advise Lewis — facetiously —

Native American, antitrust, or environmental issue, or some

about the significance of events such as the Grammys and

other challenge of serious public interest would he resist?

the Oscars, which she said he “really ought to become aware

And would it be good — or bad — for business?

of and know something about.” In April 2000, after many years of following wherever his

Frankly, it doesn’t matter. Lewis has concluded that although his renaissance practice is more stressful and time

interests and circumstances led, Lewis reluctantly decided

consuming and, hour-for-hour, less rewarding financially

that it had become necessary to focus the firm’s practice in

than a highly specialized modern practice, it is also more

order to credibly market its expertise. How could anyone

stimulating and affords him the chance to test his mettle,

believe that a firm of only a half dozen lawyers could do

help the community, and advance the profession. As he

everything Lewis had actually done? The firm’s practice in

puts it, “I am rarely, if ever, bored, but probably will never

copyrights, trademarks, publicity rights, and trade secret

be truly secure financially. All in all it makes for a good and

disputes was reliably interesting and growing steadily.

interesting practice that I hope will continue for at least

Consequently, Hendricks & Lewis decided to concentrate

another decade.” ❚

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 39


Faculty News & Briefs Kerry Abrams’s

In June Margo

has been the subject of academic

article “Becom-

Bagley was a

comment and controversy. But

ing a Citizen:

distinguished

even those scholars who have

Marriage,

visiting professor

looked favorably upon Frank’s work

Immigration,

teaching

concede that he failed to articulate a

and Assimila-

American

theory of adjudication or offer any

tion,” was

company law at

affirmative proposal for legal reform.

published by

the University of

Barzun argues, however, that this

Cambridge University Press in a book

Muenster. In July she taught interna-

interpretation of Law and the Modern

edited by Linda McClain and Joanna

tional patent law and policy in the GW

Mind is deeply mistaken and that the

Grossman entitled Gender Equality:

Summer IP Program at the Max Planck

source of the mistake lies in previous

Dimensions of Women’s Equal Citizen-

Institute in Munich. In August she

scholars’ failure to understand

ship. She also helped to organize two

presented “The International Patent

Frank’s philosophical worldview and,

family law conferences during the

System: Issues and Opportunities,” at

therefore, his intellectual motivations.

summer, one for emerging family law

the Second Beijing International

scholars at the University of Colorado,

Chemical and Pharmaceutical

Boulder, and one at Harvard Law

Intellectual Property Forum.

School. Abrams also presented two

Bagley was honored in August

Michal Barzuza’s paper, “The

papers at the Law & Society annual

to serve as a distinguished visiting

State of State

conference in Denver.

professor at the National University

Antitakeover

of Singapore, where she taught

Law,” was

international patent law and policy.

accepted for

Barbara

publication in

Armacost ’89

Virginia Law

completed an

Charles Barzun

Review in December. Barzuza’s paper,

article entitled

’05 completed

“Lemon Signaling in Cross-listing,”

“Arizona v.

work on a new

was accepted to the Yale/Stanford

Gant: Does it

article, “Jerome

junior faculty forum. She presented

Matter,” which

Frank and the

the paper at Stanford in May.

will appear in

Modern Mind,”

Barzuza participated in the

the upcoming issue of the Supreme

which argues

Harvard’s Proxy Access Roundtable in

Court Review. Also, Armacost has been

that one of the

October, and presented a paper in the

invited to deliver the Kamm Memorial

major works of legal theory in the

symposium, “In Berle’s Footsteps,” at

Lecture on Law and Society at

20th century has been profoundly

Seattle University in November.

Wheaton College in April.

misunderstood by generations of scholars. Since its publication in 1930, Frank’s Law and the Modern Mind

40 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Faculty Briefs

Lillian BeVier

in colleges and universities, an area

Whitfield

delivered the

that has been outside the domain of

Broome is

Ashton Phelps

the Supreme Court’s Commission

serving as chair

Lecture at

but that remains highly charged as a

of the Virginia

Tulane Univer-

result of recent suicides and homicides

Board of

sity Law School

committed by troubled students.

Accountancy for

in November.

The new study will be conducted

2009–2010. This

The title of her

by two task forces (on legal issues

state agency is

lecture was “Freedom, Fairness, and

and services issues) overseen by a

responsible for the regulation of

the F-Word: Reflections on the Yin

steering committee. John Monahan

Certified Public Accountants and CPA

and Yang of the First Amendment.”

will serve on the steering committee.

firms in the Commonwealth of

Bonnie appeared before the General

Virginia. The seven members of the

Assembly’s Joint Commission on

Board are appointed by the governor

Richard Bonnie

Health Care in October to describe

for four-year terms. Broome was

’69 continues

the study, which is projected to be

initially appointed to the Board by

his extensive

completed in the fall of 2010.

Governor Mark Warner in 2003, and

activities as

In May Bonnie addressed senior

subsequently reappointed for a second

chair of the

leadership at the CDC on “Public

four-year term by Governor Tim

Virginia

Health and the First Amendment” in

Kaine. His current term ends on

Supreme Court’s

Atlanta, and presented “Is Model State

June 30, 2011.

Commission on

Legislation Needed for Treatment of

In addition, Broome continues

Mental Health Law Reform, imple-

Drug Offenders?” to a forum held

to serve on the national CPA Board of

menting legislation enacted in 2008

by a special committee of National

Examiners, which is responsible for

and 2009, and preparing a third round

Conference of Commissioners

the Uniform CPA Examination used

of reforms in 2010.

on Uniform State Laws Special

by all states. For 2009-2010, he will

Committee in Washington, D.C.

also serve on the Board’s Executive

Bonnie spoke at conferences sponsored by the Alzheimer’s

In June Bonnie presented

Committee and chair its State

Association and the Virginia Hospital

“New Uses for Advance Directives”

Board Committee. The State Board

and Healthcare Association on the

to a Conference on Alzheimer’s

Committee includes representatives

Commission’s overhaul of the Health

Disease and Related Disorders at the

from boards of accountancy across the

Care Decisions Act that went into

University of Virginia Institute on

United States. It serves as a means of

effect in July. He also spoke on the

Aging in Charlottesville. And in July

communicating with state boards and

challenges of mental health law

he presented “Evaluating Reform

specifically of receiving feedback on

reform at the annual conference of

of the DC Public Schools,” to the

the Uniform CPA Examination from

the National Association of State

National Academy of Sciences in

state boards.

Mental Health Program Directors in

Washington, D.C.

September in Virginia Beach.

In October Bonnie presented a paper entitled “Indiana v. Edwards and

In April Jon

on the Virginia experience article in

the Limits of Autonomy in Criminal

Cannon and

Health Affairs, a major health policy

Defense,” at the annual meeting of

Michael Bucey

journal, entitled “Mental Health

American Academy of Psychiatry and

produced a

System Transformation After the

Law in Baltimore.

white paper for

Bonnie published an overview

Virginia Tech Tragedy.” Meanwhile, the Virginia General Assembly has asked Bonnie to chair a new study on mental health issues

the Miller Center, “America’s Energy Future: Balancing Renewable Power

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 41


Faculty Briefs

and Carbon Fuel.” The paper was

George Cohen

Research on False Convictions and

background for a debate on U.S.

completed

Exonerations.”

energy policy that was aired on PBS.

articles to be

Also in April, Cannon spoke to the

included as

University of Toronto’s lecture series,

Society of Fellows of the University of

chapters in two

“Current Controversies in Forensic

Virginia, on emerging national policy

different books.

Science & Medicine,” hosted by

on climate change.

The first is

their Centre for Forensic Science &

“Interpretation

Medicine. He presented research on

Over the summer Cannon

In October Garrett spoke at the

wrote an article on the Supreme

and Implied Terms in Contract Law,”

forensic science testimony in wrongful

Court’s decision in Entergy Corp. v.

which is an updated version of a

conviction cases, as well as discussed

Riverkeeper, Inc., which addresses

previously published article in the

current issues regarding forensic

use of cost-benefit analysis in EPA

Encyclopedia of Law and Economics,

science reform.

decisions. The article has been

the second edition of which will be

accepted for publication in the

published in 2010. The second article,

“Misjudging Innocence,” about

Harvard Environmental Law Review.

“How Fault Shapes Contract Law,”

the criminal investigations, trials,

Cannon serves on the National

will be included in a book on fault

appeals, and post-conviction litigation

Academy of Science’s Committee on

and contract law (title TBA), also to

of people exonerated by post-

America’s Climate Choices, which

be published in 2010, and edited by

conviction DNA testing, for which

has been tasked by Congress to

Ariel Porat and Omri Ben-Shahar.

he recently received a contract from

“investigate and study the serious

Cohen also expects to finish this fall

Harvard University Press. As part of

and sweeping issues relating to

work on the fifth edition of the Law

that project, Garrett is working on

global climate change and make

and Ethics of Lawyering, a casebook

analyzing data concerning eyewitness

recommendations regarding what

co-authored with Geoffrey C. Hazard,

identifications in cases of exonerees.

steps must be taken and what

Jr., Susan P. Koniak, Roger C.

He presented that data in a talk at the

strategies must be adopted in response

Cramton, and W. Bradley Wendel.

American Society of Criminology

to global climate change, including

The casebook will also be published

meeting in November.

the science and technology challenges

in 2010.

Garrett is working on a book,

thereof.” The committee’s final report will issue in 2010.

Two articles from

In September Cannon presented

Brandon

George Geis are

a critique of Regulation by Litigation

Garrett’s work

forthcoming

by Andrew Morriss, Bruce Yandle,

was cited in the

this year: “An

and Andrew Dorchak at a roundtable

Supreme Court’s

Empirical

at Case Western Reserve University

opinion in

Examination of

School of Law. Cannon also serves on

Melendez-Diaz

Business

the board of advisors for the Institute

v. Massachusetts

for Policy Integrity at NYU Law

and in the

Outsourcing Transactions” in the Virginia Law

School and participated as a panelist

majority opinion and a dissenting

Review and “Internal Poison Pills,” in

at a workshop there in November on

opinion in Osborne v. District Attorney’s

the New York University Law Review

cost-benefit analysis in regulation.

Office of the Third Judicial District.

(offering a novel type of security for

Garrett spoke about the Osborne case

governing the tensions between

at a summer workshop at the Law

majority and minority shareholders).

School. In May Garrett participated in a panel at the annual Law & Society Conference in Denver titled “New

42 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Faculty Briefs

Risa Goluboff

Afghanistan with Post-Traumatic

published an

Stress Disorder,” (with Nicole A.

lecture at the Center. His subject was

essay called

Stockey), in the Indiana Law Journal

“Founding Principles: The French

“Dispatch from

(forthcoming December).

Connection.” In his lecture, Howard

the Supreme

In addition, this summer, as

In July Howard gave his inaugural

considered the early American state

Court Archives:

editor of Developments in Mental

constitutions, French interest in

Vagrancy,

Health Law, Hafemeister published

American developments, the activities

Abortion, and

Volume 28, Number 1, which

of Benjamin Franklin and Thomas

What the Links Between Them Reveal

contained an article by Benjamin

Jefferson in Paris, the drafting of

About the History of Fundamental

Holley ’09, “It’s All in Your Head:

the Declaration of Rights of Man

Rights” in the Stanford Law Review,

Neurotechnological Lie Detection and

and the Citizen and of France’s

and gave a workshop at Harvard Law

the Fourth and Fifth Amendments,”

first Constitution, and enduring

School on the same essay. She made a

and an article by Amanda Muller ’10,

themes of French and American

presentation at a Yale Law School

“‘And His Roommate Told

constitutionalism.

conference called “The Constitution in

Me…’; Should Forensic Mental

2020,” on a panel on social rights. She

Health Evaluators Be Barred from

Conference, Howard organized

also made a presentation at a sympo-

Recounting Third-Party Statements

and moderated a panel reviewing

sium on the NAACP at the Carter

When Explaining the Basis of Their

principal decisions of the United

Woodson center at UVA.

Opinions?,” and 30 pages of case

States Supreme Court’s 2008–09 term.

notes that he authored. Holley with

His panelists included two prominent

his partner, Lee Pfeifer ’09, won the

journalists, Jan Crawford Greenburg

Thomas

William Minor Lile Moot Court

of ABC News, and Linda Greenhouse,

Hafemeister

Competition this spring.

At the Fourth Circuit Judicial

formerly of the New York Times

had three

and now a senior fellow at Yale Law

articles pub-

School. The other panelists were John

lished this

A. E. Dick

McGinnis, of Northwestern University

summer;

Howard ’61 has

School of Law, and Ted Olson, a

“Beware Those

been appointed

frequent litigator before the Supreme

Bearing Gifts:

by the National

Court. The Virginia Bar Association

Physicians’ Fiduciary Duty to Avoid

Constitution

Pharmaceutical Marketing,” (with

Center and the

invited Howard to speak on “The

Sarah Payne Bryan) in the University

University of

Struggle for the Supreme Court” at

of Kansas Law Review; “The Fiduciary

Pennsylvania

a special meeting at the Old Capitol

Obligation of Physicians to ‘Just Say

School of Law as their visiting scholar

Building in Williamsburg. He reviewed

No’ if an ‘Informed’ Patient Demands

for 2009-10. The joint appointment

the efforts of successive Republican

Services that Are Not Medically

does not entail the scholar’s being in

presidents to undo the legacy of the

Indicated,”(with Richard M. Gul-

residence; instead, the scholar gives

Warren Court and to move the Court

brandsen, Jr.), in the Seton Hall Law

several lectures or programs during

in a more conservative direction.

Review; and “Lean on Me: A Physi-

the course of the academic year.

cian’s Fiduciary Duty to Disclose an

Previous scholars have included Akhil

Muslim Women Lawyers for Human

Emergent Medical Risk to the Patient,”

Amar, Lillian BeVier, Ted Olson,

Rights, convened its annual Law

(with Selina Spinos) in the Washington

Kathleen Sullivan, and Lawrence Tribe.

and Leadership Summer Program.

University Law Review. A fourth has

The theme for the next year is global

Howard organized a workshop

been accepted for publication, “Last

constitutionalism, a focus that builds

on the distinctive features, in a

Stand? The Criminal Responsibility of

on Howard’s work with constitution-

comparative setting, of American

War Veterans Returning from Iraq and

makers in other countries.

constitutionalism. In Charlottesville,

In Washington, Karamah:

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 43


Faculty Briefs

Howard was a faculty member at

American Commission on Human

insight into the institutional forces

the National Security Law Institute,

Rights. Professor Hurwitz presented

that determine how doctrine is

sponsored by the Center for

some of the conclusions from the

implemented, and an appreciation of

National Security Law. He spoke

report at a conference hosted by the

the public impact of doctrinal and

on the prospects for constitutional

University of Los Andes in Bogota.

institutional choices, including the

democracy in other parts of the world.

The Law School Human Rights

consequences for fundamental values

Program has received a grant from

such as fairness, participation, and

the editors of the Virginia Law Review

the Office of the Vice Provost for

transparency.”

invited Howard to speak at their

International Programs to bring

annual luncheon for faculty. Reflecting

Rashida Manjoo, the U.N. Special

on his days as a law clerk to Supreme

Rapporteur on violence against

Court Justice Hugo L. Black, Howard

women, its causes and consequences,

“Standing for the Public: A Lost

recounted significant ways in which

to UVA for one month, January -

History” at NYU’s Constitutional

the Court has changed from the days

February 2010. Manjoo will be a

Theory Colloquium.

of the Warren Court to the present

distinguished international fellow and

time. He emphasized changes in the

a visiting professor. The purpose of

Justices’ background and experience,

the UVA Distinguished International

In June Tom

in the process of nomination and

Fellows Program is to broaden and

Massaro

confirmation, in way the Justices

deepen the relationships between

became

conduct their business, and in the

UVA faculty and colleagues outside

founding Dean

selection and role of the law clerks.

of the U.S.; increase opportunities

of the medical

for research collaborations; provide

school at the

opportunities to exchange ideas about

University of

effective teaching; expose students

Botswana. It is

As the fall semester got underway,

In August Magill became the Law School’s Academic Associate Dean. In October she presented

to the expertise of the International

the first medical school in the country

fellows through classroom lectures,

and the newest one in Africa.

seminars, and individual meetings; and to expose members of the larger

Deena Hurwitz at University of Los Andes in Bogota, Columbia.

University community and residents

In October Dan

of Central Virginia to the interests and

Meador

scholarship of the fellow.

participated in a panel discussion on the election

In September Deena Hurwitz was in

This summer

of state court

Colombia to participate in the launch

Liz Magill ’95

judges at the

of the Spanish version of a report on

received from

the “Right to Education of Afro-de-

the American

of the American Academy of Appellate

scendant and Indigenous

Constitution

Lawyers in Philadelphia.

Communities in the Americas.” (Full

Society’s

text online.) The International Human

Richard D.

Court at the George Washington

Rights Law Clinic wrote the report in

Cudahy Writing

University Law School in November,

annual meeting

At a conference on the Supreme

2008, in collaboration with the Robert

Competition an award for her paper

Meador participated in a panel

F. Kennedy Memorial Center for

“Standing for the Public: A Lost

discussion on a proposal to regularize

Justice and Human Rights, and the

History.” The competition seeks to

Supreme Court appointments by

Cornell Law School International

identify legal scholarship that shows “a

providing for the appointment of one

Human Rights Clinic, for the Inter-

keen grasp of legal doctrine, deep

new justice every two years.

44 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Faculty Briefs

Greg Mitchell

discrimination researchers and

related subjects requiring a detailed

published “The

scholars from Harvard, Howard

understanding of national security law.

Limits of Social

University, MIT, the University

COLP also conducted the 14th

Framework

of Minnesota, Princeton, and the

annual Rhodes Academy of Oceans

Evidence” in

University of California, Berkeley.

Law and Policy in Rhodes, Greece in

Law, Probability

This summer Mitchell

June and July. The Rhodes Academy is

& Risk (with

participated on a panel discussing

an international collegial institution

John Monahan

current psychological research

dedicated to fostering a better

and Larry Walker), and “The Relation

on witness memory and its legal

understanding of the modern law of

Between Consistency and Accuracy

relevance at the 31st Congress of the

the sea and to promote adherence to

of Witness Testimony” (with Ronald

International Academy of Law and

the rule of law in the world’s oceans.

Fisher and Neil Brewer),in the

Mental Health. Also this summer,

In June Moore presented the

Handbook of Psychology and

Tetlock and Mitchell were awarded

paper “Toward More Effective Counter

Investigative Interviewing: Current

a two-year, $250,000 grant from the

Piracy Policy” at the Maritime Piracy/

Developments and Future Directions,

Searle Freedom Trust to study the

Counter Piracy Workshop at Booz

from Wiley Press.

relationship between implicit bias and

Allen Hamilton. A published version is

discriminatory behavior.

in the works.

David Klein (UVA Politics

In July Moore spoke at the

Department) and Mitchell completed

National Governors Association

editing of the book, The Psychology of Judicial Decision Making, which

In May John

annual meeting in Biloxi, Miss. He

was published this fall by Oxford

Norton Moore,

addressed the Natural Resources

University Press. Mitchell contributed

director of the

Committee session: Barriers to

two chapters to the book: one titled

Center for

American Energy Security and

“Evaluating Judges” and one with

Oceans Law and

Independence.

Philip Tetlock titled “Cognitive Style

Policy (COLP),

and Judging.” Mitchell and Tetlock

sponsored the

also published a lead article, “Implicit

33rd COLP

Tom Nachbar

Bias and Accountability Systems: What

Conference, “Changes in the Arctic

spent time this

Must Organizations Do to Prevent

Environment and the Law of the Sea”

summer (as a

Discrimination?,” and two replies to

in Seward, Alaska. Moore delivered a

U.S. Army

responses to the article, “A Renewed

paper on the opening panel entitled

Reservist)

Appeal for Adversarial Collaboration”

“Conference Negotiation on Ice-Cov-

working on the

and “Adversarial Collaboration

ered Area Articles.” His paper, along

Detention Policy

Aborted But Our Offer Still Stands,”

with all others delivered at the

in the book series, Research in

conference, will be published late in

Washington, looking at policy

Organizational Behavior.

