新澳门六合彩开奖结果

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SLU LAW Wins Missouri Attorney General鈥檚 Cup Trial Competition

11/02/2017

SLU LAW took home the top prize at the Missouri Attorney General鈥檚 Cup Trial Competition last month in Jefferson City, Mo.

Attorney General's Cup

Two SLU LAW teams competed in the Missouri Attorney General's Cup Trial Competition Oct. 13-14.

The AG Cup is a mock trial competition among Missouri鈥檚 four law schools 鈥 Saint Louis University, University of Missouri-Columbia, University of Missouri-Kansas City and Washington University in St. Louis 鈥 with each school sending two teams. It took place Oct. 13-14, at the Christopher S. Bond U.S. Courthouse.

3L Brandon Rahimi, 2L Bridget Boyle and 2L Dashawn Cason made up SLU鈥檚 winning team. They were joined by the second SLU team 3L Alex Turpin, 3L Gabe Crocker and 3L Evan Stewart and were coached by adjunct professors Chris Finney ('10), Patrick Mickey ('02) and Kayla Williams ('14).

鈥淚t is a collaborative experience, and all of the students work together to prepare each other for competition, regardless of which of the two teams they are on,鈥 Mickey said.

The goal of the competition is to give law students the chance to hone their courtroom skills and better prepare themselves for courtroom practice following admission to the Bar.

During each of the four rounds of the AG Cup, every team tries a complete case against a team from another law school. The students make opening statements, conduct direct- and cross-examination of witnesses (who are volunteers provided by the Attorney General鈥檚 Office) and give closing arguments. The students are judged on their trial advocacy skills by a presiding judge and two additional scoring judges, all of whom are practicing Missouri attorneys or current Missouri judges.

鈥淢y team鈥檚 approach was different from the other teams鈥, and I believe it was our biggest strength,鈥 Rahimi said. 鈥淚t seemed a lot of other teams went in with the approach of winning a competition, or to score points with the judges. Our approach was to win a jury trial, each round, as if there was a real verdict at the end. Our focus was on the jury and not the competition judges, and that鈥檚 why we stood out.鈥

In addition to working with each other and their coaches, the students鈥 preparation process also involved local retired judges and practicing attorneys to judge and serve as witnesses for the practice trials.

鈥淭hey gave incredibly valuable feedback,鈥 Boyle said, 鈥渁nd our coaches made sure we were prepared for almost anything. As 2Ls, Dashawn and I were nervous because we haven't taken Evidence or Trial Advocacy classes yet, but our 3L anchor Brandon was really supportive and helpful.鈥

Rahimi said the experience helped him prepare for life after law school.

鈥淔or trial, you have to find the perfect balance between being prepared, but not too prepared. Trials are fluid, and your strategy has to be, too,鈥 Rahimi said. 鈥淚 work at a law firm that prides itself on fighting cases at trial. Our default setting is to fight, so it was important to me to develop and hone my skills now, so I can hit the ground running after graduation.鈥