Law Homepage | Today at 黑料不打烊 | 黑料不打烊 /u/news Fri, 12 Jun 2026 14:18:13 -0400 en-US hourly 1 Raising the bar: Class of 2025 sets 黑料不打烊 Law record for first-time bar passage /u/news/2026/06/11/raising-the-bar-class-of-2025-sets-elon-law-record-for-first-time-bar-passage/ Thu, 11 Jun 2026 13:02:09 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049966 黑料不打烊 Law’s Class of 2025 achieved the highest overall first-time bar passage rate in the law school’s history, with 90.9% of graduates passing a bar examination in North Carolina and 11 other states where it was administered this spring.

The record surpassed the previous high of 82.7%, set by 黑料不打烊 Law’s charter class in 2009. In all, 132 of 136 December graduates sat for a bar examination in winter and spring 2026.

鈥淲e are incredibly proud of the Class of 2025,鈥 Dean Zak Kramer said. 鈥淥ur graduates put in the work and supported each other along the way. Together, they raised the bar for all future 黑料不打烊 Law graduates.鈥

The nationwide result comes two months after 黑料不打烊 Law announced a record 91.96% first-time pass rate on the February 2026 North Carolina Bar Exam. The newly compiled data provides a broader measure of graduate success, showing that 90.9% of the law school’s 132 graduates who sat for a bar examination passed on their first attempt, regardless of jurisdiction.

The results also reflect the advantages of 黑料不打烊 Law’s accelerated 2.5-year J.D. curriculum in Greensboro and聽鈥 beginning in Fall 2027 鈥 Charlotte. Students graduate in December, sit for the February bar exam and, upon passing, can begin practicing law months earlier than graduates of traditional law programs. The accelerated timeline allows graduates to enter the profession and begin earning sooner.

The energy in the building around the bar exam has changed. They feel it. We all feel it. We’re looking forward to continuing this trajectory.

鈥 Assistant Dean for Academic Success Jenny Lane

This year鈥檚 record-setting performance reflects a culture shift at 黑料不打烊 Law and growing momentum around the law school’s programs and outcomes. 黑料不打烊 Law adopted a “One and Done” motto and mindset around the bar exam, with faculty and staff expanding academic support initiatives. In particular, the Office of Academic Success provided additional coaching, workshops, practice examinations and individualized support to reinforce that message throughout students’ legal education and bar preparation.

鈥淲hat is special about this class is that they truly embodied 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 鈥極ne and Done鈥 mission,鈥 said Jenny Lane, assistant dean for academic success. 鈥淭hey understood the power of coming together as a community and conquering the bar exam.

鈥淚t matters when we invest in students and believe in them. The energy in the building around the bar exam has changed. They feel it. We all feel it. We’re looking forward to continuing this trajectory.鈥

Twenty graduates sat for bar examinations in 11 states outside North Carolina. Seventeen passed on their first attempt, including every graduate who sat in nine of those jurisdictions.

For graduates, passing the bar exam marks the culmination of years of legal study and the beginning of professional practice. For 黑料不打烊 Law, the Class of 2025’s record-setting results reflect the success of a model of legal education built around experiential learning, practical training, and preparing students to enter the legal profession ready to serve clients and communities from day one.

鈥淭he value proposition of this law school is incredible,鈥 Kramer said. 鈥淎 skills-based education, in 2.5 years, with incredible outcomes like this. Big things are happening at 黑料不打烊 Law and we鈥檙e just getting started.鈥

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黑料不打烊 Law Advisory Board adds three accomplished legal leaders /u/news/2026/06/10/elon-law-advisory-board-adds-three-accomplished-legal-leaders/ Wed, 10 Jun 2026 15:51:02 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049917 Three attorneys with expertise in business and technology will bring their insights to 黑料不打烊 School of Law as the newest members of its Advisory Board.

Joining the board this spring are Holland Hawkins Lamikanra, vice president and assistant general counsel at Truist; Marla Crawford, general counsel at Cimplifi; and Jack Hicks, partner at Womble Bond Dickinson LLP and former adjunct professor at 黑料不打烊 Law.

黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 advisory board is comprised of 21 members including legal, business and community leaders from across the country. It counsels the law school鈥檚 leadership in its strategic vision and mission of preparing practice-ready lawyers through experiential and engaged legal education.