2009 in the conference proceedings

solutions for how to deal with

volume, Changes in the Arctic Environ-

detainees in the future. A new edition

ment and the Law of the Sea.

of the book he edits for the Army, the

In the spring semester, Mitchell helped organize the Olin Conference on “Combating Workplace

Also in May and June, COLP

Discrimination,” and he also served

held its 17th National Security Law

as a moderator and presenter at

Institute. The institute provides

the conference. Other University of

advanced training for professors of

Virginia faculty from the Law School

law and political science who teach or

and the economics, psychology, and

are preparing to teach graduate-level

sociology departments participated

courses in national security law or

Task Force in

Rule of Law Handbook, came out in October.

in the conference, as well as leading

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 45


Faculty Briefs

This fall the

up comedians, published last year in

public university board members

Carolina

the Virginia Law Review.

and presidents), while advising the

Academic Press

In October Oliar presented two

University System of Maryland on

published

papers, “Secondary Fair Use,” and

film exhibition policies, and presented

Jeffrey

“Naked and Gross: Restrictions on

a virtual seminar on campus speech

O’Connell’s

Alienation in Trademark Law” (with

issues for the National Association

book, Political

Rich Hynes) at the Works in Progress

of College & University Attorneys

and Legal

in IP conference in Seton Hall Law

(NACUA). He has also continued

School, N.J.

to work with the Association of

Adventurers: From Marx to Moynihan, co-authored with his brother Thomas

Oliar’s article, “Conventional

Governing Boards (revising their

E. O’Connell. The book is a collection

IP: A New Reading,” is forthcoming

basic document for new trustees,

of biographical essays on lawyers and

(2009) in UCLA Law Review. It

“Effective Governing Boards),” serving

others whose careers intertwined with

sheds light on puzzling occurrences

on an advisory council on conflict of

law, public policy, and politics,

in the Constitutional Convention

interest, and the board of consulting

including Adlai Stevenson, Felix

surrounding the framing of the IP

editors of Trusteeship, the AGB

Frankfurter, Tommy Corcoran, Pat

Clause, and on the framers’ intent and

magazine).

Moynihan, Bayard Rustin and others.

the clause’s original understanding.

In the spring O’Neil spoke at

In early 2010 the Columbia

the annual meetings of the American

Business Law Review will publish an

Library Association (Chicago), AGB

article by O’Connell and Patricia

Robert O’Neil

(San Diego), and NACUA (Toronto).

Born on the similar cost and other

spent the spring

He is continuing to direct the Ford

advantages of an early offers reform

semester as a

Foundation’s Difficult Dialogues

proposal for product liability claims as

visiting professor

Initiative, which is entering its final

compared to general liability claims.

at the University

year. Also this fall, he has an article

of Texas School

commissioned by NACUA for the 50th

of Law in

anniversary symposium issue of the

Austin, teaching

Association’s scholarly publication,

Oliar presented

a course, Con Law: Church and State.

Journal of College & University Law.

“Secondary Fair

During that time he lectured

In August Dotan

Use” at the IP

at the University of Missouri-

Scholars

Columbia (annual Friends of the

Dan Ortiz is

Conference at

Library Dinner), Rice University,

working on a

Cardozo Law

Trinity University/San Antonio, the

journal piece

School, N.Y. The

University of Arkansas-Little Rock, the

called “Nice

project studies the liability that should

Valencia Community College Annual

Legal Studies,”

be imposed on technology companies

Program for Community College

which he hopes

for copyright infringement related to

administrators and lawyers, and co-

to have pub-

their products.

presented the William Cotter Debate

lished next

In September Oliar published “From Corn to Norms: How IP

at Colby College in Maine. In February O’Neil received the

spring; and with Liz Magill on a book chapter called “Comparative Positive

Entitlements Affect What Stand UP

first William Kaplin Award, presented

Political Theory and Institutional

Comedians Create” (with Chris

by Stetson University at its annual

Design.”

Sprigman) in Virginia Law Review

higher education law conference.

In Brief. This essay replies to four law

He also conducted workshops and

Clinic, directed by Ortiz, has had

professors who published responses to

programs for several governing boards

several cases going on this past

our article on IP norms among stand-

(Butler University, all West Virginia

summer, which Ortiz and others have

46 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

The Supreme Court Litigation


Faculty Briefs

been working on together. First, there’s

Mildred

Legal Perspective on Teacher Compen-

Bloate v. United States, which concerns

Robinson

sation Reform,” in Performance

whether time spent preparing

published

Incentives: Their Growing Impact on

pre-trial motions is automatically

“Transfer Tax

American K–12 Education (forthcom-

excludable under the Speedy Trial

Reform after

ing, Brookings Institution Press 2009).

Act. It was argued on October 6 by

EGTRRA-2001:

Ryan also taught constitutional

Mark Stancil. The clinic also worked

Reconstruction

law to a group of foreign students in

on two cert petitions. One, in Rollins

or Further

Columbia Law School’s “Summer in

v. United States, concerns whether a

Deconstruction,” in the Virginia Tax

Amsterdam” program, and in January

federal court can impose a sentence

Review.

will begin a four-month fellowship

consecutive to a not-yet-imposed state

Robinson also made a number

at the University of Auckland Law

sentence. The other, Mincey v. United

of appearances in conjunction

School in New Zealand. Ryan stepped

States, concerns whether a person who

with Law Touched Our Hearts: A

down as the Law School’s Academic

has the renter’s, but not the rental

Generation Remembers Brown v.

Associate Dean at the end of August.

company’s, permission to drive a car

Board of Education, (with Richard

can have a reasonable expectation of

Bonnie; Vanderbilt Press, 2009). She

privacy in it. The clinic has also been

moderated a penal discussion in

George

working hard to identify and line up

Williamsburg at the William & Mary

Rutherglen has

new cases to pursue.

Law School featuring four of the five

new editions of

contributors from the William &

two books

Mary Law faculty; presented during

coming out:

In September

the Virginia Festival of the Book

Employment

Mimi Riley

in March (with Richard Bonnie);

Discrimination

presented two

presented at the Robert Russa Moton

Law: Visions of

talks at “Bio2Biz

Museum in Farmville, Va., in May;

Equality in Theory and Doctrine (a

South Africa,”

and participated as a panelist during

third edition), and Major Issues in the

South Africa’s

Larry Sabato’s “Massive Resistance”

Federal Law of Employment Discrimi-

annual national

conference in July in Richmond.

nation (a fifth edition). He also has a book under contract with Oxford

biotechnology

University Press on Slavery, Freedom,

meeting. The first is “Challenges and Solutions in Commercializing

In the summer

and Civil Rights. Also, over the

Genetically Engineered Animals and

Jim Ryan ’92

summer, his article, “Textual Corrup-

their Products,” and the second,

published an

tion in the Civil Rights Cases,” came

“Regulating Cloned and Genetically

article and book

out in the Journal of the Supreme Court

Engineered Animals: Opportunities,

chapter: “The

Historical Society.

Perils and Pitfalls.” The following week

Big Picture: Five

Riley spoke at the Virginia IRB

Legal Issues

Consortium in Charlottesville on

That Have

“The Genome Information Nondis-

Changed the Face of Public Schooling

crimination Act (GINA) of 2008”

in the United States” in Phi Delta

and “Regulatory Aspects of Genetic

Kappan; and “The Real Lessons of

Research.”

School Desegregation,” in From Schoolhouse to Courthouse: The Judiciary’s Role in American Education (Brookings Institution Press 2009). Ryan has another chapter, entitled “A

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 47


Faculty Briefs

Fred Schauer

published as an article in the UCLA

Economy: Local Economic and

continues to

Law Review. He also delivered the

Immigration Policy” held at the UC

serve on the

annual Sibley Lecture at the University

Hastings College of Law. In June he

board of

of Georgia School of Law, with the

presented “Rethinking the Theory

governors of the

title “When and How (If At All) Does

and Practice of Local Economic

James T. &

Law Constrain Official Action?” The

Development” at a conference entitled

Catherine D.

lecture will be published as an article

“Reassessing the State and Local

Macarthur Law

in the Georgia Law Review.

Government Toolkit” held at the

and Neuroscience Project, and

In November Schauer was a

Chicago Law School. The paper will be

presented “Can Bad Science Be Good

featured speaker at a university-wide

published in the Chicago Law Review

Evidence?: Neuroscience-Based Lie

conference on racial profiling at

next year. He also published “The

Detection and the Mistaken Confla-

Washington University in St. Louis.

Progressive City”, an essay for “Why

tion of Legal and Scientific Norms” as

He also spoke at the University of

the Local Still Matters: Federalism,

his inaugural lecture for the Law

Michigan Law School’s Legal Theory

Localism, and Public Interest

School’s David and Mary Harrison

Workshop on “Llewellyn on Rules”

Advocacy,” in Papers from the Eleventh

Schauer has also published

Annual Liman Public Interest Program

at the Duck Conference on Social

“Paltering,” with Richard Zeckhauser,

Colloquium (2009), a conference at the

Cognition in June; at the Mino-Foro

in Deception: From Ancient Empires to

Yale Law School.

on Proof and Truth in the Law at the

Internet Dating (Stanford University

Institute for Philosophical Research,

Press, 2009); and “Institutions and the

UNAM, Mexico City, in September; at

Concept of Law: A Reply to Ronald

Gil Siegal S.J.D.

the University of Virginia Department

Dworkin,” in Law as Institutional

’09 (with Moti

of Psychology in October; and at the

Normative Order (Ashgate Publishing,

Mark) has

State University of New York at

2009).

published

Distinguished Professorship in April;

Buffalo in November.

“Mental Health

In May Schauer lectured on

Rights in

jurisprudence at the University of

Richard

Palermo and the University of Genoa

Schragger has

in Italy.

returned to UVA

sional Analysis” in the Journal of

after a year in

Health Law and Bioethics. Siegal is a

“The Trouble with Cases” with

New York City,

member of the Israeli Statutory

Richard Zeckhauser for a National

first as a visiting

National Committee on Brain Death

Bureau of Economic Research

professor at

and Organ Transplantation; the

NYU in fall 2008

European Society of Cardiology

In September Schauer wrote

conference, Regulation by Litigation,

Israel — A Multi-dimen-

with the paper to be published in

and then as the Samuel Rubin Visiting

Special Task Force; and the Ethics

the conference proceedings by the

Professor at Columbia in spring 2009.

Committee of the Medical University

University of Chicago Press. He also

Schragger’s article, “Mobile

of Graz, Austria. He is also on the

spoke on “Guidance and the Supreme

Capital, Local Economic Regulation,

international advisory board of the

Court Docket” at a Yale Law School

and the Democratic City,” will be

Austrian Biobank Project (GATiB II

conference on the Supreme Court

published in the Harvard Law Review

Project).

docket.

in December. He presented the

In October Schauer delivered the annual Melville Nimmer Memorial Lecture at the UCLA School of Law

Siegal has received a research

paper at faculty workshops at NYU,

grant from the Israeli National

Columbia, and Cardozo.

Institute for Health policy for “A

In October of 2008 he gave the

Multi-disciplinary Approach to

with the title “Facts and the First

keynote address at a conference,

Quality Control of Child Abuse

Amendment.” The lecture will be

“Cities and Counties in the Global

Identification in Emergency Care.”

48 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Faculty Briefs

For the past decade,

Barbara

Paul Stephan

Spellman has

’77 coauthored a

Vaidhyanathan has been one of the

been serving

new casebook,

leading academic advocates for a more

this year on the

Doing Business

balanced copyright policy. He is the

National

in Emerging

author of two books, Copyrights and

Academies

Markets, with

Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual

Committee on

Richard Dean

Property and How it Threatens

Behavioral and

and published

Creativity, (New York University

Social Science Research to Improve

by Foundation Press in October. In

Press, 2001), and The Anarchist in

Intelligence Analysis for National

October, Stephan appeared at a

the Library: How the Clash Between

Security, and she was appointed

conference at Columbia Law School

Freedom and Control is Hacking the

associate editor of Thinking &

on investment law and social justice,

Real World and Crashing the System

Reasoning, and co-editor of a special

and made a presentation at Harvard

(Basic Books, 2004), with a third

issue of Psychonomic Bulletin &

Law School on accessory liability

scheduled for next year. He also

Review on “Psychology and Law:

under the Alien Tort Statute. In

has written numerous articles and

Emerging Trends in Empirical

December he will present a paper at a

appeared on TV making the case for

Research.” Spellman will have a paper

conference at Santa Clara Law School

access to information.

in that special issue (with Elizabeth R.

on “The Supreme Court and Treaty

Tenney) entitled “Credibility In and

Interpretation, 1945-2000,” which will

Out of Court.”

be published as part of a book on the

In May Ted

history of the Supreme Court’s

White chaired a

engagement with international law.

panel at the

Spellman also published (with Elizabeth R. Tenney and Hayley M. D. Cleary) “Unpacking the Doubt

Woodrow

in ‘Beyond a Reasonable Doubt:’

Wilson Center

Plausible Alternative Stories Increase

In October, Siva

for International

Not Guilty Verdicts,” in Basic and

Vaidhyanathan

Scholars’

Applied Social Psychology. That article

received an IP3

conference on

(which originally appeared in a

Award from

Alexander Vassiliev’s Notebooks and

psychology journal) was revised

Public Knowl-

their implications for Cold War

for legal application and published

edge, a public

History. A two-part essay originating

with response and replies as: “This

interest

in that conference, “Alexander

Other Dude Did It!” A Test of the

advocacy and

Vassiliev and Alger Hiss,” appeared in

Alternative Explanation Defense,” in

education organization that seeks to

the summer and autumn issues of

The Jury Expert.

promote a balanced approach to

volume 12 of the Green Bag 2d.

Spellman also spoke in September

intellectual property law and technol-

In October White attended a

at the Northwestern University

ogy policy that reflects the “cultural

conference on the history of judicial

Law School “Law and Psychology

bargain” intended by the framers of

review at George Washington Law

Colloquium on (Re-)Considering

the constitution. Awards are given to

School and presented a paper,

Credibility,” and in November at the

individuals who over the past year (or

“Looking for the Law of the Land,”

University of Buffalo Baldy Center for

over the course of their careers) have

which will subsequently be published

Law and Social Policy on the same topic.

advanced the public interest in one of

in a symposium in the George

the three areas of intellectual property,

Washington Law Review.

information policy, and internet protocol. Vaidhyanathan was recognized for his work in intellectual property.

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 49


Faculty Briefs

In January

and government representatives who

would reverse a policy decision made

George Yin

have ties to the Law School and are

exactly 100 years ago); “Reforming the

presented his

interested in tax policy issues. The

Taxation of Foreign Direct Investment

paper, “Tempo-

program focused on ways to finance

by U.S. Taxpayers,” National Tax

rary-Effect

the economic recovery effort and many

Association., Proceedings of 100th

Legislation,

preexisting government obligations,

Annual Conference on Taxation;

Political

with specific panels on energy and

“The Story of Crane: How a Widow’s

Accountability,

environmental taxes, the corporate tax,

Misfortune Led to Tax Shelters”

and the value-added tax.

in Tax Stories (Paul L. Caron, ed.,

and Fiscal Restraint,” to a tax conference held in Los Angeles, “Tax Policy

In June Yin participated in a

Foundation Press, 2d ed. 2009); and

in the Obama Era,” jointly sponsored

five-day workshop on international

“Lawyer, Teacher, Public Servant” in

by the UCLA School of Law and the

taxation, Berkeley, Calif., jointly

John Gamino, Robb A. Longman &

Urban Institute-Brookings Tax Policy

sponsored by the Robert D. Burch

Matthew R. Sontag, eds., Careers in Tax

Center. The paper, published in April

Center for Tax Policy and Public

Law: Perspectives on the Tax Profession

in the New York University Law

Finance and the Oxford University

and What It Holds for You (Amer. Bar

Review, explains why legislation with a

Centre for Business Taxation.

Assn. Section of Taxation 2009). ❚

specific expiration date promotes accountability and budget restraint. In March Yin testified before the

In July the first edition of Yin’s casebook, Partnership Taxation (Aspen 2009), co-authored with

U.S. Senate Finance Committee at a

Karen C. Burke, was published. Yin

hearing on whether the expiring Bush

is continuing work on a companion

tax cuts for middle-income taxpayers

text, Corporate Taxation, also to be

should be extended. He argued that

published by Aspen.

because of the country’s dire fiscal

In November Yin will participate

situation, all of the tax cuts, including

in the 62nd Annual Federal Tax

those applicable to middle-income

Conference sponsored by the University

taxpayers, should be allowed to lapse

of Chicago Law School. He will

as soon as the country achieves a

comment on a paper concerning the

target level of economic growth. The

taxation of publicly traded partnerships.

testimony was published in “Bush

In December Yin will deliver

Income Tax Cuts Should Not Be

the luncheon talk at the 57th Annual

Extended,” 123 Tax Notes 117 (2009).

Taxation Conference sponsored by

Yin also participated in a conference

the University of Texas School of Law.

on “The Federal Budget and Tax Policy

His topic will be “Tax Legislation

for a Sound Fiscal Future,” sponsored

(including Tax Reform?) in 2010 and

by the Washington University Law

Beyond.”

Center for Interdisciplinary Studies

Other publications during 2009

in St. Louis. He presented his paper

included “Corporate Tax Reform,

on temporary-effect legislation and

Finally, After 100 Years” (forthcoming

fiscal restraint and also commented on

Tax Notes), a short essay, which will

a paper concerning tax expenditures

be included in a compilation of tax

and the federal budget.

reform proposals for the Volcker Tax

In April Yin organized the annual

Reform Panel, that argues in order

meeting, held at the Law School,

to prevent a major tax shelter, only

of the Virginia Tax Study Group, a

public firms should be subject to the

group of practitioners, academics,

corporate tax (if adopted, the proposal

50 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Scholar’s Corner

R

ICH SCHRAGGER is one of the nation’s leading

power affects the distribution of power between private capital

young scholars of local government law whose work

and government.

expands considerably the traditional boundaries of

In the following excerpt, Schragger considers the

that field. Schragger looks at issues that are conventionally

appropriate scale for economic regulation. Despite the

analyzed as problems of state-federal relations, such as

conventional wisdom that sub-national governments cannot

economic regulation or same-sex marriage, and shows that the

effectively control or redistribute capital, Schragger observes

relevant policy actors are often mayors and other local officials.

that cities have increasingly sought to do both. This new

He uses that observation to illuminate federal constitutional

“regulatory localism” is noteworthy because it challenges the

law and federalism — but federalism considered as a three-tier

proposition that industrial policy, redistribution, and other

rather than a two-tier problem. Local, and not merely state,

responses to global economic restructuring must be addressed

rules may be protectionist or interfere with the free movement

at the national level. It also challenges the proposition that

of people and goods. Schragger’s work challenges us to think

local economic development policies must necessarily be biased

more deeply about the ways in which the division of political

in favor of corporate capital.

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 51


Scholar’s Corner

EXCERPT FROM:

Mobile Capital, Local Economic Regulation, and the Democratic City 123 Harv. L. Rev. — (forthcoming 2009)

E

CONOMIC localization is being driven by a

inform how we conceive of local power and how we think

decentralized labor movement, urban anti-poverty

about local economic policy.

organizations, opportunities in municipal law, political

We should start by complicating our understanding

alliances with progressive city mayors, a localist economic

of the relative vulnerabilities of city and capital. The

ideology, and the urban resurgence. These efforts are

disciplining view of capital mobility is skeptical of the

emphatically post-industrial; in this atmosphere it may be

exercise of local power — it assumes that government

possible for cities to regulate in ways that nations and states

power will often be deployed to exploit unless there are

cannot — to leverage place-dependent value and constrain

some constraints. Liberty, on this account, is the exercise

or redistribute capital. This nascent localization of economic

of rights against — and the operation of markets free

policy coincides with the rise of the region as an important

from — direct government intervention or interference.

economic unit and the relative decline of the nation-state

One implication of this view is that where exit does not

as a central regulator of economic life. Even if there was

provide sufficient discipline, legal limits on city power are

the political will to generate a new relationship between

appropriate to prevent exploitation of property owners,

capital and democracy, it is far from clear that the nation

corruption, and other political process flaws of local urban

can or is in a better position than cities to deliver. Indeed, a

democracy. Courts and legislatures should step in to prevent

progressive economic localism is one possible answer to the

local oppression of the vulnerable; local authority is thus

dislocations that accompany globalization.

appropriately limited.

Debates about decentralization make little sense without reference to the private-side exercise of economic power as well as the public-side exercise of regulatory power.

