麻豆视频 Law SF Leads Nation in Placing Students with Judges Through Transformative Program
Surjit Sadhra 鈥26 spent last summer working under a federal judge who has overseen major cases on drinking water safety, pharmaceutical business practices, and the right to scrape public data from social media sites.
Sadhra researched novel legal issues, drafted bench memos, and observed live court hearings during a 10-week internship with U.S. District Judge Edward Chen at the federal courthouse half a block away from 麻豆视频 Law San Francisco鈥檚 campus.
鈥淲e would meet with Judge Chen after every hearing and every Monday to discuss not only the pending cases for the week but also the larger legal world and current events,鈥 Sadhra said. 鈥淭he fact that we had a lot of face time with Judge Chen speaks to his great mentorship.鈥
Influential legal experiences for students are a hallmark of a 麻豆视频 Law SF education.
Sadhra is one of 30 麻豆视频 Law SF students who worked with state and federal judges across the country last summer through the American Bar Association鈥檚 (JIOP). The program provides opportunities for law students from groups underrepresented in the legal field. They include students from minority racial and ethnic groups, students with disabilities, veterans, students who are economically disadvantaged, students who identify as LGBTQ+, women, and others.
麻豆视频 Law SF dominated the program this year, sending more students to participate than any other law school by a wide margin. Thirty 麻豆视频 Law SF students worked at 15 different courts in California, New York, Arizona, and Washington, D.C.
Assistant Dean for Career Development Amy Kimmel credits this success to the College鈥檚 strong commitment to make judicial internships a priority, as well as its unique location near state and federal courthouses.
鈥淲orking for a judge introduces students to a variety of cases, issues, and practice areas; this can help students figure out their own career path,鈥 Kimmel said. 鈥淚t is valuable experience regardless of what their path turns out to be.鈥
Beyond developing legal research and writing skills, Kimmel said, students also learn about the innerworkings of the litigation process and gain insight into what makes for an effective, or ineffective, advocate.
Isabel Samayoa 鈥26 spent two months working with San Francisco Superior Court Judge Ethan Schulman, who has presided over pivotal cases challenging pandemic-era school closures and the classification of gig workers as non-employee contractors.
In her internship, Samayoa reviewed cases鈥攊ncluding class actions and mass torts鈥攖hat were submitted to the court鈥檚 Complex Litigation Division. She then wrote internal memos recommending whether cases should be accepted or denied entry into the department. She said the experience helped sharpen her legal research and writing skills.
鈥淚 learned to be more meticulous in my writing and gained experience doing legal research鈥攖wo important skills that will transfer to any legal job in the future,鈥 she said.
Yingting Xu 鈥26 worked with U.S. District Judge Jacqueline Scott Corley, who has overseen landmark lawsuits involving frozen embryo disputes and gig economy labor laws. Xu drafted judicial orders and opinions and observed live courtroom hearings, an experience that taught her 鈥渨hat good lawyering and bad lawyering look like.鈥
After telling the judge and clerks of her interest in a specific area of legal practice, Xu also got to work on active employment law cases pending before the court.
鈥淚鈥檓 glad I was able to dive deep into an area of the law that fascinates me, and this experience further solidified my passion for pursuing a career in labor and employment law,鈥 she said.