The board is chaired by Ellen Gregg, a retired聽partner with Womble Bond Dickinson LLP and veteran trial attorney,聽recognized for her leadership in complex litigation, legal technology and professional development. She previously served on the N.C. Chief Justice’s Commission on Professionalism.

 

New 黑料不打烊 Law Advisory Board Members:

portrait of Marla Crawford
Marla Crawford

Marla Crawford

Tuckahoe, New York

General Counsel of Cimplifi

Marla Crawford serves as general counsel of Cimplifi, a leading integrated legal services provider, which combines cutting-edge technology with deep expertise to simplify eDiscovery and contract analytics for corporate legal teams and law firms.聽She is a graduate of Duke University and Boston University School of Law. Crawford brings more than 35 years of experience in the legal industry, including more than two decades at Jones Day, where she focused on discovery in complex litigation matters. She also served as associate general counsel for Goldman Sachs where she built and led the firm鈥檚 global eDiscovery practice and focused on complex commercial and securities litigation and regulatory investigations. Marla sits on various advisory boards focused on legal technology. She and her husband, James, live in Westchester County, New York.

portrait of Jack Hicks
Jack Hicks

Jack Hicks

Greensboro, North Carolina

Partner at Womble Bond Dickinson LLP

Jack Hicks is a partner at Womble Bond Dickinson, where he advises clients with legal strategies to protect their intellectual property in the global marketplace. He helps lead the firm’s manufacturing industry sector, representing a range of industries, including manufacturing, food and beverage and apparel. He was a founding member of the firm’s innovation board and is among the AI Champions at the firm. Hicks holds bachelor’s and master’s degrees in mechanical engineering from the University of Virginia and earned his J.D. from University of Texas School of Law. He previously served as an adjunct professor at 黑料不打烊 Law and delivered the commencement address for the Class of 2023. Active in the Greensboro community, Hicks has served on the board of directors of the National Conference for Community and Justice of the Piedmont Triad and has been recognized in 鈥淣orth Carolina Super Lawyer鈥 and other publications. He and his wife, Sharon, live in Greensboro and have two adult children.

portrait of Holland Hawkins Lamikanra
Holland Hawkins Lamikanra

Holland Hawkins Lamikanra

Charlotte, North Carolina

Vice President and Assistant General Counsel at Truist

Holland Hawkins Lamikanra is a vice president and assistant general counsel at Truist Bank, where she advises on legal matters related to the lending activities of the commercial community bank. She earned her degrees from the University of Louisville and Loyola University Chicago School of Law. Prior to joining Truist, she held in-house counsel roles at Fidelity National Financial, focusing on real estate transactions and secured lending, and practiced law at Seyfarth Shaw LLP and Frost Brown Todd LLC. Holland lives in Charlotte with her husband, Olufemi 鈥淔emi鈥 Lamikanra 鈥12 G鈥15, and their 9-month-old son, Lennox.

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黑料不打烊 Law meets ABA approval to launch full-time Charlotte program in Fall 2027 /u/news/2026/06/08/elon-law-meets-aba-approval-to-launch-full-time-charlotte-program-in-fall-2027/ Mon, 08 Jun 2026 11:26:14 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049727 黑料不打烊 School of Law has been approved by the American Bar Association to open a full-time law program in Charlotte planned for launch in Fall 2027.

Applications will be accepted starting Sept. 1, 2026.

The ABA approval clears the way for 黑料不打烊 Law to expand its nationally recognized model of full-time legal education to North Carolina’s largest city. At that point, 黑料不打烊 Law will offer three pathways to a law degree in North Carolina: a full-time program in Greensboro, a full-time program in Charlotte and the part-time 黑料不打烊 Law Flex Program in Charlotte.

“This comes at an incredible moment for 黑料不打烊 Law,” said 黑料不打烊 Law Dean Zak Kramer. “Within the last year, we’ve celebrated historic bar passage rates and employment outcomes for our graduates, along with record enrollment and student applications. The ABA’s approval of our Charlotte program builds on that momentum, allowing 黑料不打烊 Law to bring our signature approach to legal education to one of the nation’s fastest-growing cities.”