In light of these phenomena, we need to reframe our

When one turns away from the dominant conception

approach to city power. The conventional approach to

of rights and markets, however, a different idea of

the allocation of powers between the federal, state, and

vulnerability emerges. A competing political tradition

local governments involves assessing those governments’

tells us that governments are also vulnerable to markets,

relative competences and the political effects of particular

though this vulnerability tends to be less visible. Indeed,

allocations. These debates occur, however, with little

the vulnerability of the city to mobile capital is often

consideration of the allocation of power as between

interpreted as the reverse — the vulnerability of capital to

government and capital. Debates about decentralization

local government.

make little sense without reference to the private-side

Kelo [v. New London] is a nice example: mobile

exercise of economic power as well as the public-side

capital dictates the terms of New London’s economic

exercise of regulatory power. The relevant question is: How

strategy, but the salient and legally-cognizable act was

is the city’s power exercised vis-à-vis capital — in particular,

the government’s invasion of the homeowners’ property

vis-à-vis large-scale, mobile capital? That question should

rights. The liberal economic order has the necessary tools

52 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Scholar’s Corner

to prevent the public sphere from invading a protected

power to intervene in the private marketplace by enforcing

private sphere — the language of rights does most of this

a rigid public/private distinction and adjusting the city’s

work. But we have more trouble understanding when the

powers vis-à-vis higher level governments have been the two

private sphere is invading the sphere of the public — that

primary ways of dealing with the pathologies of the city-

is, we have more trouble preventing the distortion of public

business relationship. These conceptual narratives continue

decision-making for private ends. Explicit corruption or

to dominate the current law of local government.

capture of public processes can be guarded against, but

Those efforts are quite imperfect, however. More

the form of corruption that worries those concerned with

importantly, they appear unable to effectively cabin the

capital’s political power — the narrowing of the public

politics of capital attraction, retention, and exploitation.

sphere, the loss of political and economic independence,

That is because the relationship between the legal regulation

government policy driven by unaccountable and unelected

of the city and mobile capital is not a linear one. The city

The sense that government has lost the power to control the chief determinants of citizens’ well-being … drives local economic reform efforts like the minimum wage.

economic actors — is more difficult to articulate. The sense

develops in tandem with private investment, commercial

that government has lost the power to control the chief

activity, and capital formation — city power cannot be

determinants of citizens’ well-being — sometimes described

disentangled from the power of private economic activity.

in terms of “democracy deficits” — drives local economic

Mobile capital operates through the instruments of local

reform efforts like the minimum wage.

government; the rules that bind the latter might well be for

Our difficulty in articulating this concern reflects the

the purpose of binding the former. Reformers legitimately

pervasiveness of the negative conception of rights as trumps

worry that public power will be used as an instrument for

to be asserted against government invasions. That difficulty

private gain, but private gain is the city’s lifeblood.

also stems from the fact that we have come to discount the

The notion of city power is thus more complicated

notion of the common good itself; the “public” no longer

than it appears. Cataloguing the powers or limitations of

exists, but is an amalgam of private interests. Indeed, our

municipal government does not tell us very much. Rather,

current theories of democratic process — dominated as they

one needs to ask how lodging authority to make certain

are by public choice — tend to undermine the idea of an

kinds of decisions at a particular level of government —

identifiable democratic public at all. The democratic public

federal, state, or local — affects the city-business relationship.

either does not exist or has no interests that can be invaded

Indeed, the city power debate — to the extent it only

by private-side rights-bearers.

looks at the legal powers of cities vis-à-vis other levels

But this one-sidedness masks the central problem,

of government — is somewhat beside the point. Local

which is that the political pathologies of local government

“autonomy” is not an available option: first, because the city

are, in significant part, a function of local government’s

and private investment are inextricably linked; and second,

relationship to capital. Indeed, both concerns — the

because different allocations of legal authority as between

public invasion of rights and the private corruption of

the city, state, and federal governments will have different

the public good — have and continue to be dominant

(and not always predictable) consequences for the city’s

problems in the city-business relationship. Recall that

vulnerability to private-side control and manipulation. ❚

the original 19th century limitations on city power were a means of restraining giveaways to mobile capital; the counter-movement to limit state authority was motivated by similar concerns that business-dominated interests were corrupting good municipal government. Limiting municipal

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 53




Class Notes 1940

Reunion Year

1951

behind him. Fortunately, the bear was well fed and distracted by salmon leaping

The University’s Miller Center of Public

Jack P. Jefferies wants classmates to know

upstream, and turned away at the last

Affairs and the Miller Center Foundation

that his wife, Karen Lisa Sommarstrom

minute.

honored Mortimer Caplin, founding

Jefferies, died on March 12. Karen and Jack

member of the law firm of Caplin &

married in 1972 and raised a daughter,

on a hiking path led Corse up a 3,000-foot

Drysdale, with the 2009 Elizabeth Scott

Elizabeth Jefferies de Villegas. Jack is a

mountain with four children in tow. After

Award for his dedication and leadership to

retired senior law partner at Lord Day &

touring Glacier National Park, he headed

the Center, the University, and the greater

Lord in New York City.

for the U.S. Masters National Swimming Meet in Indianapolis, Ind. He came in

community. The conferring of the award on September 17 was one of the highlights of the Foundation’s annual Salute Event.

On another excursion, a wrong turn

1955

second in the 50-meter freestyle event,

Reunion Year

third in the 200-meter individual medley, and swam on three winning relay teams.

The Foundation praised Caplin for his longstanding service to the Miller Center

William Littlejohn won the Washington

“Not bad,” he writes, “after lolling around

as a member of both its governing council

Writers’ Publishing House annual fiction

eating and drinking in luxury for two

and foundation board. It also applauded

contest with his debut novel, Calvin. The

weeks before the meet.”

him for establishing the endowment that

book is a coming of age story of ten-

launched the annual Mortimer Caplin

year-old Billy and an African-American

Herbert S. Glickman has joined

Conference on the World Economy. Debuted

servant, Calvin, who manages to bring

Greenbaum, Row, Smith & Davis as

last year, this landmark event brought 12

some stability to a chaotic family situation

counsel in the firm’s Roseland, N.J.,

former G-20 finance ministers to the Miller

in South Carolina during the Depression.

office. Previously he served as a superior

Center to lay the underpinning for new

The book has been published as a trade

court judge for 24 years, presiding over

financial architecture to address rapidly

paperback by the Washington Writers’

matrimonial and family-related cases. In

changing global economic challenges.

Publishing House. (See In Print)

recent years he concentrated on mediation and arbitration of family cases in private

1949

1957

practice.

1959

In September Benjamin F. Sutherland reached his 60th anniversary of practicing law. He entered the Law School on the

Wright Hugus, Jr., is entering his 15th year

GI bill after World War II, passed the bar

of semi-retirement — reading and writing

in 1949, and still practices at age 91 in

in the winter and selling ice cream from his

Clintwood, Va.

vintage Good Humor truck in the summer.

Frank Warren Swacker’s murder mystery,

1963

Who Murdered Mom?, is available in its

John Corse recently took a trip up the

second edition through Amazon.com,

Alaska Inland Passage from Ketchikan to

Barnesandnoble.com, and local bookstores.

Juneau aboard a 162-foot motor yacht. He

William R. Rakes has been included in

had a number of adventures along the way,

Virginia Super Lawyers in the area of

including a steep jump into icy waters and

business litigation. Rakes is a partner in

a close encounter (within six feet) with a

the Roanoke office of Gentry Locke Rakes

grizzly. Corse had no way to escape — with

& Moore.

two women and five children positioned

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 55


Class Notes

1964

1965

Reunion Year

Virginia Super Lawyers in the area of real estate. He is a partner with Crenshaw, Ware & Martin in the firm’s Norfolk office.

W. Thomas Grimm lives in Ruskin, Fla.,

Stuyvesant K. Bearns has been included

where he has embarked on a new career as

in Best Lawyers in America 2010 in the area

an adjunct professor teaching American

of trusts and estates. He was also listed

Henry L. Young, Jr., is a sole practitioner

government, political science, and business

in Connecticut Super Lawyers in the area

in Dawsonville, Ga. He serves as

law at Hillsborough Community College.

of estate planning and probate. He is of

National Judge Advocate of the 82nd

His daughter, Emily, recruits physicians

counsel in the Lakeville office of Shipman

Airborne Division Association, a veterans

for a regional hospital in Thomasville, Ga.

& Goodwin.

organization. In 2008 the Association honored him with “Airborne Man of the

His son, Lars, graduated from Yale medical school this spring and is at Duke for his residency. His son, Nils, just graduated

Year” at its annual awards ceremonies in

1966

Atlanta.

from Vanderbilt and is attending UVA Law. Guy Farmer recently joined Gray

1968

Edward J. Handler III is the founder,

Robinson in Jacksonville, Fla., where

chair, and CEO of The Bronx Project, Inc.,

he will continue to practice labor and

a developmental stage drug company.

employment law. He was recently

David D. Biklen was elected a lifetime

The company has finished pre-clinical

recognized as having been named in every

member of the Uniform Law Commission

testing of Pharmaceutical C3 in mice and

edition of Best Lawyers in America.

at the organization’s recent annual meeting

expects to conclude trials in non-human primates soon. Pharmaceutical C3 will be effective in arresting Parkinson’s. Studies

in Santa Fe, N. Mex. Biklen, executive director of the Connecticut Law Revision

1967

Commission, was first appointed a

with rodents have shown it to be effective

Connecticut commissioner in 1982 and

against schizophrenia and ALS as well.

J. Rudy Austin has been included in

has been reappointed by three succeeding

Publication of articles (on Parkinson’s)

Virginia Super Lawyers in the area of

governors.

in juried journals is anticipated as well as

construction litigation. He is a partner in

some media coverage.

the Roanoke office of Gentry Locke Rakes

Donald C. Greenman has been included

& Moore.

in the International Who’s Who of Shipping

Whayne Quin is a partner in the

& Maritime Lawyers 2009. He has been

Washington, D.C., office of Holland &

Howard W. Martin, Jr.,

included in Best Lawyers in America in the

Knight, where he practices municipal law.

recently received the

maritime category since 1989 and has been

Eggleston-I’Anson

editor of American Maritime Cases since

Gilbert Wright practices insurance and

Award from the

1993. He is a principal in the admiralty

contract litigation law as a solo practitioner

Norfolk & Portsmouth

and maritime group in the Baltimore, Md.,

in Jacksonville, Fla., after many years as

Bar Association. The

office of Ober/Kaler.

counsel with larger law firms. In 2006 he

award, given in a

moved to Jacksonville from Massachusetts with his wife, Nancy. They have a son

formal ceremony at

Barry C. Hawkins has been selected for

the association’s annual meeting in May,

inclusion in Best Lawyers in America 2010

who practices law in Chicago, a son who

honors attorneys who epitomize the

in the area of real estate law. He was also

works in banking in Montana, and two

highest standards of professionalism

listed in Connecticut Super Lawyers.

grandchildren.

throughout their careers. Martin has been

Hawkins is a partner in the Stamford office

selected for inclusion in Best Lawyers in

of Shipman & Goodwin.

America 2009 and has also been listed in

Tell us the important things that happen in your life! We welcome submissions for inclusion in Class Notes. Online, submit them at www.law. virginia.edu/alumni; E-mail them to lawalum@virginia.edu; mail them to UVA Lawyer, University of Virginia School of Law, 580 Massie Road, Charlottesville, VA 22903; or fax them to 434/296-4838. Please send your submissions by February 19 for inclusion in the next issue.

56 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Class Notes

Lessons From Camp PHILIP LILIENTHAL ’65 AND GLOBAL CAMPS AFRICA by Rebecca Barns For many of us, camp was where we first heard stories around a bonfire, learned to paddle a canoe, and got our first taste of independence. When avid camp enthusiast Philip Lilienthal ’65 founded Global Camps Africa in 2003, he took all of the best things about the camp experience and put them to work helping children in South Africa get a second chance in life. Following his graduation from the Law School, Lilienthal served two years with the Peace Corps in Ethiopia as an attorney and helped establish the country’s first residential summer camps. He later worked in private practice, served as an attorney in Peace Corps headquarters in Washington,

Above, Lilienthal remembered encountering John F. Kennedy’s photos everywhere when he was a Peace Corps volunteer in Ethiopia so he distributed photos of our current president.

D.C., and as staff in the Philippines and Thailand. When he returned to the U.S. he opened a law practice in

When camp first started, no one knew how South African

Reston, Va. For 30 years he was also the owner and director of Camp

families would respond. “We thought we would hit the wall at least

Winnebago in Maine, a boys camp established in 1919 and now

twice,” says Lilienthal. “At the beginning, when they found out we

owned by his son, Andy. In 2003 Lilienthal travelled to South Africa, where the world’s

were talking to their children about sexuality and HIV/AIDS, and more recently, when we promoted HIV testing and then actually did

highest number of people living with HIV/AIDS leaves thousands of

the voluntary counseling and testing at camp.” The community, as it

children orphaned, infected, and with parents dying of it. He wanted

turns out, is very supportive.

to find out whether these kids had any opportunities to go to camp,

Back in Soweto, Global Camps Africa extends its reach to

and discovered there were none. So he founded Global Camps Africa,

graduates through bi-weekly Kids Club meetings. The sessions provide

Inc. to see if camp would be an effective intervention. He set up

continuing support and reinforce the life skills learned in camp.

headquarters in Reston. In 2004 the first overnight camp, about an hour’s drive from Johannesburg, opened for business. Camp Sizanani (Sizanani means “to help each other” in Zulu) has six ten-day sessions each year for about 130 boys and girls aged 10-16. Most of the children come from

Lilienthal travels to camps throughout the United States to spread the word about Global Camps Africa. He’s often asked about the wherewithal it takes to tackle what seems, at time, an insurmountable crisis. “The key to me in facing the HIV/AIDS issue,” he says, “is never to look at what is left unsolved, but to concentrate on how many

the Soweto area. Since Sizanani opened in 2004, more than 3,700

children might benefit from what we were doing. There is also the

children have attended.

constant thought that, by other groups copying what we are doing,

Kids play sports, dance, sing, write about their lives, and create art at the camp. Boys and girls learn respect for one another and

we are helping more children than we are directly impacting.” Lilienthal sees Camp Sizanani as a beginning, a model for other,

speak openly about sexual issues — a novel experience for most —

much-needed camps throughout South Africa. Three new camps are

and begin to break gender stereotypes. Lessons in proper hygiene,

in the planning stages, along with plans for a camp in Uganda. In the

HIV/AIDS prevention and awareness, healthy sexuality, and nutrition

meantime, Sizanani continues to change lives for the better. As one

are incorporated into daily activities in creative ways. Lilienthal and

13-year-old camper named Busi put it, “I came here empty, but now

his colleagues call it “serious fun.”

I am full.” ❚

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 57


Class Notes

Bruce Lev has joined the board of

1969

WANTED:

directors of Integral Systems. Since 2003 Lev has served as a managing director of

Robert W. Ashmore

Loeb Partners, an investment firm based

has been selected for

in New York City. Previously, Lev served

inclusion in Best

as vice chairman and director of USCO

Lawyers in America

Logistics, a service provider of supply

2010. He is a partner

chain management. From 1995 through

in the Atlanta, Ga.,

2000 he served as executive vice president

office of Fisher &

of corporate and legal affairs of Micro

Phillips, where he

Warehouse, a $2.5 billion direct marketer

focuses on representing employers in nearly

of brand name personal computers and

every area of labor and employment law.

A few good annual giving volunteers Join the Law School’s volunteer team. Contact Helen M. Snyder ’87 helensnyder@virginia.edu 434-924-4668

their daughters are married and live in Richmond and Fluvanna County, Va. James

accessories to commercial and consumer Ford Barrett recently argued a case before

is a member of the Roanoke Chapter of the

the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth

National Railway Historical Society, and he

Gail S. Marshall and her husband, John,

Circuit concerning the use of suspicious

and his wife are active in the Lions Club.

recently completed a two-week volunteer

activity reports in private civil lawsuits.

They enjoy traveling, and this year they will

teaching tour in Ghana. Gail continues a

The argument was held at the University

take their eleventh trip to Europe — this

private practice and serves as attorney for

of Texas Law School in Austin. Barrett

time visiting Eastern Europe.

the town of Orange, Va.

is senior counsel in the Office of the

markets.

Comptroller of the Currency, a bureau

Frederick Hodnett is quite active in his

Ambassador (ret) W. Robert Pearson has

of the U.S. Treasury Department that

“retirement.” He worked for the Senate of

been president of IREX since November

regulates all the national banks in the

Virginia Clerk’s Office for the 2009 session

2008. IREX is an international nonprofit

United States.

of the Virginia General Assembly, is a

organization providing leadership

substitute teacher in the Hanover County

and innovative programs to improve

School system, and performs civil marriage

the quality of education, strengthen

ceremonies throughout Virginia.

independent media, and foster pluralistic civil society development. Founded at

1971

Princeton in 1968, IREX has an annual portfolio of over $60 million and a staff of 500 professionals worldwide.

William P. Boswell was awarded the

Pearson retired in 2006 from the U.S.

Pennsylvania Meritorious Service

Foreign Service. As Director General of

Tom Carr reports that his son, Brendan,

Medal in 2008 by Governor Ed Rendell.

the U.S. Foreign Service from 2003 to

was sworn in as a member of the bar of the

The Commonwealth’s highest civilian

2006, he introduced critical changes in

Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals on May

decoration was presented to Boswell

American diplomacy, earning awards for

14 in Richmond by Judge Dennis Shedd,

for more than 25 years of public and

innovation and management improvement

for whom he clerked through the summer.

community service in various positions at

and preparing the United States for the

The day after Brendan’s swearing in, Tom

local, state, and national levels, including

challenges of the 21st century. He served as

had breakfast with His Honor J. Harvie

ten years as president of the council and

Ambassador to Turkey from 2000 to 2003

Wilkinson III ’72, and toured the State

ten years as the mayor of Glen Osborne, a

during a critical period, and was previously

Capitol with Her Honor Diana Gribbon

suburb of Pittsburgh.

posted in Paris, Brussels, Beijing, Taipei,

Motz ’68, who was leading the clerks on a

and Auckland, in addition to other senior

special tour. Tom notes that his son

Consolidated Natural Gas Company

positions at the Department of State. From

introduced him to Her Honor Sandra Day

(now Dominion), a retired partner of

2006 to 2008, he headed the international

O’Connor.

McGuireWoods’ Pittsburgh office, and

business division of the Spectrum Group in Alexandria, Va.

58 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

Boswell is a retired executive with

a retired colonel in the U.S. Air Force James Cosby and his wife, Noel, are

Reserve. He practices in the area of non-

enjoying retirement. James retired from

profit corporate governance and serves as

the Department of Justice in 2007; Noel

general counsel of the North American

retired from the IRS in 2001. All three of

Energy Standards Board.


Class Notes

Edward B. Lowry has

firm, Sugarman & Susskind, represents

G. Franklin Flippin has been selected for

been selected for

labor unions, employee benefit funds, and

inclusion in Virginia Super Lawyers in the

inclusion in Virginia

workers.

area of business law. He is a partner in the Roanoke office of Gentry Locke Rakes &

Super Lawyers and in Best Lawyers in

Jim Turner, retired captain, U.S. Naval

America 2010. He is

Reserve, enjoys retirement and tending

with Michie Hamlett

his garden and lawns in the idyllic hills of

Lowry Rasmussen &

central New York, just outside picturesque

Tweel in the Charlottesville office, where his

1974

Cooperstown.

practice focuses on commercial litigation. John McVickar is on the board of the

Moore.

Ralph Hornblower and Cynthia Edmunds were married on November 6, 2004.

1973

Hornblower’s daughter, Natalie, was

Capital Region Land Conservancy in

born on June 21, 2007. His son, Sam, is a

Richmond, a private, non-profit land trust

George Bostick has been appointed

producer for the CBS program, 60 Minutes,

that helps preserve and protect areas of

benefits tax counsel at the U.S. Department

and his son, Luke, entered a JD/MBA

scenic, historic, and ecological significance

of the Treasury. He will advise the Assistant

program in Claremont, Calif., this fall.

in Richmond and seven surrounding

Secretary for Tax Policy, the General

counties.

Counsel of the Treasury, and others in

In April 2008 Victor V. Ludwig was elected

Treasury regarding employee benefits

by the Virginia General Assembly to serve

Ronald R. Tweel was

and executive compensation policy.

as a circuit court judge of the 25th Judicial

selected for

Bostick practiced with Sutherland Asbill

Circuit. He is the resident judge of Augusta

membership in the

& Brennan in Washington, D.C., for 30

County.

American College of

years and was one of the founders of the

Family Trial Lawyers,

firm’s employee benefits and executive

James T. O’Reilly is

one of only two

compensation team.

co-author of Punishing

lawyers in Virginia to

Corporate Crime: Legal

be so honored. Tweel

Lee F. Feinberg has

Penalties for Criminal

has also been selected for inclusion in the

been selected for

and Regulatory

Virginia Super Lawyers and in Best Lawyers

inclusion in Best

Violations, published

in America 2010. Tweel practices with

Lawyers in America

by Oxford University

Michie Hamlett Lowry Rasmussen & Tweel

2010 in the area of

in Charlottesville, where he focuses on the

energy law. He is a

O’Reilly is an international lecturer on

area of domestic relations.

member in the

environmental law and part-time professor

Charleston, W. Va.,

at the University of Cincinnati College of

1972

office of Spilman Thomas & Battle.

Press in August.

