Open House for Clinics & Externship Program

Thursday, October 18th | 12:30pm in the Blue Lounge

2Ls &3Ls: Are you interested in registering for a clinic and/or doing an externship? Please join GPS for an Open House with our clinical and experiential faculty. Directors and student representatives from each of Duke Law’s clinics and Professor Anne Gordon from the Externship Program will be available to answer questions about their work and specific projects. Food will be served. Space may be limited, so please RSVP to https://goo.gl/forms/G4qq5GjihZgkqvWv1. Sponsored by the Government and Public Service Society. For more information, please contact Amanda Ng at amanda.ng@duke.edu.

Executive Power and the Office of Legal Counsel: A Conversation with Walter Dellinger

Thursday, January 24th | 12:30pm in Room 3041

Professor Walter Dellinger (former Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel) discusses the role OLC plays in Executive decision making, key moments and figures in the Office’s history, as well as his time leading the office during the Clinton Administration. Moderated by Professor Jeff Powell (former Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel). Co-sponsored by the American Constitution Society, the Federalist Society, and the Government and Public Interest Society. For more information, please contact Harrison Newman harrison.newman@duke.edu.

Cookies & Coffee with Public Interest Faculty

Tuesday, November 6th | 2:30pm in Star Commons

Join the Government & Public Service Society for an opportunity to speak with Duke Law Faculty about their public interest careers over cookies and coffee. Professors and students can drop in at their leisure to mingle with other members of Duke Law’s public interest community. List of attending faculty to be published soon!

Sponsored by the Government & Public Service Society. For more information, please contact Ellie Shingleton at eleanor.shingleton@duke.edu.

Matthew Eible, ’19

U.S. Department of Justice’s Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division – Washington, D.C.

I spent the final six weeks of my summer as a SLIP intern with the Civil Division of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Commercial Litigation Branch. During my internship, I assisted attorneys in the Civil Frauds, National Courts, Corporate / Financial, and Foreign Litigation sections of the Commercial Litigation Branch with various assignments in support of the Justice Department’s mission. As a student interested in both litigation and public service work, this internship was an unparalleled opportunity to gain experience in these areas.

My time with the Commercial Litigation Branch exposed me to numerous areas of law that I had not previously studied. This included bankruptcy law, statutory requirements for civil fraud liability, and the imposition of moral damages by foreign states. At the same time, I was able to utilize various doctrines I reviewed during my coursework at Duke Law to contribute to the Branch’s efforts, including rules for preclusion and for state sovereign immunity. This work resulted in an excellent mix of assignments that required me to both hone my previous understanding of certain areas of law while also learning new legal rules in subjects I have not yet studied.

Additionally, the assignments in my portfolio required that I both research and provide summaries of discrete issues and cases for ongoing litigation matters and also generate research memoranda addressing areas of law with long-term impacts for the Branch’s work. This gave me experience in focusing on individual issues in present matters while also providing research for the future benefit of the Department.

Further, the Commercial Litigation Branch offered an enjoyable environment to meet government attorneys practicing various areas of the law. I was provided four dedicated mentors, each from a different section within the Commercial Litigation Branch, and the Branch also held a number of events to meet and socialize with current attorneys. These included events outside of the office and also events during the lunch hour where attorneys would share their past experiences prior to working for the Commercial Litigation Branch.

The Justice Department as a whole also offered numerous events for its interns. I took advantage of a guided tour of the U.S. Supreme Court, and I also attended a career fair the Department held that allowed its interns to speak with attorneys working throughout the Department. I also attended a very informative event led by members of the Department’s recruiting team that provided insight into applying for and working in the Justice Department as an Honors Attorney that will be useful when I seek to apply to the Department following my post-graduate clerkship.