The inaugural Charlotte class, consisting of up to 75 students, will begin studies in August 2027 on the campus of Queens University of Charlotte. The charter cohort will graduate in December 2029, following 黑料不打烊 Law’s existing 2.5-year, seven-trimester academic calendar in Greensboro. The 黑料不打烊 Law Flex Program will also begin holding its part-time evening classes on the Queens campus in Fall 2027.

A group of law students taking notes during a classroom lecture.
The part-time Flex Program in Charlotte will enroll its third class of up to 50 students in August 2026. More than 75 students have enrolled since 2024.

The full-time Charlotte program will replicate the innovative curriculum established at 黑料不打烊 Law’s Greensboro campus. The hallmark of 黑料不打烊 Law’s experiential, skills-based, community-centered approach to legal education is the Residency-in-Practice Program: a course-connected placement that pairs every student with a practicing attorney or judge during the winter or spring of their second year.

That experience moves students beyond studying the law to begin living it 鈥 working alongside attorneys and judges, serving clients and communities, and developing the professional judgment and practical skills expected of new lawyers. Students return to campus with greater confidence, stronger professional connections and a clearer sense of the kind of lawyer they will become.

黑料不打烊 Law is in the early stages of hiring a full complement of professors, administrators and student support personnel who will lead the full-time program in Charlotte. The move aligns with the proposed merger of 黑料不打烊 and Queens University, which remains subject to final approval from SACSCOC and the U.S. Department of Education.

黑料不打烊 leaders are working closely with Queens University to ensure law students benefit from a vibrant campus experience and the resources of a thriving university community.

A group of law students, supervising attorney and clients meet around a table in a room overlooking the Charlotte skyline.
Flex Program students Lamarie Austin-Stripling LF’29, left, and Aaron Johnson LF’29, center, speak with clients at a Wills for Heroes event hosted at 黑料不打烊’s Charlotte Center on Nov. 8. 2025.

The expansion also builds on 黑料不打烊 Law’s longstanding relationships throughout Charlotte’s legal community. Already, more than 10 percent of the law school鈥檚 alumni live and work in the Charlotte area. Law school leaders plan to strengthen existing partnerships, develop new connections and grow opportunities for students to serve in a region with a need for legal talent, legal services and innovative legal education.

Through clinics, residencies and community partnerships, 黑料不打烊 Law students regularly work alongside attorneys, judges, nonprofit organizations and public agencies to help address unmet legal needs.

“We’ve been in Charlotte all along through our students, alumni and community partnerships,” Kramer said. “This approval gives us an opportunity to deepen our commitment to Charlotte. We’re excited to invest here, build new partnerships and help shape what comes next.”

Additional information about admissions, faculty hiring and program development will be announced in the coming months.

About 黑料不打烊 Law

黑料不打烊 Law is the preeminent school for engaged and experiential learning in law. With a focus on learning by doing, it integrates traditional classroom instruction with a required residency-in-practice field placement for all full-time students during the winter or spring of their second year. The law school鈥檚 distinctive full-time curriculum provides a logically sequenced program of professional preparation and is accomplished in 2.5 years, which offers exceptional value by lowering tuition and permitting graduates early entry into their careers.

黑料不打烊 Law has graduated more than 2,000 alumni since opening its doors in downtown Greensboro in 2006. Its annual enrollment now tops 500 students. The law school is regularly featured in PreLaw Magazine鈥檚 鈥淏est Schools for Practical Training鈥 rankings, maintaining an A+ rating each year since 2023. 黑料不打烊 Law was also among schools highlighted by Bloomberg Law in 2023 for its innovative approach to student development.

The 黑料不打烊 Law Flex Program, a part-time, in-person program of legal study, launched in Charlotte in 2024. Designed for students balancing work, family and other commitments to earn their J.D. in under four years, it will enroll its third cohort in Fall 2026.

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黑料不打烊 Law students test advocacy skills in Intramural Moot Court Competition /u/news/2026/06/05/elon-law-students-test-advocacy-skills-in-intramural-moot-court-competition/ Fri, 05 Jun 2026 14:35:51 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049572 Does an online-only business qualify as a place of public accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act? And can a lender violate the ADA by offering a qualified borrower less favorable loan terms because of a disability?