Law. He is the vice-mayor of the city of Wyoming, Ohio, and has been elected to

Mark E. Feldmann

the executive committee of the Ohio-

In May Robert A. Sugarman was honored

was selected for

Kentucky-Indiana Regional Council of

by the Jewish Labor Committee for his

inclusion in Legal Elite

Governments. He is of counsel in the

contributions to labor and employee

2008 by Virginia

Indianapolis, Ind., office of Baker &

benefits law and his accomplishments on

Business magazine in

Daniels, where he is a member of the life

behalf of working people. A reception

the area of

sciences practice group concentrating on

was held for him at the AFL-CIO lawyers

construction law and

FDA regulatory matters. (See In Print)

coordinating committee conference at the

the Virginia Super

Fontainebleau Resort in Miami Beach.

Lawyers for business litigation. He is a

Bruce Stanley, Sr., was

Growing up in Miami, the son of a union-

shareholder/director and president of

selected for inclusion

member butcher, Sugarman became a

Glenn, Feldmann, Darby & Goodlatte in

in Florida Super

union member himself as a teenager, and

Roanoke.

Lawyers. He is a

later a union organizer. His Miami law

stockholder with Henderson, Franklin, Starnes & Holt in the

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 59


Class Notes

firm’s Fort Myers office. Stanley practices

Lee F. Mercier has been selected for

Auburn United Methodist Church, and a

civil litigation with special focus on

inclusion in Florida Super Lawyers in estate

dedicated Democrat who formerly served

medical malpractice, aviation cases,

planning and probate. He has been board

as chairman of the Montgomery County

products liability defense, and eminent

certified in wills, trusts, and estates since

Democratic Committee.

domain. He also has an agency practice

1986 and is a shareholder with Dale, Bald,

dealing with licensing and disciplinary

Showalter, Mercier & Green in the firm’s

John V. Little has been

issues before the Florida Department

Jacksonville office.

selected for inclusion

of Health.

1975

in Best Lawyers in

Reunion Year

America 2010 in the

1976

areas of corporate and real estate law. His practice focuses in the

Peter E. Broadbent, Jr., has been Kent E. Agness retired after practicing

recognized in Virginia Super Lawyers as

areas of business law

business law for 30 years with Barnes

one of the top five percent of lawyers in

and commercial real estate law, including

& Thornburg in Indianapolis, Ind. His

the state for his practice in utilities law.

formation and operation of business

daughter, Karin, graduated from the Law

He has also been reappointed by the

entities; business and real estate finance;

School in May, and Kent reports that he

speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates

banking; real estate development; and

really enjoyed getting to Charlottesville to

as one of the non-legislator members of

business and commercial real estate

visit her over the past seven years.

the Virginia War of 1812 Bicentennial

transactions. He is in the Charlottesville

Commission. Broadbent practices business,

office of Michie Hamlett Lowry Rasmussen

Charles L. Howard has been selected

intellectual property, governmental and

& Tweel.

for inclusion in Best Lawyers in America

communications (utilities) law as a partner

2010 in the area of commercial litigation.

with Christian & Barton in Richmond.

Ann Margaret Pointer

He was also listed in Connecticut Super

has been selected for

Lawyers in the area of intellectual property

Fred Gleaton recently

inclusion in Best

litigation. He is a partner in the Hartford

became one of the first

Lawyers in America

office of Shipman & Goodwin.

ten lawyers in Georgia

2010. Pointer is a

certified by the

partner in the Atlanta,

John H. Lawrence, Jr., has been included

American Board of

Ga., office of Fisher &

in Best Lawyers in America 2010 in the

Professional Liability

Phillips, where she

areas of corporate and health care law.

Attorneys. He has been

focuses on representing management in

He was also listed in Connecticut Super

involved in the defense

labor and employment matters. She is also

Lawyers in the area of business/corporate

of physicians and medical care providers in

an adjunct professor at Emory University

law. He is a partner in the Hartford office

medical liability cases for the past 25 years.

Law School.

of Shipman & Goodwin.

Gleaton has been named an advocate by the American Board of Trial Advocates, a

David B. Shapiro has

Don P. Martin was

fellow of Litigation Counsel of America,

been selected for

named in Southwest

and has been recognized in Georgia Super

inclusion in Best

Super Lawyers

Lawyers, 2007-2009. He is a founding

Lawyers in America

magazine as among

partner in the Atlanta firm of Owen,

2010 in the area of

the top five percent of

Gleaton, Egan, Jones and Sweeney, which

corporate law. He is a

attorneys in Arizona

was recently named by Georgia Trend as

member in the

and New Mexico. He is

one of the “Best Places to Work in

also included in

Georgia.”

office of Spilman Thomas & Battle.

litigation. Martin was also selected for

Phillip Edwin Keith passed away on

M. Hamilton Whitman, Jr., has been

inclusion in Best Lawyers in America 2010

August 15, after a long battle with brain

selected for inclusion in International Who’s

in the area of commercial litigation/legal

cancer. Keith was the head prosecutor

Who of Shipping & Maritime Lawyers 2009.

malpractice law. He is a partner in the

at the Montgomery County (Virginia)

He was also included in Maryland Super

Phoenix office of Quarles & Brady, where

Commonwealth Attorney’s office, a

Lawyers in the area of transportation/

he handles complex commercial litigation.

Hokie fan, a lifelong member of the

maritime law, and has been listed in Best

Charleston, W. Va.,

Chambers USA 2009 in the area of

60 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Class Notes

Lawyers in America since 1989. Whitman

focus was collective redress/class action in

Eric Solomon, most recently the U.S.

serves on the advisory board of Historic

the European Union. D’Angelo delivered

Treasury Assistant Secretary for Tax Policy,

Ships in Baltimore and the national

“Hearing of the Alliance of Liberals and

has been named director of national tax in

advisory board of the Maritime Arbitration

Democrats for Europe on Collective

Ernst & Young’s national tax department in

Association of the United States. Whitman

Redress” and “What Did Go Wrong with a

New York City.

is a fellow of the American College of Trial

Well-Meant Idea in the U.S.?”

Lawyers. He is a principal in the admiralty

In June he spoke at the Product

and maritime group in the Baltimore office

Liability Advisory Council’s conference

of Ober/Kaler.

in Boston, Mass. In his presentation, “The

1979

Times They Are a Changin’,” he discussed

Robert Burton has served for over 21

his work with the European Parliament

years as a procurement law attorney in the

and the EU Commission regarding

Department of Defense. In 2001 he was

proposals for class actions in Europe,

appointed deputy administrator for federal

William C. Crenshaw has joined Akerman

noting what consumer rights actions in

procurement policy in the Executive Office

Senterfitt as a shareholder in the firm’s

Europe and Australia could mean for U.S.

of the President and became the top career

Washington, D.C., office, where he focuses

and multinational companies. D’Angelo is

procurement policy official in the federal

his practice in the areas of bankruptcy and

a partner with Montgomery, McCracken,

government.

creditors’ rights, commercial litigation, and

Walker & Rhoads in Philadelphia, Pa.

1977

In 2008 Burton retired from federal service and joined Venable in Washington,

real estate. Mark Duvall recently retired from Dow

D.C., as a partner, where he works with

Dennis A. Henigan’s book, Lethal Logic:

Chemical and has moved to Washington,

the firm’s government contracts and

Exploding the Myths that Paralyze American

D.C., joining Beveridge & Diamond to

government affairs practice groups.

Gun Policy was published by Potomac

practice environmental regulatory law. His

Burton is a fellow of the National Contract

Books in June. The book explores the

daughter, Amy, graduated from Michigan

Management Association and the National

impact of “bumper-sticker logic” on the

Law School and will work in New York.

Academy of Public Administration and previously served on the Council of

gun control debate and explains how the gun lobby’s tireless trumpeting of

Lyn Gammill Walker has been selected for

the American Bar Association’s Public

simple, misguided messages has helped it

inclusion in Best Lawyers in America 2010

Contract Law Section.

maintain political power. Henigan is the

in the area of trusts and estates. She was

vice president for law and policy at the

also listed in Connecticut Super Lawyers in

have four children: Beth, Jim, John, and

Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence and

the area of estate planning and probate.

Danny. Beth is a junior at George Mason

is the founder of the center’s Legal Action

She is a partner in the Hartford office of

University; Jim is a first-year student at

Project. For two decades he has been an

Shipman & Goodwin.

UVA; John is a sophomore at the Heights School in Potomac, Md.; and Danny is a

outspoken advocate for stronger gun laws. (See In Print)

Burton and his wife, Jane Urling,

Michael P. Haggerty

4th grader.

has been appointed to Charles S. Sharp has been elected by the

the North Dallas Bank

F.B. Webster Day has

General Assembly to the position of judge

& Trust Co. Board of

been selected for

of the 15th Judicial Circuit, sitting in

Directors. He is a

inclusion in Best

Stafford, Va.

partner with Jackson

Lawyers in America

Walker, where he leads

2010 in the area of

the finance practice

corporate and public

1978

group in the firm’s Dallas office. He is listed in Best Lawyers in America 2010 in In May Christopher

the area of real estate law and has been

Scott D’Angelo was a

named a “Texas Super Lawyer” by Texas

featured speaker at the

Monthly for the past six years.

finance law. He manages the Roanoke, Va., office of Spilman Thomas & Battle. David Furrow has been running his own

International

firm for 20 years. With two other lawyers,

Association of Defense

Furrow & Dudley is now the largest private

Counsel meeting in

firm in Franklin County, Va. The firm’s

Prague. The meeting’s

office is in Rocky Mount.

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 61


Class Notes

Gary Goldberger has started a solo law practice in the Los Angeles, Calif., area focusing on entertainment law, general business law, and new media law. Email Gary at Goldbergerlaw@sbcglobal.net. Michael K. Kuhn has been selected for inclusion in Best Lawyers in America Joseph Ryan, Jr. ’78

2010. Kuhn is a partner

James M. Campbell ’83

in the Houston, Tex.,

Alumni at the Helm of Worldwide Counsel

office of Jackson Walker, where he focuses his practice on commercial real estate. Ely A. Leichtling has

by Rebecca Barns

been selected for inclusion in Chambers

James M. Campbell ’83 and Joseph W. Ryan, Jr. ’78 were recently elected to lead the

USA 2009 and Best

the International Association of Defense Counsel (IADC), a prestigious worldwide, legal

Lawyers in America

organization. With headquarters in Chicago, Ill., the IADC serves nearly 2,500 corporate

2010 in the area of

and insurance defense attorneys from 33 countries. Membership is by invitation only,

labor and employment law. He is a partner in

following a thorough review process. “For someone who never wanted to be anything other than a trial lawyer, the opportunity, challenge, honor, and responsibility of serving as the president of the IADC is both daunting and exhilarating,” says Campbell, president of Campbell Campbell Edwards & Conroy in Boston, Mass. Established in 1920 by a group of general counsels, the IADC has evolved into a

the Milwaukee, Wis., office of Quarles & Brady. Elaine E. Whitbeck has been selected as the 2009 recipient of the Robert H. Dedman Award for Ethics and Law.

dynamic organization that offers opportunities through which members can sharpen

Established in 2001 in honor of the late

their skills and professionalism, as well as strengthen camaraderie among their peers.

Robert H. Dedman’s commitment to

The annual Trial Academy is one example of the IADC programs. The seven-day

ethics, the Dallas/Ft. Worth chapter of the

course, held at the Stanford Law School, is designed to hone the advocacy trial skills

Texas General Counsel Forum honors a

of less-experienced attorneys. Sessions are taught by leading defense trial lawyers

corporate attorney who has demonstrated

who demonstrate different ways to solve courtroom challenges. Students practice

the highest ethical standards during his or

making opening and closing statements and leading direct and cross examination of

her career.

mock witnesses and medical experts. Faculty review the videotaped sessions and offer constructive comments to students. Campbell and Ryan first collaborated at the IADC Trial Academy in 2005 as director and director-elect, and discovered that they work very well together. “We share a

Whitbeck is senior vice president, chief legal officer, general counsel, and corporate secretary for Alcon, the world’s largest eye care company, headquartered in Fort Worth.

great deal,” says Ryan, an attorney with Porter Wright Morris & Arthur in Columbus, Ohio. “We’re both Irish Catholics, went to Jesuit colleges, love to try lawsuits, and have

1980

Reunion Year

magnificent wives who buoy us up when we need it.” The Law School instilled in both men the ability to listen with an open mind. Ryan,

Martha Ellett has moved from the

recently chosen as president-elect of IADC, attributes that quality, in part, to the

Treasury Department to the FDIC’s Legal

approach of Bob Scott, Charlie Whitebread, Emerson Spies, and other Law professors.

Division (Consumer and Legislation

UVA is well-represented in the IADC, notes Campbell, including past president Will Cleveland ’75, Chris D’Angelo ’78, and Kevin Brill, Fred Paliani, and Pat Conlon, all from the class of 1983. With Campbell and Ryan at the helm, IADC is in good hands. ❚

62 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

Branch) in Washington, D.C. She and her husband, Will, reside in Alexandria, Va.


Class Notes

Sally C. Merrell has joined Von Briesen

acquisitions law. He is a member in the

the public sector services and business

& Roper in the Milwaukee, Wis., office.

Charleston, W. Va., office of Spilman

services groups in the Pittsburgh office of

She is a shareholder in the business

Thomas & Battle.

Babst, Calland, Clements and Zomnir.

practice group, where she focuses on estate planning, estate and trust administration,

William M. Herlihy

Allen Morgan has been elected a company

charitable gift planning, and private

has been ranked by

director of Oversee.net, a business

foundations.

Chambers USA 2009 in

headquartered in Los Angeles, Calif.,

natural resources law

offering integrated services to register,

W. David Paxton has been included in

and has been selected

appraise, buy, and sell domain name

Virginia Super Lawyers in the area of

for inclusion in Best

properties. For the past ten years he has

employment and labor. He is a partner in

Lawyers in America

been a managing director and most recently

the Roanoke office of Gentry Locke Rakes

2010 in the areas of

a venture partner at the Mayfield Fund.

& Moore.

corporate law, energy law, and natural resources law. He is a member in the

David N. Schaeffer was installed as the new

Beat U. Steiner has

Charleston, W. Va., office of Spilman

president of the Atlanta Bar Association,

been elected a fellow

Thomas & Battle.

the largest voluntary bar association in the Southeast, at the bar’s annual meeting

of the American College of Real Estate

Christine Hughes was selected for the list,

and awards luncheon in June. He served

Lawyers (ACREL).

“In-House Leaders in the Law,” compiled

as chair of the Litigation Section of the

ACREL’s lawyers are

by Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly and

Atlanta Bar Association in 2003–2004, and

elected to fellowship

featuring attorneys who “demonstrate

has been a board member and officer of

for their legal ability,

innovative and practical business and legal

the organization for seven years. Schaeffer

experience, and high standards of

skills” as general counsel or staff attorney

is a partner in the Atlanta office of Holland

professional and ethical conduct in the

and who have “an uncanny ability to

Schaeffer Roddenbery Blitch (formerly

practice of real estate law. Steiner is the

inspire and lead.” Hughes is vice president

known as Kidd & Vaughan), where his

administrative partner of the Boulder,

and general counsel to the president and

practice includes civil litigation, personal

Colo., office of Holland & Hart, the largest

board of trustees at Emerson College in

injury claims, employment litigation, and

law firm in the Rocky Mountain West, and

Boston.

malpractice litigation. With the passing

Tom Keane is a columnist for the Boston

of Woodrow W. Vaughan, Jr. ’78, the

Globe’s op-ed page and regularly writes

remaining partners have renamed the firm.

for the Globe Sunday Magazine. His pieces

David is now the only remaining UVA Law

have also appeared in the Boston Herald

alumnus at the firm.

of Charles Kidd ’62 and the retirement

chairs the firm’s resorts, lodging, and leisure group.

1981

and a number of other publications. Keane Lora Dunlap has been included in Best

has established a reputation for calling

The recent acquisition of AbCRO by

Lawyers in America 2010. Dunlap is a

things as he sees them (i.e., describing the

Pharmaceutical Product Development

partner in the Orlando, Fla., office of

Rose Kennedy Greenway as “wretched”

created a serendipitous instance of Law,

Fisher, Rushmer, Werrenrath, Dickson,

and weighing in on whether eating locally

Darden, and other UVA alumni working

Talley & Dunlap, where she focuses her

grown food will really save the planet — in

together, writes Bob Webb.

practice on professional liability defense

his opinion it won’t). Keane is a partner

in the area of attorney and accountant

with Murphy & Partners, a New York-

organization operating in Central and

malpractice.

based private equity fund.

Eastern Europe, was cofounded in 1999

AbCRO, a clinical research

by Darden alumna Dana Leff Niedzielska. David P. Ferretti has

Blaine Lucas has been

Under Dana’s leadership as CEO, AbCRO

been selected for

named by Pennsylvania

expanded operations throughout Eastern

inclusion in Best

Super Lawyers as one

Europe, including Bulgaria, Poland,

Lawyers in America

of the top lawyers in

Romania, Serbia, Croatia, Ukraine, and

2010 in corporate law

the state in the

Russia, and had over 230 employees.

and mergers and

government/cities/

The sale transaction brought together

municipalities section.

more Virginia graduates, as Darden

He is a shareholder in

alumna Cecilia (Vidaeus) Gleason and

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 63


Class Notes

Robert Bettacchi, a former senior vice

office of Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,

president of Grace and the president of

where he focuses his practice in the area of

the construction products division, was

commercial law counseling.

charged with conspiracy to violate the Clean Air Act, knowing endangerment

Jeffrey Levinger is

under the Clean Air Act, and conspiracy

included in D

to defraud the United States. He faced

Magazine’s listing of

a maximum prison sentence of up to

the “Best Business

15 years. The indictment alleged that

Lawyers in Dallas.” He

Bettacchi, several other Grace executives,

is a co-founder of

and the company had endangered

Hankinson Levinger,

the citizens of Lincoln County due to UVA ties abound. From left: Neal McCarthy, Dana Leff Niedzielska, Lukasz Niedzielski, Cecilia Vidaeus Gleason, and Bob Webb.

an appellate boutique

the release of asbestos from Grace’s

firm, and has been recognized among

former vermiculite mining operation

Texas’s top lawyers every year since the

near Libby, Mont. The Department of

Texas Super Lawyers list was first published

McIntire alumnus Neal McCarthy, both of

Justice characterized the case as the

in 2003. Levinger has also been named

investment banking boutique, Fairmont

most significant criminal environmental

repeatedly to lists of the top 100 attorneys

Partners, served as financial advisors to

case ever prosecuted by the federal

in both the Dallas-Fort Worth area and

AbCRO, while Webb of the Tysons Corner,

Government.

throughout the state of Texas.

Va., office of Squire, Sanders & Dempsey

The Weil Gotshal trial team, headed

served as legal counsel to AbCRO and its

by Frongillo, conducted the cross-

Will Lindsey recently closed his office in

shareholders.

examination of the Government’s key

Salem, Va., after 27 years of private practice

witness that exposed the Government’s

and joined the Capital Public Defender’s

Pharmaceutical Product Development

suppression of exculpatory evidence.

Office as a senior assistant capital defender.

turned to Mark Allebach ’98 of the

As a result, the district court imposed

The office, based in Christiansburg, is one

Wilmington, N.C., offices of Murchison,

sanctions against the Government during

of four regional offices in the state, and

Taylor & Gibson for its outside legal counsel.

the trial and struck all testimony of the

represents indigent defendants who face

witness against Bettacchi. The jury’s verdict

the death penalty throughout southwest

exonerated him on all charges. Frongillo

Virginia.

Not to be left “un-Wahooed,” however,

1982

leads Weil Gotshal & Manges’ litigation practice in the firm’s Boston, Mass., office.

Jay M. Tannon has helped create a new transatlantic clean energy fund called

Joe Dischinger is vice president of the Colorado Bar Association. Dischinger is

Michael Houghton

Novus Energy Partners, with offices in

with Fairfield and Woods in Denver, Colo.,

has been elected chair

Alexandria, Va., and Oslo, Norway. He

where he focuses his practice on water

of the executive

is a founder and outside counsel for the

rights and environmental law.

committee of the

fund. Tannon is a partner with DLA Piper

National Conference

in the Washington, D.C., office, where he

Wendell Fleming has started a new

of Commissioners on

counsels private equity funds and other

job as executive director of the LARRK

Uniform State Laws

businesses on acquisitions and other

(Uniform Law

strategic transactions.

Foundation in Denver, Colo., which focuses on helping at-risk kids. “I have

Commission). The ULC oversees the

never enjoyed a job this much,” he says. “It

drafting and promotion of uniform state

is especially gratifying to be giving away

laws, including the Uniform Commercial

money during these tough times.”

Code, Uniform Probate Code, and Uniform Securities Act.