Submitted August 13, 2018

GPI Speaker Series: Careers in Government

Friday, September 28th | 12:30pm in Room 4047

Please join us for another panel in our series highlighting a range of government and public interest careers. The program will cover a range of careers in government. Hear what it is like to practice with from our panelists:

Uchenna Evans, L’07 (U.S. Dept. of Labor, Office of the Solicitor)
Uchenna is an attorney in the Division of Employment & Training Legal Services at the U.S. Department of Labor, Office of the Solicitor.  She started in the office as an Honors Attorney following her graduation from Duke Law in 2007.

Katelyn Love, L’11 (Deputy General Counsel at the N.C. State Board of Elections & Ethics Enforcement)
Katelyn is the Deputy General Counsel at the NC State Board of Elections and Law Enforcement.  When she graduated from Duke Law in 2011 she clerked on the US Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.  She then was an Asylum Office and later an Associate Counsel for the US Citizenship and Immigration Services.

Kimberly Rehberg, L’94 (Senior Asst. City Attorney, City of Durham)
Kimberly is a Senior Assistant City Attorney for the City of Durham where she has worked since 2005.  She graduated from Duke Law in 1994 and has worked for the NC Association of County Commissioners, as an Assistant County Attorney in Durham, and as an Assistant Professor at the UNC School of Government.

Erin Reis (U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development)
Erin is an attorney advisor with the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development in Greensboro, NC. She started in the office in 2011 as an Honors Attorney when she graduated from the University of NC School of Law with her Juris Doctor  and a Masters in Regional Planning.

Sponsored by the Office of Public Interest and Pro Bono, the Career and Professional Development Center, and the Government and Public Service Society (GPS). Lunch will be provided, please bring your own beverage. For more information, contact Stella Boswell at boswell@law.duke.edu.

Andrew Toig, ’20

Legal Aid of North Carolina – Greenville, North Carolina

My time at the Greenville office for Legal Aid of North Carolina was enjoyable and rewarding. Unfortunately, the office was not able to provide me with the opportunity to represent a client in an administrative hearing due to lack of availability. However, in all other ways it exceeded my expectations. I found each attorney in the local office to be incredibly helpful and accommodating. They were all willing to answer questions, give me varied work, and allow me to attend court sessions if I chose.

At the time, I was the only intern. This provided me with a good deal of flexibility to choose tasks that were of interest to me, and to learn from all the attorneys in the office. Unlike many interns at other offices, I always had a personal desk and computer. While not essential, this made my work easier to manage and organize.

This summer, I gained experience with many of the issues faced by people in Eastern North Carolina, including many issues related to rural poverty. I was able to assist with many domestic violence protective orders (DVPO, or 50B order), including negotiating consent decrees with the opposing counsel. I found the DVPO process to be interesting and rewarding, as we were able to get immediate relief for our clients and could personally see their relief and gratitude.

I assisted two separate attorneys with Social Security Disability benefits appeals before an Administrative Law Judge. In one case, for which we had significant advanced notice, I reviewed medical records, spoke to teachers and other references and helped to develop a theory of the case to meet the legal standards and participated in writing a brief. In this case, we received a favorable decision at the hearing. For a different client, I assisted one of the attorneys in preparing for his first SSDA case. Here, we did not have enough notice to prepare a brief, but I was able to help build and review the factual record, as well as prepare our theory for the hearing.

In another interesting matter, I assisted with a claim for unfair and deceptive trade practices against a landlord for unfit housing. Here, I prepared a memorandum of law to be used at trial. This situation gave me a surprising look into the workings of the courts. Although the law is well settled in this area, we expected the elected judge in that district to decide the case based on local tradition and the fact that the defendant is influential in the community. As such, we prepared for trial with the expectation that the case would need to be appealed. It was interesting to observe the internal strategy sessions in anticipation of this outcome.

At LANC Greenville, I gained experience not only with substantive law, but also with the social and cultural conventions that come with practicing in many small communities. It was very personally and professionally rewarding to develop close relationships with clients, and then be able to obtain relief for them. While many may be put off by the prospect of spending their summer in a smaller city, I found that it afforded me great flexibility and an opportunity to get to know the attorneys (and some judges) much more closely.

Submitted August 24, 2018