These were the questions centered in the fictional case analyzed and argued by 116 first-year 黑料不打烊 Law students in the school’s 19th Annual Intramural Moot Court Competition, held May 27 and 28.

Two male students in suits and ties seated at a counsel's desk in a courtroom. They are conversing over legal documents.
Rylan Learman L’27, left, and Anthony Logrono L’27, prepare to present oral arguments in the Robert E. Long Courtroom.

A deaf small-business owner applied for a loan from an online lending company and was offered a 14.25% interest rate. After his twin brother 鈥 who shared nearly identical financial, educational and employment credentials but did not have a disability 鈥 received a 6.25% rate for the same loan, he suspected the lender had considered his disability when evaluating the application.

The business owner sued under the ADA, arguing that the online lender discriminated against him based on his disability. A federal court dismissed the case, finding that the lender’s website was not a place of public accommodation covered by the ADA and that the law regulates access to lending services, not the terms of the loans offered.

The business owner appealed the ruling to the fictional U.S. Court of Appeals for the 15th Circuit, which regularly hears cases represented by 黑料不打烊 Law students.

Members of the Class of 2027 comprised the largest group ever to compete in the spring event, with 58 teams appearing before volunteer judges that included local judges, attorneys, 黑料不打烊 Law alumni, and law school faculty and staff.

All first-year students were introduced to the case in their Legal Method & Communication courses as the basis for graded oral arguments this spring. Each student presented two oral arguments, one for appellant and one for appellee, and was scored on preparation, speaking ability, argument structure and responses to judges鈥 questions.

Top 10 Oral Advocates in the 2026 competition (with ties)

  • Gabrielle Brown Roycroft
  • Aarya Deshmukh
  • Zaria Hanchell
  • Adelaide Anne Zahren
  • Avery Vidt
  • Michael Iafrato
  • Grant Paramore
  • Rachel Wilson
  • Jacqueline Gardner (tie)
  • David Bryant (tie)
  • Megan Chen

鈥淭his competition was a reminder not to let fear of failure keep me from trying,” said Gabrielle Brown Roycroft L’27, from Salisbury, North Carolina, who is interested in family law, estate planning and civil litigation. She graduated from Catawba College with a degree in politics. “It鈥檚 worth it to push through the nerves and use them as fuel to perform your best. You can鈥檛 memorize your way through oral advocacy. You have to think on your feet and respond in the moment. When you鈥檝e done the work in advance, you can trust your preparation and focus on having a conversation with the judges.鈥

Two female law students review file folders at a desk in a courtroom. They are gesturing and discussing the notes.
Geomae Peterson L’27, left, and Isabella Duque L’27 review their case notes before presenting oral arguments in 黑料不打烊 Law’s 19th annual Intramural Moot Court Competition

Selections for membership on the Moot Court Board will be announced this summer before the board hosts the 17th Billings, Exum & Frye National Moot Court Competition on Oct. 22-24. Moot Court Board members will also compete in a slate of national moot court competitions during the 2026-27 school year.

Vice Dean and Professor of Law Alan Woodlief, director of 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Moot Court Program, praised the Moot Court Board for its professionalism and hospitality in running the spring competition.

The annual event sees the 黑料不打烊 Law community step up to provide an exceptional experience for first-year students. This year, 黑料不打烊 Law was honored to host more than 50 volunteer attorneys and judges, including over 20 黑料不打烊 Law alumni, as well as a current justice and former chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court participate as judges.

鈥淢oot Court is a great experiential learning opportunity, and I was excited to see so many students take advantage of this experience to strengthen their advocacy skills,鈥 Woodlief said. 鈥淥ur Moot Court Board did an exceptional job coordinating the school鈥檚 largest-ever competition, and they could not have done it without the great support from our student body, faculty, and staff, as well as the many 黑料不打烊 Law alumni, attorneys, and judges who contributed to the success of the competition.鈥

Alumni judges reflect: 鈥業t helped me find my voice鈥

The annual Intramural Moot Court Competition 鈥 along with the graded Legal Method and Communication Program鈥檚 graded oral arguments held the week before 鈥 is also a homecoming of sorts.