Thomas C. Frongillo was the lead attorney

Since first appointed to the ULC from

1983 James P. Cox III has been selected for

in United States v. W.R. Grace, et al., an

Delaware in 1995, Houghton has served

inclusion in Virginia

11-week federal criminal jury trial in

on drafting committees, as chair of two

Super Lawyers and Best

Missoula, Mont., that resulted in acquittal

committees, and as ULC vice president.

on all counts and was the subject of

He is a partner in the Wilmington, Del.,

newspaper articles throughout the country.

64 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Class Notes

Lawyers in America 2010. He practices with

Jeff Horner has been selected for inclusion

John Serpe recently

Michie Hamlett Lowry Rasmussen & Tweel

in Best Lawyers in America 2010 in the

opened Serpe, Jones,

in the Charlottesville office, where he

area of education law. He is a partner in

Andrews, Callender &

focuses on estate planning and

the Houston, Tex., office of Bracewell &

Bell in Houston, Tex.

administration, estate litigation, and real

Giuliani.

The firm handles all

estate.

areas of litigation with Robert Maguire has joined Perella

special expertise and

Stephen S. Edelson earned an MBA from

Weinberg Partners as a partner in the firm’s

Stanford after Law School and has been

corporate advisory group in the London

malpractice, health law, and commercial

a biotech and clean tech entrepreneur

office. Maguire provides strategic advisory

litigation.

since then. Currently he is co-founder and

services to clients in the global energy

president of FogGusters, Inc., which has a

sector. Prior to joining the firm, Maguire

novel, eco-friendly technology to remove

was active in the global energy markets for

fat, oil, and grease (FOG) from oil refinery

over 20 years, including his tenure at Basin

and food factory wastewater so the FOG

Capital Partners, where he continues to

can be used to make biodiesel — “cash

serve on the advisory board. Prior to Basin

from trash.” Edelson has also founded and

Capital, Maguire was an investment banker

headed companies in “precision farming”

in Morgan Stanley’s energy group.

experience in medical

(using GPS to grow crops using less water, fuel, and fertilizer) and in electric

Wayne Moore,

power efficiency (digital filters that clean

associate professor of

“polluted” AC electricity). Steve, his wife,

political science in the

Meg, and their daughter live in the San

College of Liberal Arts

Francisco, Calif., area.

and Human Sciences at Virginia Tech,

Patrick O. Gottschalk is nearing the end of his four-year term as the Virginia Secretary

received the University’s 2009

A fond memory from the class of 1983’s 25th reunion in 2008: (from left) Craig Van de Castle, Frank Vecella, Jeff Oleynik and Bob Latham.

of Commerce and Trade. Thus far in

Alumni Award for Excellence in

Governor Tim Kaine’s administration,

Undergraduate Academic Advising.

Craig Garett Van de Castle passed away

more than 70,000 jobs have been created

Recipients may be nominated by faculty

on August 2 from pancreatic cancer. As an

and over $11 billion invested in Virginia.

members or students, and are selected by a

undergraduate at UVA he was an Echols

committee of former award winners.

Scholar and lived on the Range. Craig

Lee Guerry married Witney Schneidman

Moore has served as a pre-law adviser

graduated with a B.A. in history and won

on November 15, 2008, in Alexandria,

for the Department of Political Science

a scholarship from the Victorian Society

Va., with a reception at the Mayflower

since joining the Virginia Tech faculty in

for the study of Victorian architecture in

Hotel in Washington, D.C. Lee has two

1992 and has been the university’s sole

England. After law school he clerked for

stepchildren: Sam, a junior at Sewanee in

pre-law adviser since 2003. He also teaches

Ellen V. Nash and practiced with Wood

Tennessee, and Ellie, a sophomore at St.

constitutional law for the department.

and Stone until 1986, when he joined the

Joe’s in Philadelphia, Pa. Lee is with Keller Williams Realty in Alexandria.

National Legal Research Group, where Julie K. Oldehoff has

he specialized in the law of governmental

joined Greenspoon

bodies. Craig was one of the first garden

Don K. Haycraft has

Marder in the firm’s

been selected for

West Palm Beach, Fla.,

guides at Monticello in 1984 and became

inclusion in Best

office, where she

a gardener there in 1987. In 1994 he

Lawyers in America

focuses her practice in

became a groundskeeper at the University,

2010 in the areas of

commercial litigation

maintaining Monroe Hill, the Lawn,

maritime law and

and collections and

Pavilion gardens, and the cemetery. In

personal injury

appellate law.

1997 he became a private landscaper

litigation. He is a

and worked on estates in the counties

shareholder in the New Orleans, La., office

surrounding Charlottesville. The work he

of Liskow & Lewis.

loved the most was the 36 years of blood,

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 65


Class Notes

Reunion Weekend EACH MAY the Law School Alumni Association hosts Law Alumni Weekend in Charlottesville. We asked the Alumni Association for some key facts about the weekend. We share them here, along with some photos of the weekend’s highlights.

66 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Class Notes

Number of

people in town for LAW

1187

(the most ever)

Number of Mint

Juleps consumed at the Kentucky Derby

party

Pounds of

Number of

250+ (we lost count)

BBQ enjoyed at the picnic

174

kids who were dazzled by the magician

or had their faces painted

130+

‘Hoos who picked up some historic facts on the “Hoo Knew Tour” of the Grounds

Largest gift for reunions

121

Class of 1979

Most participants in class gift Class

of 1974

Number of dancers at the Saturday night after party

500+

Belgian waffles consumed at Sunday brunch

225

(at the very least)

#1 reason Law alumni return for LAW to see old friends and classmates

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 67


Class Notes

sweat, and tears that he put into Blackberry

Mark Mamantov has

and singles, both gay and straight, have

Hill Farm, where he created an extensive

been named as one of

children through surrogacy and egg

series of trails, rock walls, terraced lawns,

the 101 most

donation. Circle Surrogacy has had about

and flower beds throughout the beautiful

influential people in

300 children born through its program and

40 acre farm in Crozet.

commercial real estate

expects another 100 or so this year. Last

in Tennessee by

year alone, the agency was featured in the

BusinessTN magazine.

New York Times, the Wall Street Journal,

The magazine has

the front cover of Newsweek, the London

Craig is survived by his brothers, Keith of Nashville, Tenn., and Drake of Crozet, and his father, Robert, of Charlottesville.

named him one of the best lawyers in the

Times, CNN, and many other magazines,

Missy Young, who is no longer at

state of Tennessee every year since 2004,

newspapers, radio stations, and television

Monticello, traveled to England this

and has recognized him as one of

programs worldwide. Circle Surrogacy

summer and had lunch with Bob Maguire

Tennessee’s leaders in commercial real

has clients from nearly 40 countries and

in London. Bob’s wife, Katherine Bucknell,

estate since 2007.

has been growing even in this time of economic crisis.

is a literary scholar and novelist. All three of their children are accomplished

Winsor Schmidt LL.M. has been

musicians: son Bobby just graduated from

appointed Endowed Chair/Distinguished

Cambridge, daughter Lucy has begun

Scholar in Urban Health Policy at the

studies at the New England Conservatory,

University of Louisville. He is also

and 10-year-old Jack follows in his siblings’

professor of psychiatry and behavioral

Paul A. Lombardo and his research on

footsteps as a talented violinist.

sciences, and professor of family and

state-sponsored sterilizations were the

geriatric medicine, at the University’s

focus of a full-length cover story in USA

School of Medicine, and professor of

Today on June 24.

1984

health management and systems sciences,

1985

Reunion Year

For nearly 30 years Lombardo

at the University’s School of Public Health

has delved into the facts involved in

Jeanne Bynum Hipes opened Hipes Law

and Information Sciences. Schmidt was

the Buck v. Bell case in which the U.S.

in Alpharetta (metro Atlanta), Ga., in July

previously professor of health policy and

Supreme Court ruled it was legal for

2008. Hipes Law (www.HipesLaw.com)

administration, and chair, Department

the State of Virginia to order the tubal

consists of four seasoned trial lawyers who

of Health Policy and Administration, at

ligation of Carrie Buck because she was

focus on the representation of business

Washington State University.

deemed “feeble minded.” His book, Three Generations, No Imbeciles, published in

executives and professionals in disputes involving employment and commercial

Bill Stuntz reports that in the spring of

2008, presents his careful research on Buck,

business matters.

2008 he was diagnosed with advanced-

the first victim of a 1924 sterilization law,

stage cancer. So far, his treatment is

and the history of eugenics in the United

Sarah P. Clement is an administrative

going well. Stuntz is on the law faculty at

States.

judge with the U.S. Merit Systems

Harvard University.

Lombardo is professor of law at Georgia State University’s College of Law,

Protection Board in Alexandria, Va. She still sees Joanne Schehl ’84 and Kathleen

John Weltman continues his practice as

where he teaches courses in the history of

Nilles ’85, who also live and work in the

a commercial litigator, handling business,

bioethics, genetics and the law, and mental

D.C.-area.

real estate, and art-related disputes across

health law and legal regulation of human

the U.S. and abroad. He recently won an

research.

Clement’s work involves adjudicating employment appeals of Federal employees.

international arbitration involving burn

She reports that the work is “very

unit facilities for oil workers in Algeria and

Andrew J. Morris has joined the

interesting, involving lots of human

is now handling a hedge fund partnership

Washington, D.C., office of Carr

interest stories.”

dispute with mediation in London.

Maloney, where he focuses his practice

Weltman writes that he and his

on commercial litigation and government

Jory Hingson Fisher is a certified life and

husband, Cliff, were one of the first gay

investigations with emphasis on high-

career management coach in Lynchburg,

couples in the country to have children

stakes disputes involving financial

Va. (www.joryfishercoaching.com) Jory also

through surrogacy. Shortly following the

reporting, professional liability, securities

practices law part-time as a child advocate

birth of his second son, Weltman founded

fraud, and corporate governance. He was

and as a collaborative family practice

a surrogate parenting agency, now called

previously with Mayer Brown.

attorney.

Circle Surrogacy, to help other couples

68 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Class Notes

Christine Thomson

William M. Ragland,

services in Eliot Spitzer’s administration.

has been selected for

Jr., has been named to

Baker previously served as executive vice

inclusion in Best

the first-ever IAM

president of the Medicare Rights Center

Lawyers in America

250 — The World’s

from 1994-2001.

2010. Thomson is in

Leading Strategists. The

the Charlottesville

list, compiled by

Craig Fishman continues to work in

office of Michie

Intellectual Asset

the financial markets department in

Management magazine,

the Washington, D.C., office of Orrick

Hamlett Lowry Rasmussen & Tweel, where her practice

recognizes the world’s top 250 attorneys,

Herrington. He still runs and enjoys free

focuses on medical malpractice. She also

financiers, and consultants who work with

time with his wife, Shari, and playing with

represents plaintiffs in products liability

intellectual property owners to increase the

his son, Jamie (7).

and other personal injury actions and legal

value of their IP portfolios. Ragland is in the

malpractice in handling medical cases.

Atlanta, Ga., office of Womble Carlyle

Kim Michele Keenan was sworn in as

Sandridge & Rice, where he focuses his

the newest president of the D.C. Bar at

Joyce White Vance was nominated by

practice on complex business litigation,

its annual business meeting and awards

President Barack Obama and approved

intellectual property litigation, and licensing

dinner on June 25. Keenan is the principal

by the Senate Judiciary Committee for

and technology matters.

of the Keenan Firm, where her practice

U.S. Attorney for the Northern District

focuses on complex medical malpractice

of Alabama. Vance has been with the U.S.

litigation and litigation consulting. She

attorney’s office in Birmingham since 1991

1987

for four years.

1986

was listed among Washington, D.C. Super Lawyers. She was also listed as

and served as chief of its appellate division Tom Angelo’s firm, Angelo & Banta, was

one of the Top 50 Women Washington,

highlighted in a July 6 article in the Wall

D.C. Super Lawyers and as top lawyer by

Street Journal entitled, “Midsize Law Firms

Washingtonian Magazine.

Pick Up Clients as Companies Turn From Pricey Giants.” The piece reported on how

In January Neil McKittrick became one of

William W. Eigner has been selected by

the current economic crunch has sent

the founding shareholders in the Boston

his peers as a top attorney in San Diego

some hard-hit businesses to seek smaller

office of Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak &

County, Calif., in the area of corporate

law firms for legal work. AutoNation Inc.,

Stewart, a national labor, employment, and

transactions, as featured in the San Diego

the largest car dealership chain in the U.S.,

litigation firm with 35 offices in the U.S.

Daily Transcript. Eigner is a partner in the

hired Angelo & Banta to handle the legal

Previously McKittrick had been a director

San Diego-based firm of Procopio, Cory,

work for the company’s move across town.

of Goulston & Storrs for seven years and,

Hargreaves & Savitch.

Angelo was listed among the Legal Elite

before that, a partner at Hill & Barlow.

in Florida Trend Magazine for 2009 and is Liz Espin Stern travels a good deal and

listed among South Florida’s “Top Lawyers

R. Hewitt Pate was tapped by Chevron to

enjoys her global practice in immigration

in Real Estate and Corporate Law” for 2009

become its general counsel. Pate had been

law at Baker & McKenzie in Washington,

in South Florida Legal Guide. He was also

global competition group head in Hunton

D.C. “Time flies,” she says, noting that

selected for the list of Florida Super Lawyers

& Williams’ Washington, D.C. office, after

in the area of real estate.

serving as head of the Department of

her children, Alex and David, are 15 and

Justice’s antitrust division.

10. She reports that she and her husband, Michael, are really enjoying this period in

Joseph Baker is president of the Medicare

their lives.

Rights Center, a national nonprofit

Samuel B. Sterrett, Jr., has joined Blank

consumer organization that works to

Rome as partner in the mergers &

Richard A. Mills has been selected for

ensure access to affordable health care for

acquisitions and private equity group in

inclusion in Best Lawyers in America 2010

older adults and people with disabilities

the firm’s Washington, D.C., office. He was

in the area of education law. He was also

through counseling, education programs,

formerly with Foley & Lardner.

listed in Connecticut Super Lawyers in the

and public policy initiatives. He was

area of employment and labor law. He is a

deputy secretary for health and human

Benjamin Webster has joined Littler

partner in the Hartford office of Shipman

services in New York Governor David

Mendelson as managing shareholder in the

& Goodwin.

Paterson’s administration and assistant

Sacramento, Calif., office, where his practice

deputy secretary for health and human

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 69


Class Notes

Lewis ’89 is Ebony “Unsung Hero” Dr. Shireen Lewis ’89 received an “Unsung Hero” award from

quite young. That mentoring relationship profoundly changed my

Ebony magazine, for making a difference for children, schools, and

life and boosted my self esteem to such an extent that I went on to

communities. Lewis is the executive director of EduSeed and founder

excel in college, earn a law degree, and a Ph.D.”

of its SisterMentors program, based in Washington, D.C. Lewis’ career includes almost 30 years of mentoring and

SisterMentors’ women and girls are African Americans, Latinas, Asian Americans and immigrants. The program helps doctoral

coaching women and girls. Through SisterMentors, Lewis has helped

candidates to complete their dissertations and get their doctorates.

32 women of color earn doctorates and two groups of girls of color

The women in turn, while in the program, give back by mentoring

get into college, including to Duke University, Goucher College,

girls of color from disadvantaged backgrounds, inspiring girls to stay

and Bates College. Many of the women graduates now serve roles

in school, do well and go to college. They serve as role models for

in communities in the U.S. and abroad, including as leaders of

women of color who have achieved academic success despite the

nonprofits and professors at universities.

odds.

“The impetus for my work,” said Lewis, “is my experience

This spring, Lewis brought a group of elementary, middle, and

attending the first school in my village in Trinidad and Tobago. It was

high schools students from the Washington, D.C.-area to spend two

there that I was mentored by a young woman teacher when I was

days at the University.

SISTERMENTORS VISIT CHARLOTTESVILLE By Shireen Lewis ’89

“An awesome man,” said one of the girls in describing University President John Casteen, who took time out of his busy schedule to meet with 23 girls taking part in the SisterMentors program. The girls sat in President Casteen’s office as he talked about Thomas Jefferson and his vision for the university. He explained that students from all over the world attend the University, and shared that he had recently returned from a trip to China where he met with parents of students. The girls were comfortable enough to ask questions — one

even attended a science class designed specifically for them —

wanted to know if there are equestrian events at the University,

learning to make ice cream using liquid nitrogen. In addition to

while another asked if the University has a particular specialty —

the arts and sciences courses, the girls attended a law class with

to which the president said most students undertake arts and

Professor Darryl Brown ’90.

sciences courses. The president shared a story about his daughter, who graduated from UVA in five years with a bachelor’s degree and a degree in teaching. One of the last questions asked was why one should choose

The Law School Through Young Eyes The visit to the Law School was special for the girls, as many of the younger students want to be lawyers. Professor Brown

UVA. The president said that first-year students would find an

designed and taught a criminal law class for them. Like law

interesting mix of people and would have fun doing so. At the

students, the girls sat in a classroom to read a case and examine

end of the meeting, President Casteen presented the girls with Girl

a statute. They were thrilled as they responded to questions on a

Scout cookies as they presented him with a thank you gift.

criminal case used with first-years, Martin v. State. Brown asked

Attending Classes

case, and where the case was in the court system. The group then

the students to identify the plaintiff and defendant, the type of

On the second day of their visit, the group attended classes in international relations, drama and theatre, and sociology. They

70 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

analyzed the statute under which the defendant was convicted. ❚


Class Notes

will focus on labor and employment. Webster

Los Angeles with his wife, Amy, and their

Leo Kane works at the Financial Industry

had been with Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw

3-year-old daughter, Paige. He is working

Regulatory Authority - Enforcement to

Pittman for 21 years.

on a new novel and a children’s book.

protect retirement accounts. He lives in Bethesda, Md., with his wife, Carol, and

Irene Daisy Williams, aka author Treva

In September Colleen

three daughters, Elise (12), Julia (10), and

Harte, was featured in the style section

Marea Quinn moved

Lauren (8).

of the Washington Post on June 28. The

her adoption,

article traces her journey from U.S. Patent

surrogacy, and

Willis Lanier has completed a judicial

and Trademark Office attorney to novelist,

personal injury law

clerkship for the Virginia Court of Appeals,

editor-in-chief, and co-owner of Loose Id,

practice to Locke,

and has worked in the private sector as a

an e-publishing company that specializes

Partin, DeBoer &

corporate in-house counsel. He is happily

in romance laced with paranormal events.

Quinn. She was

married with four children. He enjoys

Williams co-founded the company

selected by Virginia Super Lawyers

environmental activism and is interested in

in 2004 after a frustrating experience

magazine as one of the class of 2009

all that life has to offer.

getting her first digital novel published.

leaders in the law. Her practice (including

She streamlines the publishing process

the Adoption & Surrogacy Law Center and

and revels in taking on titles that more

Women’s Injury Law Center) was a finalist

established publishers would probably

for the Altria Rising Star Award in June

turn away. She runs the thriving company

2009 at the Richmond National

Mary Bauer was

(more than 1 million books sold, most

Association of Women Business Owners

recently named the

online) from her home in Falls Church, Va.

Enterprising Women of Excellence Awards.

legal director for the

1990

Reunion Year

Southern Poverty Law Matt Myers and his wife, Daisy, recently

Center in Montgomery,

began their second tour as a diplomatic

Ala. She will guide the

family. Matt retired from the U.S. Army

course of SPLC’s legal

John M. Cooper has

JAG Corps in June 2007, served a tour

advocacy, including

been appointed as

of duty as a diplomat in Ciudad Juarez,

litigation in state and federal courts, public

designated legal

Mexico, and is now a consular officer at the

policy advocacy, and legislative reform.

counsel for the

U.S. Embassy in Manila, Republic of the

Bauer has directed the Center’s Immigrant

Transportation

Philippines.

Justice Project since it began in 2004,

1988

overseeing lawsuits aimed at protecting the

Communications International Union. Cooper is in the

1989

rights of migrant workers, immigrants, and foreign guest workers. She has served as legal director for the Virginia Justice Center

Virginia Beach office of Shapiro, Cooper, Lewis & Appleton, where he focuses his

Elissa Cadish was appointed as a district

for Farm and Immigrant Workers and for

practice exclusively on personal injury and

judge in Las Vegas, Nev., in the summer of

the Virginia ACLU and has testified before

wrongful death cases, primarily on behalf

2007. She successfully ran to retain her seat

Congress on issues concerning the

of railroad industry employees under the

in 2008 and began serving a six-year term

exploitation of migrant workers in the U.S.

Federal Employers Liability Act.

in January 2009. She now handles civil and criminal cases of all kinds.

Richard Forsten has joined Saul Ewing

1991

as partner in the firm’s Wilmington,

In November Joan Cohen successfully

Del., office, where he focuses his practice

ran for a seat in the Maine House of

Matthew Pachman has been named to

in the areas of land use and land use

Representatives. In December her husband,

the 2009 Attorneys Who Matter list by the

litigation and commercial and real estate

Jim, retired after 6 years on the Portland

Ethisphere Institute, an international think

transactions and litigation.