Alumni return to campus each spring to hear arguments, offer feedback and help first-year students develop the advocacy skills they will use throughout their careers. 聽They have clear memories of standing at the podium themselves and how meaningful it was to their development to receive feedback from legal professionals.

April Franklin L’25 said oral arguments helped her overcome her nerves and discover a passion for advocacy.

鈥淚t gave me confidence. It helped me find my voice that I didn’t know that I had,鈥 said Franklin, who is pursuing practice in wills and estates, health care or corporate law. 鈥満诹喜淮蜢 gave me the support that I needed to progress in this career path, and I want to be able to give that same support to the next generation of 黑料不打烊 Law students.”

Landon Eckard L’25, who will begin a federal judicial clerkship in Detroit this summer, said moot court taught him to think on his feet and respond to difficult questions from judges.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the most spontaneous kind of advocacy there is in the legal profession,鈥 Eckard said. 鈥淵ou can have a rough script before you get there, but one minute into the argument, that script goes out the window. It made me a better litigator and a better attorney.鈥

Thomas Harvey L’22, a criminal defense attorney in nearby Rockingham County, North Carolina, pursued law as a second career. He returns because he remembers exactly what it felt like to stand at the podium as a student and believes the experience helps shape better advocates.

鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 that long ago that I was standing right where they are. Believe it or not, the judges are all rooting for you individually,鈥 Harvey said. 鈥淚t’s such a joy to come back and be a part of 黑料不打烊 Law.鈥

2026 Intramural Moot Court Competition student leadership

Overall Chairs of the Competition: Isabel Craige L鈥26, Elizabeth Gregory L鈥26, Sierra Watkins L鈥26

Judge Recruitment and Coordination Chairs: Emma Farrell L鈥26, James Galipeau L鈥26, Cayla James L鈥26, Bailey Langford L鈥26, Renata Navarro L鈥26

Bailiff Recruitment and Coordination Chairs: Madisyn Butler L鈥26, Erin Carleton L鈥26, Megan Eldredge L鈥26, Cameron O鈥橬eil L鈥26, Tyler Sesker L鈥26

Scoring Committee Chairs: Brittany Balis-West L鈥26, Jackie Rullman L鈥26, Rebecca Vairin L鈥26

LMC Oral Argument Coordination Chairs: Daulton Hadaway L鈥26, Courtney Maxwell L鈥26

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黑料不打烊 Law Flex Program leader joins Mecklenburg Bar Foundation board /u/news/2026/06/01/elon-law-flex-program-leader-joins-mecklenburg-bar-foundation-board/ Mon, 01 Jun 2026 12:25:31 +0000 /u/news/?p=1049142 Emma Butterworth, staff director of 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Flex Program in Charlotte, has been named to a three-year term on the Board of Directors for the .

directory portrait of Emma Butterworth
Flex Program Staff Director Emma Butterworth

The foundation is the charitable arm of the Mecklenburg Bar Association, dedicated to service, access to justice and community engagement in the Charlotte region.

The appointment reflects 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 growing engagement with Charlotte鈥檚 legal community and the law school鈥檚 emphasis on service and experiential learning through its existing part-time Flex Program and proposed full-time, 2.5-year J.D. program, which plans to enroll its first class in fall 2027.

Since the launch of the Flex Program in 2024, Butterworth has helped cultivate partnerships between 黑料不打烊 Law and nonprofit organizations across the Charlotte area, connecting students with volunteer opportunities, nonprofit organizations and community service initiatives. Those efforts have included collaborations with organizations such as Safe Alliance, Charlotte Center for Legal Advocacy and the Guardian ad Litem Program, as well as campus supply drives and events hosted by area agencies.

Many of those organizations have also met with Flex Program students during weekly Evening Docket events, providing students the opportunity to meet with and learn from legal professionals in the community.

Dean Zak Kramer said Butterworth has played an important role in establishing the Flex Program鈥檚 presence and growing the law school鈥檚 presence in Charlotte.

鈥淓mma has invested herself in the life of the Flex Program and the Charlotte community,鈥 Kramer said. 鈥淪he has made a real difference for 黑料不打烊 Law, our students, and our neighbors in Charlotte.鈥

Vice Dean and Professor of Law Alan D. Woodlief said Butterworth鈥檚 appointment reflects both her commitment to community engagement and 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 broader mission in Charlotte.

鈥淭he Mecklenburg Bar Foundation does important work throughout the Charlotte area, and Emma has been deeply committed to connecting our students with opportunities to serve and learn,鈥 Woodlief said. 鈥淗er leadership has strengthened 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 ties to Charlotte鈥檚 legal and nonprofit communities, and advanced our students鈥 professional lives.鈥

Butterworth said the role aligns closely with 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 mission and will create additional ways for students to engage with the legal profession in Charlotte.

鈥淚鈥檓 honored to serve alongside members of the Mecklenburg Bar Association in support of the Foundation鈥檚 mission of giving back to the Charlotte community,鈥 Butterworth said. 鈥淭he Charlotte legal community has warmly welcomed both the Flex Program and me personally, and that support has created opportunities for meaningful partnerships and collaboration. I look forward to continuing to build connections with local nonprofits while expanding opportunities for our students to engage in service and professional development.鈥

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鈥楽tand for the rule of law鈥: 黑料不打烊 Law graduates sworn to state, federal bars /u/news/2026/05/29/stand-for-the-rule-of-law-elon-law-graduates-sworn-to-state-federal-bars/ Fri, 29 May 2026 15:17:18 +0000 /u/news/?p=1048924 Swearing oaths to uphold the Constitution and rule of law, 15 recent graduates of 黑料不打烊 School of Law joined the legal profession during a joint ceremonial session of state and federal courts at the L. Richardson Preyer Federal Courthouse.

Presiding over the ceremony were The Hon. Catherine C. Eagles of the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, The Hon. Stephanie L. Reese of the North Carolina Superior Court and The Hon. Bill Davis of the North Carolina District Court. Graduates were presented to the court by sponsoring attorneys before being admitted to practice before the state bar, the federal bar or both.

Four people with right hands raised as they take an oath in a courtroom.
From left, Tyler Sherrill L’25, Tristan Reynolds L’25, Yates May L’25 and Sadie Lambert L’25 swear oaths to join the federal bar in the L. Richardson Preyer Federal Courthouse on May 21, 2026. (Photo by Jerry Wolford / Perfecta Visuals)

鈥淭oday is the day you can represent people, represent clients and call yourself a lawyer,鈥 Eagles said during the Thursday, May 21, session. 鈥淚t鈥檚 your job to stand up for people and to stand up for the rule of law. It is your job to conduct yourself uprightly and according to law, and to look after our system of justice every day in everything that you do.鈥

The ceremony was hosted by the 鈥檚 Young Lawyers Section, one of many held across North Carolina and the nation as members of 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Class of 2025 complete their legal studies after December graduations and successful performances on the February 2026 bar examinations. Dean of 黑料不打烊 Law Zak Kramer delivered remarks welcoming new attorneys, calling the ceremony 鈥渢he culmination of years of work and sacrifice by our graduates and their families.鈥

Jonathan M. Parisi, president of the Young Lawyers Section, encouraged newly licensed attorneys to engage in the legal profession and broader community as they begin their careers.

鈥淭his is not the end of your learning journey. It鈥檚 just the beginning,鈥 Parisi said. 鈥淪eek out mentors, get involved in your legal community, and find ways to serve.鈥

Davis reminded them that their professional reputation will shape their careers.

鈥淵our reputation is your greatest tool and your greatest asset,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淏e thoughtful about how you interact with judges, lawyers, clients and court staff. Build a reputation that will serve you well and help you succeed.鈥

Reese emphasized the responsibility attorneys assume when clients place their trust, livelihoods and futures in lawyers鈥 hands.

鈥淵ou鈥檝e shown incredible strength and character in making it to this point,鈥 Reese told the newly admitted attorneys. 鈥淧eople put their very lives in your hands. From today forward, you have that responsibility, and no one else can carry it for you. You are their voice. You are their guide and their strength in the storm.鈥

Eagles also encouraged the graduates to pursue civic leadership beyond courtrooms and law offices.