City Council, including a term as mayor.

tank dedicated to creating and sharing best

On winter weekends, Cohen and her

practices in business ethics and corporate

Michael Kun is the national chairperson

husband ski at Sugarloaf with their two

social responsibility. The list recognizes

for Epstein, Becker and Green’s wage-

sons, Spencer (12) and Devon (8).

legal professionals who have advanced the

hour and class action practice. He lives in

cause of corporate ethics and compliance inside and outside their organizations.

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 71


Class Notes

Pachman is vice president for ethics

of Andrews Kurth, where she focuses on

Management. The couple lives in London

and compliance at Freddie Mac in the

the areas of antitrust litigation and

with their three children, Zoe (8), Liesel

corporation’s McLean, Va., office.

counseling, class actions, and other

(6), and Atticus (4).

complex commercial and business Ken Paxton was re-elected to the Texas

litigation matters.

1994

House of Representatives in November 2008 and recently completed his fourth legislative session. He currently serves on the ways and

1993

Fran Cannon Slayton’s recent book, When

means committee and the house land and

the Whistle Blows (Philomel Books/Penguin,

resource management committee. Paxton

Amy Y. Jenkins has

June 2009), has been voted one of the top

also operates a private practice, specializing

been named one of the

ten recommended children’s books for fall

in estate planning, probate, real estate, and

top attorneys in South

by independent booksellers. Visit Fran at

general business matters. He and his wife,

Carolina by South

www.FranCannonSlayton.com.

Angela, and their four children currently

Carolina Super Lawyers

reside in McKinney.

magazine. She was also

Amelia A. Fogleman

selected for inclusion

has been included in

in the 2009 and 2010

Best Lawyers in

1992

editions of Best Lawyers in America.

America 2010 in the

Jenkins is in the Charleston office of

areas of antitrust law,

Patrick Jackman has joined the

McAngus Goudelock & Courie, where

appellate law, and

international tax practice at Weil Gotshal

employment law is the focus of her

commercial litigation

& Manges as partner in the New York

practice.

law. She is a shareholder with GableGotwals in the

office. Jackman was previously with Merrill Lynch, where he concentrated on

Robert J. Schmidt, Jr., has been recognized

improving the tax efficiency of cross-

by Chambers USA 2009 as one of Ohio’s

border operations.

leading lawyers in the area of natural

Stephanie Shepard Cobb is general

Tulsa, Okla., office.

resources and the environment. He

counsel of the investment firm, New

Paul G. Lannon, Jr., has been appointed

is listed in Best Lawyers in America

Amsterdam Capital Management, in

chair of the board of editors of the Boston

in environmental law and has been

London, where she lives with her husband,

Bar association’s publication, the Boston Bar

recognized as an Ohio rising star by Ohio

Shane ’93, and their three children, Zoe

Journal. The quarterly magazine features

Super Lawyers. He represents clients in all

(8), Liesel (6), and Atticus (4). Shane is

news, analysis, and opinion for lawyers

major environmental programs, including

general counsel of Circle, a private hospital

in nearly every area of practice. During

the Clean Water Act, the Clean Air Act,

group in the UK.

his three-year term, Lannon will lead the

emergency planning, Superfund sites, solid

board in selecting and editing articles for

and hazardous waste, and agricultural

Richard L. Winston has been recognized

publication. He is a partner in the litigation

issues. Schmidt is in the Columbus office

as a leading U.S. international tax lawyer

section of Holland & Knight.

of Porter Wright Morris & Arthur.

in the 2009 edition of Chambers Global: The World’s Leading Lawyers for Business.

Kay Lynn (Vincent)

Wendy Silliman is a partner in the real

Brumbaugh has been

estate section of Troutman Sanders in

recognized as one of

Atlanta, Ga., where her practice centers

the top 15 business

primarily on cellular communications. She

defense lawyers in

is married to R. Todd Silliman, who is a

Dallas in The

partner in the environmental section of

Defenders, a

McKenna Long & Aldridge. They have two

publication of the

children.

Winston is a partner with K&L Gates in the

WANTED: A few good annual giving volunteers Join the Law School’s volunteer team.

Dallas Business Journal. She has also been listed as a leading antitrust lawyer in Texas

Shane Shepard Cobb is general counsel of

Contact Helen M. Snyder ’87

by Chambers USA, America’s Leading

Circle, a private hospital group in the U.K.

helensnyder@virginia.edu

Lawyers for Business in 2007–09.

Stephanie ’94 is general counsel of the

Brumbaugh is a partner in the Dallas office

investment firm New Amsterdam Capital

72 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

434-924-4668


Class Notes

Miami, Fla., office, where his international

Amy Tisinger was recently sworn in as

Kathleen Grillo is senior vice president

tax practice focuses mainly on Europe and

the newest judge on the 26th General

of federal regulatory affairs for Verizon,

Latin America.

District Court. She was selected by the

becoming the company’s main advocate

Virginia General Assembly, becoming

on policy issues before the Federal

the first woman to sit on the 26th district

Communications Commission. She joined

bench, and will serve a six-year term.

Verizon in 2002 as counsel in the legal

She previously served as the Shenandoah

department’s federal regulatory group and

County Assistant Commonwealth Attorney.

became vice president of federal regulatory

1995

Reunion Year In March Trey Cox

affairs in 2003.

tried and won a trademark case on

Peter S. Vincent has

behalf of Mary Kay.

been appointed

Gregory L. Maurer recently spoke at the

After a two-week trial,

principal legal advisor

Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore on

the jury found in his

for U.S. Immigration

“The Global Future of Software Patents.”

client’s favor on all

and Customs

He is a partner in the Portland, Ore.,

counts, finding

Enforcement (ICE),

office of Klarquist Sparkman, where his

trademark infringement and willfulness,

U.S. Department of

practice focuses on computer-related and

and forfeiting the defendant’s profits for

Homeland Security. In

bioinformatics patent applications and

the past three years. Cox has recently been honored with

this position, he oversees the largest legal

business methods and intellectual property

program in DHS, supervising nearly 1,000

counseling.

an invitation to join the Litigation Counsel

attorneys across the country who are

of America, a trial lawyer honorary society

responsible for representing ICE in

representing less than one-half of one

removal proceedings before immigration

percent of American lawyers. He has also

courts and the Board of Immigration

been recognized in Chambers USA 2009

Appeals. He also advises ICE’s numerous

as a leading lawyer in general commercial

enforcement components on issues

litigation. He is in the Dallas, Tex., office

ranging from customs law to Fourth

of Lynn Tillotson Pinker & Cox, where his

Amendment search and seizure issues.

practice focuses on business disputes.

Vincent previously served as the judicial attaché at the U.S. Embassy in Bogotá,

J. Travis Laster has been nominated

Colombia.

by Delaware Governor Jack Markell to serve as Vice Chancellor on Delaware’s Court of Chancery. Laster practices in

1996

the Wilmington, Del., office of Abrams

Erik Petersen and his wife, Andrea, welcomed their daughter, Marley Joan Petersen (9 lbs., 10 oz.), into the world on July 14. Mother and

& Laster, a corporate and business law

Cory C. Caouette has been appointed to

boutique firm he co-founded in 2005.

the board of governors of the American

daughter are doing fine.

Immigration Lawyers’ Association and

Mark H. Vacha recently gave a presentation

Anne H. Littlefield has been selected

continues to manage his own Southern

entitled “The Current U.S. Economy and

for inclusion in Best Lawyers in America

California immigration practice. He

Its Impact on Local Government” at the

2010 in the area of education law. She is a

was instrumental in founding By Sea

Government Finance Officers Association

partner and current chair of the labor and

Immigration Services in 2002, and has

of Pennsylvania’s east regional chapter

employment department in the Hartford

represented clients from more than 40

meeting in Villanova. In July he presented

office of Shipman & Goodwin.

countries in immigration matters. His

a talk entitled “Bedrock Tools - Bonds

clients include sole proprietors, athletes,

and the Basics” at a seminar in Allentown

Shannon Nash and her husband were

entertainers, business investors, Fortune

organized by the Pennsylvania State

featured in a Black Enterprise magazine

500 companies, and corporate executives.

Association of Township Supervisors and

article on their family’s approach to

Catherine ’04 has returned to the

the Council of Development Finance

financial matters.

employment and labor division of Paul,

Agencies on the fundamentals of economic

Hastings, Janofsky & Walker in San Diego

development. Vacha is a partner in the

following maternity leave after the birth of

public finance group of Dilworth Paxson

their son, Kieran.

in Philadelphia.

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 73


Class Notes

1997

Jennifer Morgan DelMonico was recently

is of counsel with Troutman Sanders in

elected as the secretary and general

Richmond, Va., where her practice focuses

counsel of the Greater New Haven (Conn.)

on pharmaceutical and medical device

Chamber of Commerce. She has served

products liability litigation. Melissa is

on the Chamber’s board of directors since

currently the chair of the Defense Research

2005. She is a partner at Murtha Cullina in

Institute’s Young Lawyers Committee,

New Haven.

which has over 4,000 members nationwide.

Heather Podesta was recently included

Glenn Saks was

in the National Law Journal’s list of 40

recently interviewed on

lawyers under 40 in the Washington,

National Public Radio’s

Kate Henderson Day and Jonathan Day ’99

D.C., area who are expected to play a

Marketplace report and

welcomed their second child, Charles Clark

major role in the nation’s capital in the

on WLRN’s Miami

Day, in January. Charlie joined his big

years to come. Editors with the National

Herald News about the

sister, Molly (3), for fun and games in

Law Journal made their selections based

mortgage foreclosure

Houston, where the Days live and work.

on reporting and nominations. Podesta

Kate is a finance partner at Bracewell &

is head of Heather Podesta + Partners,

impacts tenants. He is of counsel in the

Giuliani, and July marked the two-year

which lobbies on key Congressional

Miami, Fla., office of Assouline & Berlowe.

anniversary of Jonathan’s litigation and

issues, including climate change, financial

general practice firm, Day PLLC (www.

regulatory reform, economic stimulus, and

daypllc.com).

health care reform. She started her firm in

crisis and how it

1998

2007 and already represents well-known Kevin W. Holt has been selected for

corporations, including U.S. Steel and Eli

Ann Ayers reports that a group of

inclusion in Virginia Super Lawyers and

Lilly & Co.

alums — all greatly missing, inter alia,

magazine in the area of business litigation.

Melissa Roberts Tannery and her

gathered at Marylou Brown Houston’s

He is a partner with Gentry Locke Rakes &

husband, Joe, proudly announce the birth

house in Denver, Colo., in July for a

Moore in the Roanoke office.

of their daughter, Hollis Sterling Tannery.

summer barbecue.

named a rising star by Law & Politics

their close friend, Ned Scharfenberg —

She joins big brother, Austin (5). Melissa

In May David Chung was sworn in as chair for the Commission on Asian and Pacific Islander Affairs. The organization’s mission is to ensure that health, education, employment, social services, business information, and programs and services are available for the Asian and Pacific Islander community in the District of Columbia. A group of alums gathered at Marylou Brown Houston’s house in July in Denver, Colo., for a summer BBQ. Pictured: Front Row: Charlie May (2), Craig May ’98, Harris May (4, in lap), Davis Long (holding bat, 4), Magnus Houston (holding glove, 4) Second Row: Katie van Heuven ’99, Ryan Ritacco (3), Ann Ayers ’98, Tate Ritacco (1), Coates Lear ’98, Valerie Long ’98, Don Long ’97, Davis Long (7) Back row: Marylou Houston ’98, Wyatt Houston (1)

74 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

Earsa Jackson has been named among the best business lawyers in Dallas, Tex., in the area of franchise and development


Class Notes

by D magazine. She was also recently

anniversary of Jonathan’s litigation and

Stanley Panikowski was selected by San

recognized as a leading franchise lawyer in

general practice firm, Day PLLC (www.

Diego Metropolitan magazine as one of

the sixth annual Legal Eagle poll conducted

daypllc.com).

its “40 Under 40” honorees for 2009, recognizing him as “one of the brightest

by Franchise Times. She is a partner with Strasburger and Price in the firm’s Dallas

Darren Dragovich and Parker Whitfield

and most enterprising young people in San

office, where she leads the franchise and

Dragovich welcomed their first son,

Diego County.” Panikowski is a partner

distribution group.

Josiah Charles, in November, joining his

in the San Diego office of DLA Piper,

two big sisters, Reese and Sydney. Darren

where his practice focuses on intellectual

Jeff Kreisler’s first book, the satire Get Rich

serves as counsel at Western Union and

property, antitrust, and other areas of

Cheating, was published by Harper Collins

Parker practices at Holland & Hart in

business litigation.

in June. He misses his Law School friends

Englewood, Colo.

and lives in New York City. (See In Print) In November 2008 Kathleen Evey Walters was asked by the Department of the Treasury

1999

to assist in developing a compliance program for the Troubled Asset Relief

Carlos Brown and his wife, Tamara,

Program. After completing her temporary

welcomed a new daughter, Chelsea Joanne,

assignment at Treasury in April, she

in September 2008. Carlos recently ran for

returned to the IRS, where she serves as

a seat in the Virginia House of Delegates.

the director of privacy and information protection. In March she was selected to be

In March Jody Calemine was named

a member of the Senior Executive Service,

Sali and Michael Rakower are happy to

general counsel, handling labor issues for

becoming one of the youngest career

announce the birth of their daughter,

the U.S. House Committee on Education

executives in the federal government. She

Rebecca Brooke Rakower, on August 11.

and Labor. He previously served as the

lives in Northern Virginia with her two

Committee’s Deputy Director for Labor

Cavalier King Charles Spaniels, Katie and

Kelly Riordan Horwitz was elected to the

Policy. He and his wife, Daria, welcomed

Charlie.

Tuscaloosa, Ala., Board of Education for

their first child, Annabella, in March 2007.

a four-year term beginning in November. The American Constitution Society

Kelly recently was admitted to the Alabama

Stephanie Chandler

for Law and Policy has given the first

Bar and continues to work part-time,

has been named a 2009

David Carliner Public Interest Award to

telecommuting as an appellate litigator for

rising star in Texas

Tim Freilich, the legal director of the

Benedon and Serlin of Woodland Hills,

Monthly magazine. She

Charlottesville-based Immigrant Advocacy

Calif. She and her husband, Paul, had a

is a partner in the

Program (IAP). The award honors mid-

son, Isaac, on November 28, 2008. He was

intellectual property,

career public interest lawyers who do

welcomed by his older sister, Samantha.

energy, finance,

advocacy work for marginalized people.

corporate and

During Freilich’s time with the IAP, he has

Riley H. Ross III was elected to the

securities, telecommuni-cations, life

served as co-counsel on a class action suit

board of directors of the newly formed

sciences and medical technology,

on behalf of Hispanic workers brought

Pennsylvania Innocence Project (PIP),

internet/e-commerce, and technology

to America to plant trees under the H-2B

an organization dedicated to exonerating

practice areas in the San Antonio office of

work visa program, and helped promote

persons imprisoned in Pennsylvania

Jackson Walker.

immigrant-friendly policies.

for crimes they did not commit. This is the first innocence project launched in

Jonathan Day and Kate Henderson

Thomas Funke LL.M. is a partner in the

Pennsylvania. Since the first innocence

Day ’97 welcomed their second child,

Cologne, Germany office of Osborne

project was founded in New York in 1992,

Charles Clark Day, in January. Charlie

Clarke, where he is head of the department

more than 400 individuals serving long

joined his big sister, Molly (3), for fun and

for antitrust & EU law. Thomas, his wife,

prison sentences have been exonerated

games in Houston, where the Days live and

Alexa, and their son, Jonathan, live in

based on DNA analysis. In many of these

work. Kate is a finance partner at Bracewell

Cologne.

cases, the exoneration led to the capture of

& Giuliani, and July marked the two-year

the actual perpetrator. The PIP will operate

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 75


Class Notes

Rakower ’99 Directs New West Point Center By Rebecca Barns A few years ago, Sali A. Rakower ’99 co-judged a moot court

Center’s grand opening. Military and judicial experts, economists,

competition at the Law School with Brig. Gen. Patrick Finnegan ’79,

and world leaders addressed a range of issues, including national

the dean of the academic board at West Point. For Rakower, this first

security, international relations, and criminal justice. U.S. Attorney

connection to West Point was an auspicious one. While practicing

General Eric Holder, President Mary Robinson of Ireland, former U.S.

at White & Case and lecturing at West Point, Rakower was asked

Navy General Counsel Alberto Mora, and Her Majesty Queen Noor

to become the director of the school’s new Center for the Rule of

of Jordan were among the keynote speakers.

Law. She did not hesitate. “I jumped at the chance to be part of

Queen Noor described the importance of the rule of law

this historic Center whose mission is so much in line with my own

in securing international peace, and told how her own life has

passions,” she says.

been a journey that bridges two worlds. Her story has personal meaning for Rakower, who was born in the Middle East then raised and educated in the United States. She says she knows what it means to “traverse sometimes conflicting cultures and worldviews and learn to harmonize the best from both worlds.” “It’s a profound honor for me to be the Center’s first director,” says Rakower, whose background as an Iraqi-American and opportunities for world travel have given her an invaluable perspective on how the rule of law can impact domestic and international affairs. In 2002 she served in the prosecutor’s office of the U.N. International Criminal Tribunal for

Sali Rakower ’99 and Her Majesty Queen Noor of Jordan at West Point before the Queen’s address on the importance of the rule of law in securing international peace.

Rwanda in Tanzania, where she assisted in prosecuting Rwandan military leaders for acts of genocide committed in 1994.

The West Point Center for the Rule of Law, the first of its kind

As director, Rakower would like to see the Center have a strong

in U.S. history, was established in 2008 to promote international

influence in shaping U.S. domestic and foreign policy and continue

justice, human rights, and respect for the rule of law in times of war

to provide a wealth of learning opportunities for West Point cadets.

and peace. Its location at an institution renowned for academics

As her first year comes to a close, she has been asked to continue in

and military leadership sends a signal that the United States takes a

her role as Director — an extension she would be happy to accept if

major role in establishing respect for the rule of law everywhere.

the funding for her position is secured.

Issues involving the rule of law — U.S. policy on torture, debate

While at the Center, Rakower is on sabbatical from White &

about what exactly defines torture, and the decision to close the

Case, where her practice focuses on complex litigation involving

detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, to name just a few — are

international law. ❚

among the most hotly debated topics of our time. A significant component of the Center’s mission is to educate military and nonmilitary leaders in principles of the rule of law as they apply to the military justice system and civil-military relations. In April Rakower facilitated a conference to celebrate the

76 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Class Notes

out of Temple University’s Beasley School

and a honeymoon in Greece and Turkey,

David Stuckey has recently been made a

of Law. Ross is in the Philadelphia office of

the newlyweds held a U.S. reception on

senior consultant for expatriate placement

Drinker Biddle & Reath.

May 30 in Dallas, where they reside.

at Hudson Legal in emerging Europe,

Attending the Dallas reception were Toni

with regional responsibility across Central

Anthony M. Russell has been selected for

Thomas Bacon, Steven Geiszler ’01,

and Eastern Europe. He has been asked to

inclusion in Virginia Super Lawyers and

Cortland Kelly Grynwald ’99, Jason

spearhead the company’s expansion into

was named a rising star by Law & Politics

Metcalf, Michael Moore, Karen Randolph

Latin America.

magazine in the areas of personal injury

Rogers ’99, and Kathleen Evey Walters ’99.

and medical malpractice. He is a partner with Gentry Locke Rakes & Moore in the

Ryan Clinton has been named a rising star

Roanoke office.

for 2009 in Texas Monthly magazine. He is

2002

in the Dallas office of Hankinson Levinger.

Daniel Brozost has

Johanna W. Schneider has been accredited

been named partner at

by the U.S. Green Building Council as

David F. Gieg moved from Atlanta, Ga.,

Raines Law Group in

a LEED™ (Leadership in Energy and

to Charleston, S.C., in May 2008. He is

the firm’s Beverly Hills,

Environmental Design) Green Associate.

at Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein in the

Calif., office, where he

She is one of the first attorneys in the U.S.

business law group with a focus on resort,

focuses his practice on

to earn this designation, which required

hospitality, and planned developments. He has

commercial real estate,

her to demonstrate thorough knowledge

two daughters, Kate (4) and Lindsey (2½).

finance and corporate

of green building design, construction,

matters.

and operations, and an understanding of

Robert D. Probasco has been named

the complex LEED™ certification system.

a rising star for 2009 by Texas Monthly

Earlier this year, Padraic Fennelly left

Schneider is a partner in the Boston, Mass.,

magazine. He is a partner in the Dallas

his position as a litigation partner in the

office of Choate, Hall & Stewart.

office of Thompson & Knight, where he

Washington, D.C., office of Kirkland &

focuses his practice on IRS audits and

Ellis to accept a position as counsel for

appeals and tax litigation.

global law affairs at the Boeing Company.

2000

Reunion Year

Amy Ashton Shaw is an associate in the

Padraic and his wife, Robin, live in

2001

Arlington, Va., with their two children, Caitlin (10) and Ryan (8).

Cincinnati, Ohio, office of Griffin Fletcher & Herndon, a real estate boutique firm.

David Bell and his wife, Elizabeth, are

Adam Green recently co-founded the

Her practice focuses on commercial real

pleased to announce the birth of their son,

Progressive Change Campaign Committee

estate, construction, development, and

Andrew Joseph (“AJ”) Bell on February 14.

(see Boldprogressives.org) to help

business entity formation.

Two-year-old Charlotte is excited to be a

progressive Congressional candidates run

big sister. David was recently promoted

effective campaigns and win. The PCCC

to counsel at Crowell & Moring in

has been featured in the New York Times,

Washington, D.C., where he’s a litigator in

Politico, MSNBC, ABC, and the Huffington

the international dispute resolution and

Post. The organization has been praised by

E-discovery & information management

elected members of Congress, including

groups.

Charlottesville’s U.S. Representative, Tom Perriello.

Stephanie Golden and Eric Menell proudly welcomed a son, Jake Golden Menell, in

Eric Magnell and his wife, Stephanie

July of 2008.

’03, welcomed Clara Christina Nicole (5lbs., 13oz.) and Elise Sophia Theresa

Erica Bachmann and Andrew Cerminara were married on April 18 in Pizzo Calabro

Andrew H. Lippstone has joined Saul

(6lbs., 7oz.) on February 15. All are doing

(VV), Italy. In attendance at the wedding

Ewing in the firm’s Wilmington, Del.,

fine — and are looking forward to more

were matron of honor Elizabeth Kinsaul

office, where he focuses on land use

sleep in the coming months.

Dugas ’01, Jason Dugas ’01, Ryan Farney,

and real estate, as well as transactional

Steven Geiszler ’01, and Kathleen Evey

work and litigation relating to Delaware

Walters ’99. After their Italian wedding

corporate law.

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 77


Class Notes

Najwa Nabti Russo sends news that Paulus

working as a partner at TMI Associates,

Geoff Grindeland has been named a rising

Russo was born August 13, weighing in

specializing in asset finance, project

star by Law & Politics magazine for 2009.

at 3.2 kilograms. Baby, mom, and dad are

finance, financial regulations, corporate

He is in the Seattle office of Mills Meyers

doing well and thank everyone for all their

finance, and international business.

Swartling, where he focuses his practice on civil litigation, including civil rights,

good wishes and prayers. Karin Ottens Prangley recently joined the

insurance coverage, business disputes, and

Michael L. Whitlock just celebrated his

law firm of Krasnow Saunders Cornblath in

aviation law.

first wedding anniversary to Monica

Chicago. Her practice continues to focus on

V.M. Arcé-Whitlock. Michael, a federal

wills, trusts, and estates.

John Newby and his wife, Reba, welcomed Jillian Grace Newby into the world on

prosecutor with the United States Department of Justice, and Monica live in

On April 5 Stacey Rose Harris and

February 9. Jillian weighed 7 lbs., 9 oz., and

Arlington, Va.

Daniel Harris were married at the Sixth

measured 19.5 inches.

and I Historic Synagogue in Washington,

2003

D.C. Stacey practices commercial and

John is an associate at Arnold & Porter in Washington, D.C.

civil litigation at DiMuroGinsberg in Alexandria, Va. Daniel is a family

John A. Sensing has joined Potter Anderson

In December Melissa B. Arbus will receive

physician, and completed his residency

& Corroon as an associate. He is in the

a 2009 Women to Watch award from

at Georgetown University in June. Lori

litigation group in the firm’s Wilmington,

Jewish Women International, a leading

Hildebrand, Rebecca Brown, Alison

Del., office, where he focuses his practice on

organization committed to empowering

Keith, Whitney Smith Pellegrino,

corporate and commercial litigation. He was

women and encouraging leadership. She

Alexander Tuneski, and Heather Faltin ’04

previously an associate at Morris, Nichols,

currently serves as an assistant to the

attended the festivities.

Arsht & Tunnell.

Solicitor General representing the United States before the Supreme Court. She

Craig D. Story has joined the J.P. Morgan

Sean S. Suder was

previously worked at Latham & Watkins in

Private Bank in New York. He advises

recently certified as a

the firm’s Washington, D.C., office, as an

attorneys on managing their assets, with

LEED™ (Leadership in

associate in the appellate practice group.

emphasis on investments, capital needs,

Energy and

and trusts and estates. Previously, Craig

Environmental Design)

Andy Beshear and his wife, Britainy,

was an investment banker in the M&A

accredited professional

welcomed their first child, William Bradley

group at Citigroup in New York. He also

in new construction by

Beshear, who was born on June 15. William

practiced law in the New York and London

(7 lbs, 1 oz.) is quite healthy. Thus far,

offices of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher

Certification Institute. Certification enables

William enjoys eating, eating, and eating,

& Flom.

him to advise real estate clients on the

and has quickly and effectively altered his parents’ daytime and nighttime schedules. Andy is currently practicing at Stites &

the Green Building

regulations and requirements involved in

2004

Harbison in Louisville, Ky.

green building, helping them to navigate the complex LEED™ certification process. He is an attorney in the real estate group in the

Catherine Caouette has returned to the

Cincinnati, Ohio, office of Keating

Stephanie Magnell and her husband,

employment and labor division of Paul,

Muething & Klekamp, where he is a

Eric ’02, welcomed Clara Christina Nicole

Hastings, Janofsky & Walker in San Diego

founding member of the firm’s Green Team.

(5lbs., 13oz.) and Elise Sophia Theresa

following maternity leave after the birth of

(6lbs., 7oz.) on February 15. All are doing

son, Kieran.

fine — and are looking forward to more sleep in the coming months.

Jeremy Sylestine was married on February 23, 2008, to Molly Ann Jorgensen in

Justin Dobbie and his wife, Mary Chris

Austin, Tex. Alba-Justina Secrist and

Dobbie, welcomed their son, Jack, on

Steven Gieseler were both in attendance.

Yoshikazu Noma LL.M. and Ritsuko

August 24, 2008. Justin is an attorney in

Jeremy has been with the Travis County

Noma LL.M. ’06, welcomed their first

the Division of Corporation Finance of the

District Attorney’s office for over two years,

son, Keitarou, on June 2. They thank their

Securities and Exchange Commission, and

and is currently assigned to the family

LL.M. ’03 and ’06 friends for the warm

Mary Chris is an Assistant U.S. Attorney in

justice division, which handles prosecution

congratulations and lovely baby gifts. The

the District of Columbia.

of felony-level child abuse and domestic

family lives in Tokyo, where Yoshikazu is

78 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

violence cases.


Class Notes

ALUMNI EVENTS

D.C. Luncheon More than 100 alumni attended the annual D.C. Luncheon at the Mayflower Hotel on June 24. As alumni enjoyed a light lunch, Dean Mahoney introduced Professor John Harrison who shared an outsider’s inside view of the U.S. Department of State, where he spent 2008 as a counselor on international law in the Office of the Legal Adviser.

Richmond Reception The annual Richmond Reception took place on June 11 at the Jefferson Hotel. Alumni sampled hors d’oeuvres while catching up with Law School friends. Dean Paul Mahoney addressed the crowd of 40 regarding the current news of the Law School and answered questions.

D.C., from top right: From Left: Scott Patrick ’96, Professor John Harrison, Lindsay Grinols Simmons ’07, and Suzanne Dans ‘96 From Left: Tillman Breckenridge ’01, Ryan Hartman ’05, Babak Djourabchi ’01, and Monica Welt ‘01 From Left: Janet Schwitzer Nolan ’89, Christine Hines ’98, and Elizabeth Leverage ‘92 Richmond, from left below: From left: Patricia Merrill ’92, Henry Chambers ’91, and Francine Mathews ‘97 Karen Elliott ’86 talks with Calvin Thigpen ’74 Photos by Laura Monroe

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 79


Class Notes

Kathryn Walter recently joined Goldberg

group, where she focuses her practice on

Tiffany Marshall Graves will serve as

Kohn in the litigation, intellectual property,

providing regulatory and legal compliance

president of the Mississippi Women

and labor & employment practice groups

assistance to financial institutions.

Lawyers Association (MWLA) for 200910. MWLA is a statewide organization

in the Chicago office, where she focuses primarily on general commercial contract

Last year Kristin Johnson Aldred married

founded to enhance the image of lawyers

and tort litigation. She served as clerk

Booth Aldred, a medical student from

in Mississippi, promote fellowship among

to Judge Humphrey Lefkow of the U.S.

her hometown of Dallas, Tex. They live in

the members of the legal community, and

District Court for the Northern District of

Houston, where Kristin is a trial associate

advance women in the legal profession.

Illinois and to Judge Richard D. Cudahy of

at Baker Botts. She was recently named a

In addition to her leadership position

the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh

rising star by Texas Monthly magazine.

with MWLA, Graves will also serve on the executive committee of the Jackson Young

Circuit. Dara Zelnick Kesselheim and her husband,

2006

Lawyers Association, an organization that strives to strengthen the bonds between attorneys in the Jackson metropolitan area

Dr. Jared Adam Kesselheim, were overjoyed

by emphasizing community, education,

to welcome their first child into the world

On August 26 Jessica Blaemire and her

on July 22. Zachary Morton was born

husband, Peter Thaxter, had their first

and service. Graves is in the Jackson office

at 9:52 p.m., weighing 9 lbs., 7 oz. and

baby, Brynna Campbell Thaxter. She was

of Watson & Eager, where she practices in

measuring 20.5 inches. “The whole family is

7lbs, 13oz., and the whole family is doing

the areas of labor and employment and

doing great,” writes Dara. She is an associate

well. “We are still in Chicago,” Jessica notes,

tort and general litigation.

in the Boston, Mass., office of Choate Hall

“and are loving it.”

& Stewart, where she focuses her practice

Ritsuko Noma LL.M.

in the area of government enforcement and

On May 9, 2009, Diego Blanco Carrillo

and Yoshikazu Noma

compliance.

LL.M. married Alejandra Bartlett, and

LL.M. ’03 welcomed

they are now happily living in Mexico City.

their first son,

Diego joined Ritch Mueller, S.C., last year as

Keitarou, on June 2.

an associate and has been participating in

They thank their

M&A and restructuring deals.

LL.M. ’03 and ’06

2005

Reunion Year

friends for the warm

Andrew Crapol passed away on March 13 from cancer. He was an associate for

Soohye Cho LL.M. started her career as

congratulations and lovely baby gifts. The

Debevoise & Plimpton, first in Washington,

a researcher at the Korean Constitutional

family lives in Tokyo, where Yoshikazu is

D.C., and more recently in New York City,

Court on July 16, after the completion of

working as a partner at TMI Associates,

where he resided. Andy’s family includes

her J.S.D. degree at University of Illinois

specializing in asset finance, project

his wife, Allison Simmons Crapol, parents

in May.

finance, financial regulations, corporate finance, and international business.

Edward Crapol and Jeanne Zeidler, sister Heidi Crapol and brother-in-law Milam Walters, sister Jennifer Sedbrook and

Patricio Pablo Pantin LL.M. has joined

brother-in-law John Sedbrook, brother

Fortunati & Associates law firm in Buenos

Paul Crapol, and sister-in-law Kimberly

Aires. His practice focuses on debt

Simmons.

restructuring and complex litigation.

In recognition of the many friendships Andy made as a member of the soccer

Juan Pinzon LL.M. is the attorney in

community and his love of “the beautiful

charge of securities and derivatives

game,” a scholarship has been established

for Citigroup in Colombia. He is also

in his name at the College of William &

Xun (Sean) Liu LL.M. and Dan Jin were

due to finish an MBA at INALDE, the

Mary Foundation. (www.AndyCrapol.com)

married on May 17 in Beijing, China. Xun

Management and Business School of

is a senior associate in the Beijing office of

Universidad de la Sabana in Colombia in

Meredith Crowell is an associate attorney

Fangda Partners, a leading Chinese law

June 2010.

in the Tallahassee, Fla., office of Williams,

firm. He is also the marketing director of

Gautier, Gwynn, DeLoach & Sorenson.

the firm. Xun’s wife, Dan, is a TV producer

On May 24, Tom Reece married Jessica

She is in the firm’s corporate compliance

in Beijing. The couple first met not long

Chilson ’08 at Grace Episcopal Church

after Xun returned to Beijing from UVA.

in Charlottesville. Jonathan Light, Will

80 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


Class Notes

Solar Powered Lawyers CREATING NEW MARKETS IN A TROUBLED ECONOMY When the credit crisis hit Wall Street last year, financing for big and

graduate when he expanded his staff this fall. Sean Conway ’09

small energy projects alike hit major roadblocks. Yuri Horwitz ’06

began working with Sol Systems this summer while he waits to start

had firsthand experience with these problems as a renewable energy

as an associate with Akin Gump Hauer Strauss and Feld LLP next year.

lawyer, and he was determined to help solar energy overcome this financial hurdle. Horwitz is the co-founder, President, and CEO of Sol Systems, a Washington, D.C. based solar energy financing and development company. “The mission of Sol Systems is to serve as a bridge

“Like many members of the Class of 2009 I had my start date deferred due to the slow economy,” says Conway, who was a teammate of Horwitz’s on the men’s track team at the College of William & Mary where both earned their undergraduate degree. “I looked at my deferment as an opportunity to gain practical

between the renewable energy and traditional energy sectors with

business experience with an environmental company, and my work

the end goal of making solar energy more affordable,” says Horwitz.

with Sol Systems has exceeded my expectations.”

Horwitz founded Sol Systems with George Ashton, who serves as Vice President and CFO of the company. “The financing solutions

Conway credits the socially conscious legal work in a business setting as a top reason for his happiness at Sol Systems.

we offer our customers have a substantial impact on their decision to purchase solar energy” explains Ashton. Sol Systems helps customers finance the purchase solar generation systems, in part, through the monetization of solar renewable energy credits. Solar renewable energy credits are tradable commodities that represent the green attributes associated with solar energy production. Many states now require electricity retailers to include a certain percentage of solar generated power within their overall electricity portfolio or pay a hefty fine. Sol Systems has partnered with solar panel installers to buy solar credits directly from homeowners and small businesses, allowing the company to provide electricity retailers with a large-scale solar credit

Sean Conway ’09, left, and Yuri Horwitz ’06

supplier they can trust. “What makes this so exciting is that Sol Systems is helping to make solar energy affordable for people all over the country who

“In my first week at the company I was drafting comments for a

only two years ago could not take advantage of this subsidy,” says

state rulemaking proceeding one day and speaking with solar panel

Horwitz. When Horwitz founded Sol Systems in 2008, the company was virtually alone in the industry, effectively creating the solar credit markets in states such as Indiana, Ohio, and Virginia. While

installers about problems on the ground the next,” says Conway. “It is an interesting mix of responsibilities that I do not think I could have found anywhere else.” It does not appear that the work will slow for Sol Systems, either.

competitors have materialized over the past year, Sol Systems

The company currently operates in nine states, including Delaware,

remains the largest solar credit aggregator, an important position in

Indiana, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania,

a market that is estimated to grow to $1.4 billion in the next 10 years.

Virginia, and Washington, D.C., and Horwitz plans to expand to a

With sales reaching over $5 million in a little over a year, Horwitz

number of other states in the upcoming months. In addition, Sol

recently left his job in the renewable energy practice at the law firm

Systems recently began to expand its financing options available

of Alston and Bird, LLP in Washington, D.C. to focus his attention on

to potential solar customers, enabling more customers to take

Sol System’s expansion. Leaving the traditional practice of law does

advantage of solar energy while diversifying the company’s business

not mean Horwitz no longer considers himself a lawyer, however.

portfolio.

“Whether it involves drafting a contract with an installer or interpreting a new state regulation, I could not have started this company without my legal education,” says Horwitz. It was for this reason that Horwitz looked to a Law School

“Our end goal is to get as many systems in the ground and running as possible,” says Horwitz. With a pair of Virginia Law educated lawyers working to make this happen, the future is looking bright for the solar energy. ❚

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 81


Class Notes

Igoe, Michael Bailey, Steve O’Connor,

Casa Grande,” for which he worked on

were ’06 classmates Chris Kavanaugh,

Nick Margida, and Will Mason served as

immigration issues and human rights

Jasmine Yoon, Mike Buchwald, Dan

groomsmen. Also in attendance were: Chris

awareness education. In October he

Reing, JoAnn Koob, Steph Johnson,

Kavanaugh, Jasmine Yoon, Mike Buchwald,

will begin a six-month internship at the

Gabe Meyer, Brooke Nelson Bailey, and

Dan Reing, JoAnn Koob, Steph Johnson,

European Commission Privacy and Data

Molly Crall Light; as well as Seth and Lisa

Gabe Meyer, Brooke Nelson Bailey, and

Protection subunit in Brussels.

(Perrygo) Ragosta, John Myers, Justin

Molly Crall Light; Seth and Lisa (Perrygo)

Lowery, Jesse Crew, Laura Fairneny, and

Ragosta ’08, John Myers ’08, Justin Lowery

Lauren Rogoff; Sarah Copeland ’09 and

’08, Jesse Crew ’08, Laura Fairneny ’08, and

2007

Michelle Bryant ’09.

Lauren Rogoff ’08; Sarah Copeland ’09 and Michelle Bryant ’09.

Melany Grout is director of the Conflict Risk Network, a program that is part

Lars Rueve LL.M. received the Dr. iur.

of the Genocide Intervention Network,

degree from the University of Munich,

headquartered in Washington, D.C. She

Germany, for his dissertation on conflict

oversees a network of financial service

of laws and employees inventions. Virginia

providers and institutional investors

Law Professor Emeritus Graham Lilly

that have come together to work toward

supervised his research paper on a related

responsible foreign investment in areas

subject in 2006. Lars is now a third-year

affected by genocide and mass atrocities.

associate with Sullivan & Cromwell in the firm’s Frankfurt office.

Lauren King finished second in figure and third in fitness at her first figure/fitness

2008

Ignacio Salvarredi LL.M. has joined Philip

competition, the 2009 National Physique Committee Washington State Championships on July 18. She qualified in both categories

Morris International as counsel in its

Ericka Alonso married Kevin Clouther

for the national bodybuilding, figure, and

South America subsidiary based in Buenos

in June in Harwich Port, Mass. Kevin

bikini championships to be held in

Aires, Argentina. His practice focuses on

teaches writing at Stony Brook University.

Hollywood/Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. in

contracts, finance and corporate law.

Matthew Brady officiated the ceremony,

November. She is an associate in the

and Briggs Wright, Sarah Hughes, and

Seattle, Ore., office of K & L Gates.

John Sherman married Mary Hobson

Brian Leung were members of the

Williams on April 18 in Richmond, Va.

wedding party.

Olivier Winants LL.M. has moved from

On May 24 Jessica Chilson married Tom

Spain back to Belgium, after living a

Reece ’06 at Grace Episcopal Church in

Matthew D. Stachel has joined Potter

year and a half in Valencia. There he

Charlottesville. Classmates Jonathan Light,

Anderson & Corroon in the firm’s

taught languages and did volunteer work

Will Igoe, Michael Bailey, Steve O’Connor,

Wilmington, Del., office. ❚

for the Campaign Section of Amnistía

Nick Margida, and Will Mason served

Internacional Valencia and the NGO “La

as groomsmen. Also in attendance

82 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

2009


In Memoriam Allen S. Hubbard, Jr. ’40 August 29, 2008 Vero Beach, Fla.

Thomas Chalmers Ruff ’48 April 13, 2009 Charlotte, N.C.

George F. Maynard, III ’56 June 1, 2009 Birmingham, Ala.

John B. Dinsmore, Sr. ’69 January 23, 2009 Virginia Beach, Va.

Joseph Myers ’40 April 6, 2009 Indianapolis, Ind.

Bowen Pattison Weisheit, Sr. ’48 April 29, 2009 Bel Air, Md.

Robert Homer Anderson, Jr. ’57 April 16, 2009 Norfolk, Va.

Leslie A. Grandis ’69 March 30, 2009 Richmond, Va.

William P. Oberndorfer, II ’41 June 11, 2009 Bridgewater, Va.

William Cabell Garbee, Jr. ’49 April 16, 2009 Richmond, Va.

John Leroy Glover, Jr. ’58 March 4, 2009 Baton Rouge, La.

Carroll L. Wagner, Jr. ’69 July 8, 2009 Atlanta, Ga.

David Barhydt Marshall ’42 June 7, 2009 Charlottesville, Va.

John Izard ’49 July 10, 2009 Atlanta, Ga.

Warren B. Burt ’59 April 23, 2009 New Castle, Del.

James Henderson Abrams, Jr. ’74 March 9, 2003 Summerville, S.C.

William Henry Sanders, II ’42 June 3, 2009 Princeton, W.Va.

John Montgomery Greene ’50 May 10, 2009 Ocala, Fla.

Edward M. Kennedy ’59 August 25, 2009 Washington, D.C.

Phillip Edwin Keith ’76 August 15, 2009 Christiansburg, Va.

James Madison Barr, III ’47 June 10, 2009 Hot Springs Village, Ark.

Peter Clark Manson ’51 April 12, 2009 Charlottesville, Va.

Herbert A. Pickford, III ’59 June 7, 2009 Charlottesville, Va.

Peter W. Hursh ’77 June 24, 2009 Pacific Palisades, Calif.

Marvin C. Goff, Jr. ’47 May 13, 2009 Memphis, Tenn.

Donald Eugene Selby ’51 May 31, 2009 Charlottesville, Va.

Walter Stephens, Jr. ’59 December 7, 2008 Fairfax, Va.

James S. McDonald ’77 September 13, 2009 New York, N.Y.

George C. Rawlings, Jr. ’47 April 22, 2009 Fredericksburg, Va.

A. Russell Beazley, Jr. ’52 August 26, 2009 Richmond, Va.

Joel C. McGurk ’60 August 25, 2008 Richmond, Va.

George P. White, III ’79 August 23, 2009 Birmingham, Ala.

Louis C. Shell ’47 August 14, 2009 Petersburg, Va.

Orville G. Calhoun, Jr. ’52 April 6, 2009 Beech Mountain, N.C.

Janet M. Riley ’60 July 5, 2009 New Orleans, La.

David P. Joyce ’80 July 8, 2008 Martinsville, Va.

Henry Taylor Wickham ’47 November 10, 2008 Richmond, Va.

Henry Clinton Mackall ’52 July 7, 2009 Fairfax, Va.

David N. Montague ’61 July 1, 2009 Hampton, Va.

Marylou Skidmore Wilson ’82 July 12, 2009 Fort Defiance, Va.

Lucien Wulsin ’47 August 30, 2009 Boulder, Colo.

Edwin I. Ford ’53 March 16, 2009 Clearwater, Fla.

John Boswell ’62 February 27, 2009 Hanover, N.H.

Craig Van de Castle ’83 August 2, 2009 Crozet, Va.

John Taylor Bigbie ’48 March 4, 2009 Lynchburg, Va.

Donald Kilgore ’53 March 21, 2009 Portsmouth, Va

John “Bill” Ragsdale, Jr. ’62 September 2, 2009 Atlanta, Ga.

John V. Sylvester, IV ’89 July 8, 2009 Springfield, Va.

Louis H. Glickman ’48 August 17, 2009 Buffalo, N.Y.

Preston Sawyer, Jr. ’53 March 30, 2009 Lynchburg, Va.

R. Neil Dickman ’64 May 20, 2009 Washington, D.C.

Andrew E. Crapol ’05 March 13, 2009 Alexandria, Va. ❚

Leonard Flippen Jones ’48 April 14, 2009 Charlottesville, Va.

C. James Jessee, Jr. ’54 June 14, 2009 Marietta, Ga.

Paul J. Winters ’64 April 26, 2009 Mount View, Calif.

Carleton Penn, II ’48 August 26, 2009 Leesburg, Va.

Myles Cane ’55 April 2, 2009 New York, N.Y.

William B. Brent ’66 November 27, 2008 Virginia Beach, Va.

Henry T. Rathbun ’48 March 19, 2009 Washington, D.C.

Alfred Evans, Jr. ’56 April 25, 2009 Atlanta, Ga.

Charles Larimore Whitaker ’68 April 2, 2009 Birmingham, Ala. UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 83


In Print Non-Fiction

in the documents used in those types of transactions,” Antonacci says. John Antonacci is an associate in

After serving and fighting in New Guinea and the Philippines, Heller earned his Ph.D., and taught at the University of

The Commercial Real Estate Lawyer’s Job: A Survival Guide

Pillsbury’s real estate group. He works on a

Kansas. He left the academic life once again

variety of real estate transactions, including

for active duty in the Korean War, and later

John Antonacci ’02 and Brad Dashoff

purchase and sale of commercial properties,

served in the U.S. Army and General Staff

American Bar Association

commercial and retail leasing, commercial

College at Fort Leavenworth.

Nearly two years ago, the authors

lending and real estate development

Heller’s narrative reflects the

were approached by a fellow attorney

(including ventures that qualify for the

unique perspective of someone who

about authoring a book for the American

federal low-income housing tax credit).

has experienced war and peace through

Bar Association that could serve as a

Before entering law school, Antonacci also

alternating careers of soldier and scholar.

commercial real estate law survival guide

worked as a Certified Public Accountant.

Heller is Professor Emeritus of Law at the University of Kansas and author

for new attorneys, solo practitioners, and

and editor of numerous titles, including

in-house counsel who

The Kansas State Constitution: A Reference

practice real estate

Steel Helmet and Mortarboard: An Academic in Uncle Sam’s Army

law. Intended as an

Francis H. Heller ’41

Administration.

essential tool for both

University of Missouri Press

may not regularly

new and seasoned

Guide and Economics and the Truman

As a young officer in the Austrian

real estate lawyers,

army in 1938, Francis Heller refused

this book provides

to swear an oath of allegiance to Adolf

Lethal Logic: Exploding the Myths that Paralyze American Gun Policy

basic instruction on

Hitler and narrowly evaded arrest by the

Dennis A. Henigan ’77

commercial real estate assignments they

Gestapo, escaping to Czechoslovakia, then

Potomac Books

are likely to receive.

to America.

The Commercial Real Estate Lawyer’s

For decades, bumper-sticker slogans

Steel Helmet and Mortarboard

have framed the heated debate over

Job explains the most common transactions,

recounts the dramatic story of how

gun control in the United States. These

and the tasks associated with them. It offers

the author’s life alternated between the

simplistic, well-crafted messages —“When

practical advice for organizing workload;

demands of military

guns are outlawed, only outlaws will

provides tips for success; and details vital

service and an

have guns,” and “Guns don’t kill people;

resources needed for real estate lawyers.

academic career.

people kill people,” — are catchy and

Heller earned his law

memorable, but don’t hold up to rational

Specific areas covered in the book include: real property interests and deeds;

degree in 1941 and set

thought. Yet they have

purchases and sales; debt and equity

a course for studying

been methodically

financing; mezzanine loans; REITs;

political science, but

drummed into the

leases and development documents;

was drafted into the

minds of many

U.S. Army in 1942 and

Americans by the A

transaction closings; and more. The book has added value given the changes

became a private in a field artillery unit.

National Rifle

in the real estate market caused by the

After receiving a battlefield commission for

Association and other A

current economic crisis. “With the recent

his service in the Pacific, he was assigned

pro-gun groups.

increase in the volume of workouts and

to bring German nationals from the Far

lease renegotiations, readers may find

East, and in doing so he witnessed Dachau

examines the effect of the gun lobby’s

the chapters on financing and leasing

and the terrible fate of so many of his

relentless message and how it has been

particularly beneficial in gaining a better

countrymen.

successful in blocking the passage of

understanding of the terms and issues

84 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

Lethal Logic

lifesaving gun laws. Many Democratic


In Print

reluctant to speak out against the NRA for

Get Rich Cheating: The Crooked Path to Easy Street

fear of the political consequences, while the

Jeff Kreisler ’98

Punishing Corporate Crime: Legal Penalties for Criminal and Regulatory Violations

alliance between the Republican Party and

Harper

James T. O’Reilly ’74

leaders in favor of stricter gun controls are

the NRA strengthens and continues to be a force to be reckoned with. In his book, Dennis A. Henigan exposes

In a world where so many people seem to bend the rules — from Congressmen to baseball players to slick

Oxford University Press James T. O’Reilly and four colleagues at Baker & Daniels have written a timely

the pro-gun slogans as wrong-headed

financiers — what’s holding the rest of

book about corporate

marketing ploys and helps raise the debate

us back? Jeff Kreisler’s first book, Get

crime. As scrutiny of

to a higher plain. “Dennis Henigan has

Rich Cheating, is a humorous, tongue-in-

corporate business

long been one of the nation’s leading

cheek guide to getting what isn’t ours (but

deals increases in

thinkers on the gun violence issue,” says

sometimes seems as if it ought to be). He

the post-Enron

Sarah Brady, honorary chair of the Brady

dedicates his book, “To money, the root of

era, so do novel

Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, the

all good,” and throughout he gently pokes

remedies to address

sister organization of the Brady Center. “In

and prods readers to stop daydreaming

the problem. The

Lethal Logic, he has given us a clear roadmap

about a life of luxury and go out and grab

toward destruction of the ‘any gun, any time,

it — to boldly go where upright, ethical

the historical background of corporate

any place’ arguments of the gun lobby.”

people would never dare.

punishment, which has traditionally played

Henigan is vice president for law and policy at the Brady Center to Prevent

Kreisler’s thoroughly researched guide presents the stories of famous and

authors summarize

out in fines, or in more extreme cases, sanctions that terminate the business.

Gun Violence, a national non-profit

not-so-famous

Punishing Corporate Crime also analyzes

organization that works to reduce gun

cheaters and what we

the latest remedies used by the United

violence in America through education,

can learn from them.

States Government, including restitution,

research, and legal advocacy. He is the

He has the answer for

receivership and monitoring, deferred

founder of the center’s Legal Action Project,

anyone naïve enough

prosecutions, integrity agreements, and

which represents gun violence victims in

to ask, “Why cheat?”

disbarment from regulated fields.

lawsuits against gun manufacturers and

And A he follows up

sellers. He has been a leading advocate

with lots of tips on

preventative programs and offers advice on

for stronger gun laws for 20 years,

how to exploit “some

ways to address the changing punishments

Punishing Corporate Crime analyzes

appearing on national TV shows including

of the people all of the time.” Kreisler

60 Minutes, The Today Show, Nightline,

put his J.D. to use in writing the handy

Larry King Live, and Dateline NBC.

section on what to do if you’re unfortunate

& Daniels of Indianapolis, as well as a

enough to get caught.

part-time professor at the University

Henigan has written and spoken extensively on liability and constitutional issues relating to gun laws and violence

“A brilliant and brilliantly sustained

that challenge modern corporations. O’Reilly serves as counsel at Baker

of Cincinnati College of Law. He is an

satirical broadside,” writes Tony Hendra

international lecturer on environmental law

committed with guns and has testified

of National Lampoon. “On just about

and author of more than 40 textbooks. He

before Congressional committees on gun

every page you’ll find a pithy, pointed barb

provides safety and environmental health

issues. Under his direction, the Brady

worthy of the late great George Carlin.” Get

consulting to a wide variety of clients, and

Center’s Legal Action Project has recovered

Rich Cheating is a Boston Globe bestseller.

currently chairs the FDA Committee of the

millions of dollars in damages for victims of

It has been noted in The New York Post, Fox

American Bar Association.

gun violence. Henigan coauthored another

News, and on a number of popular comedy

book on the issue of gun control, Guns

blogs.

Amendment Protection for Firearms in

Central’s Indecision 2008, the Huffington Post,

America in 1995.

Shoot The Messenger, and the Independent

Anatomy of an Execution: The Life and Death of Douglas Christopher Thomas

Film Channel. He wrote a humorous business

Todd C. Peppers ’94 and

column for Jim Cramer’s TheStreet.com

Laura Trevvett Anderson

and he’s won the Bill Hicks Spirit Award

Northeastern University Press

for thought-provoking comedy. Kreisler

University Press of New England

and the Constitution: The Myth of Second

Kreisler has written for Comedy

performs internationally and resides in New York City.

At the age of 17, Chris Thomas committed a brutal double homicide of his

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 85


In Print

girlfriend’s parents. The facts of the case,

Fiction

mother to live with her father in Athena, South Carolina. An African American

and his guilt, are undisputed. In 2000 he

servant named Calvin Lemoyne ends up

was executed by the Commonwealth of Virginia by lethal injection, one of the last

True Blue

taking care of Billy that summer of 1940,

juvenile offenders put to death before the

David Baldacci ’86

in the Depression-wracked South. Their

Supreme Court ruled that execution of such

Grand Central Publishing

relationship unfolds in the unforgettable

young offenders was “cruel and unusual punishment.” Co-authors Todd C. Peppers and

months that lie ahead,

Mason “Mace” Perry was a respected police officer in the nation’s capital until

a troubled time of war

she was framed for a crime. She spent two

and segregation.

Laura Trevvett Anderson, Chris Thomas’s

years in prison, stripped of her freedom

“Calvin is a

high school teacher, trace the complete

and her career. When she walked out she

brilliantly told tale …,”

story — from a desolate childhood, a

set her sights on one goal — reclaiming her

writes one reviewer,

twisted first romance that led to the crime,

badge and her reputation. There was only

“that illustrates the

the trial, the time in jail, and death row.

one way to prove that she had the right to

darkness, mysteries,

Peppers examines the pros and cons of

wear her uniform again; she would have to

and occasional joys

the court-appointed counsel and takes a

solve a challenging case on her own. She

of life as they all occur: with complexity,

careful look at the execution of juvenile

works undercover and there’s someone

natural suspense, and ultimate if bittersweet

offenders in terms of public policy and

shadowing her — a

clarity.” Littlejohn, who was born in

constitutional law. He describes conditions

U.S. attorney who

the South and grew up there, describes

on death row and how a spiritual advisor

wants nothing more

everyday scenes in spare, vivid prose:

can give a condemned criminal a chance at

than to send her back

redemption in his final days. Is a murder’s

behind bars.

life worth nothing

Despite the fact

He splashed cold water on his face for a few seconds. Then he picked

more than its most

that her sister is the

up a white bar of Ivory soap and

violent act? Readers

police chief, Mace is

vigorously scrubbed his head and

of Anatomy of an

on her own — until

neck working hard to raise suds

Execution will find

she meets a lawyer named Roy Kingman

in the cold water. Every now and

themselves looking

who worked with poor people before he

then he blew through the growing

more deeply into that

landed a job at a D.C. law firm. Together

suds like a breaching whale.

question.

they investigate the mysterious death of a

With the suds thick and white,

female partner at his firm. With every twist

shrouding his blackness, he rinsed.

Execution combines excellent scholarship

and turn they unravel dark secrets from

Splashing about he ducked his

and legal analysis with a compelling

both the private and public realm.

head under the faucet. He made

“Anatomy of an

and tragic life story,” says Victor Streib,

Baldacci has written 17 best-selling

loud noises, puffing and snorting

professor of law and former dean, Ohio

novels on themes ranging from

more than needed to keep the soap

Northern University of Law. “As such,

international intrigue to coming of age

out of nose and mouth.

it is accessible to lay readers and true

in the rural South. With his wife, Michelle,

crime buffs, as well as instructive to

he is co-founder of the Wish You Well

criminologists and lawyers. Very few if any

Foundation, which works to promote

reveals how war changed everything in

books of this genre are its match.”

literacy.

this small Southern town. Through it all, Calvin, the central figure and the man of

Peppers is associate professor in the

few words, emerges as an unforgettable

Department of Public Affairs at Roanoke College in Salem, Virginia, and lectures

Calvin

in law at Washington and Lee University

William L. Littlejohn ’55

School of Law. His first book was Courtiers

Washington Writers’ Publishing House

of the Marble Palace: The Rise and Influence

William Littlejohn won the 2009

of the Supreme Court Law Clerk.

character. After serving in the U.S. Marine Corps, Littlejohn practiced law for 30 years in Chicago. He took a sabbatical year to try

Washington Writers’ Publishing House

his hand at writing and enjoyed it so much

fiction writing contest with his first novel,

he decided to leave his law practice to write

Calvin. As the novel unfolds, 10-year-

full-time. He lives with his wife, Marcia, in

old Billy Smithson is abducted from his

Washington, D.C. ❚

father’s home and taken by his unstable

86 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009

Calvin captures a sense of place and


Opinion Honor Code, Softball, and No Class Rank by Stan Perry ’90

IN AUGUST I was in Charlottesville for on-campus

lawyers, past and present, that we are part of something

recruiting. Boy, what a difference a year makes.

grand and special. In fact, I was impressed two weeks ago, as

Last year, the talk among the Big Law firms, of which I’m a member, was how to get to $1 million in profits per partner — unless your firm was already at $1 million in

always, by the quietly confident but self-assured law students at UVA. So, what is the good news? Is UVA special because of the

profits per partner, in which case the focus was how to get

beauty of Charlottesville, the sanctity of the Grounds, and

to $1.25 million. Another hot topic before The Fall was

the enduring legacy of Thomas Jefferson? Yes and no. Yes,

whether less profitable practice groups, such as labor and

Charlottesville, the Grounds, and Thomas Jefferson make

employment or mass tort litigation, should be eliminated.

UVA special. But no, as important as they are, they do not

Fast forward to 2009, and the talk in Big Law has changed, and changed dramatically — no more $1 million

help prepare UVA lawyers for the throes of modern legal practice.

profit goals. Rather, articles and blogs chronicle layoffs and reductions (performance-based only, of course). Labor and employment and mass tort litigation are now growth areas in this abysmal market. Firms are embracing them like long lost Prodigal Sons.

I’m here to remind UVA lawyers, past and present, that we are part of something grand and special.

All of this makes for an interesting recruiting experience to my favorite place on Earth. Every time I go to Charlottesville, which is, regrettably, only once a year, I view it as a pilgrimage to holy ground. But this year the holy ground is not such a happy place. The students at the Law School face a dreadful market. They’ve either had bad summer experiences or heard horror stories about low offer rates. But I’m not here to bring more bad news — we have all had enough of that already. No, I’m here to remind UVA

UVA Lawyer • Fall • 2009

| 87


Opinion

Nevertheless, there are three keys to the UVA Law

teamwork and a lesson that life is not fair. As UVA Lawyers,

experience that help equip the current students, and those

we know that, as in softball, we must practice to get better,

of us not so current, to survive these dark days in the legal

learn from our mistakes, and ensure we are playing on a

profession.

team committed to teamwork and not just a collection of individuals who happen to be on the same field.

Honor Code: If you’re a self-promoter, you won’t like UVA’s honor code. The self-promoter does not trust his

No Class Rank: If your goal is to be first, to make sure

classmates to be fair, honest, and ethical, whereas the UVA

everyone knows how high you rank, then the Law School is

Law student understands the freedoms that come with living

not for you. What a joy to say, when asked about class rank,

in a community of honor and the knowledge that honor

“At UVA we did not have class rank.” Not only that, but we

violations will be dealt with swiftly and seriously. Lawyers

had the B mean (now officially the B+ mean). How does

face all kinds of ethical temptations — from trust accounts

the lack of class rank better adapt UVA Law students for the

to billing time. For the UVA Lawyer, these are nothing new.

current market? It helps us realize that our commitment to

We walked out of classrooms with our exams in hand and

hard work is simply that: our own commitment to do the

a time limit to complete them. One can either live with this

best we can. It is not, as most of the legal world would have

freedom and trust her classmates, or become paralyzed with

you believe, a commitment to grind our competition (inside

the fear that others will cheat and gain an unfair advantage.

our law firms and opposing counsel) into sawdust. If we

The practice of law is no different — you can either set your

do the best we can, and do so in a professional and ethical

own professional and ethical conduct, or you can fret about

manner, we will survive these difficult times. An individual

how others are cheating the system, the firm, or the court.

commitment to do your best will help you survive layoffs, reductions in force, career changes, and even personal defeats.

Softball: In softball, individual accomplishments must be part of an overall team effort. An individual bats and

I suggest that every UVA Lawyer with the experience

fields the ball but, in isolation, can accomplish nothing.

of the Honor Code, Softball, and No Class Rank can adapt

A batter, short of a home run, cannot get an RBI without

to these harsh times because we know that money will

a runner on base. A base runner cannot drive herself in.

come and go, and busts will follow booms, but our personal

A simple groundout requires a ball thrown by the pitcher,

commitment to effort, integrity, and teamwork will not

fielded by an infielder, and thrown to the first baseman.

change. ❚

Creating that one out requires three of the nine players. If you are a true UVA Lawyer, you understand teamwork. A non-UVA Lawyer might prefer to play golf — an

Stan Perry is a partner in the Houston office of Haynes Boone.

individual sport based on one’s own accomplishments. One

He is one of the leading environmental litigation counsels in

can learn many things on the golf course, but one thing you

Texas.

won’t learn is teamwork. Softball, however, is a lesson in

88 | UVA Lawyer • FAll • 2009


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