鈥淟awyers are often the people making the nonlegal parts of our community work,鈥 Eagles said. 鈥淔ind your place where you can make a contribution beyond the courtroom and your office.鈥

Presiding over the ceremonial court sessions were:

The Hon. Catherine C. Eagles of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina

The Hon. Stephanie L. Reese of North Carolina Superior Court for the 24th District

The Hon. Bill Davis of North Carolina District Court for the 24th District

黑料不打烊 Law graduates admitted to federal and state court

黑料不打烊 law graduates seeking admission only to federal court

黑料不打烊 Law graduates seeking admission only to state court

A judge in a robe shakes hands with a woman. A law license is beneath their hands on a desk in a courtroom.
Alyson Hanlon L’25 shakes hands with Superior Court Judge Stephanie L. Reese while having her law license signed May 21, 2026. (Photo by Jerry Wolford / Perfecta Visuals)

听尝’25

About 黑料不打烊 Law

黑料不打烊 Law is the preeminent school for engaged and experiential learning in law. With a focus on learning by doing, it integrates traditional classroom instruction with a required residency-in-practice field placement for all full-time students during the winter or spring of their second year. The law school鈥檚 distinctive full-time curriculum provides a logically sequenced program of professional preparation and is accomplished in 2.5 years, which offers exceptional value by lowering tuition and permitting graduates early entry into their careers.

黑料不打烊 Law has graduated more than 2,000 alumni since opening its doors in downtown Greensboro in 2006. Its annual enrollment now tops 500 students. The law school is regularly featured in PreLaw Magazine鈥檚 鈥淏est Schools for Practical Training鈥 rankings, maintaining an A+ rating each year since 2023. 黑料不打烊 Law was also among schools highlighted by Bloomberg Law in 2023 for its innovative approach to student development.

黑料不打烊 has applied to the American Bar Association to open a full-time, 2.5-year J.D. program in Charlotte beginning in fall 2027. The 黑料不打烊 Law Flex Program, a part-time, in-person program of legal study, launched there in 2024. Designed for students balancing work, family and other commitments to earn their J.D. in under four years, it will enroll its third cohort in fall 2026.

 

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黑料不打烊 Law Review publishes Volume 18, Issue 1 /u/news/2026/05/21/elon-law-review-publishes-volume-18-issue-1/ Thu, 21 May 2026 12:20:09 +0000 /u/news/?p=1048180 黑料不打烊 Law Review has published Volume 18, Issue 1, featuring scholarship on the evolving intersection of law, technology and the First Amendment.

This volume includes articles from contributors to the law review鈥檚 2025 symposium, 鈥淏reaking News: First Amendment on Trial,鈥 which explored emerging challenges to free speech and expression. It also features legal analysis by 黑料不打烊 Law graduates of the Class of 2025.

Published annually by 黑料不打烊 Law students, the 黑料不打烊 Law Review is dedicated to advancing thoughtful, practice-informed legal scholarship that engages timely and complex legal questions shaping the profession and society.

The volume continues the journal鈥檚 commitment to rigorous analysis of emerging legal issues.

鈥淭he 黑料不打烊 Law Review is proud to present Volume 18 to scholars, practitioners and readers interested in timely legal issues,鈥 said Rachel Claffee L鈥26, the journal鈥檚 editor-in-chief. 鈥淭his edition features scholarship exploring how artificial intelligence and emerging technologies are reshaping the First Amendment and journalism. It also includes analysis of juvenile commercial sexual exploitation courts, racial annexation in rural North Carolina, the reasonable doubt standard, and disaster resilience, including work completed by members of the 黑料不打烊 Law Review Class of 2025.鈥

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Portrait of an innovator: Dean Emeritus Luke Bierman’s 黑料不打烊 Law legacy /u/news/2026/05/19/portrait-of-an-innovator-dean-emeritus-luke-biermans-elon-law-legacy/ Tue, 19 May 2026 15:09:31 +0000 /u/news/?p=1047908 His portrait now hangs on the wall, but some legacies are written into the life of an institution.

At 黑料不打烊 School of Law, Dean Emeritus and Professor of Law Luke Bierman left his mark on a curriculum unlike any other in legal education: a 2.5-year J.D. program built around a full-time Residency-in-Practice. Already proven 鈥渁 law school with a difference,鈥 that curriculum has become a nationally recognized model of experiential legal education, consistently ranked for the quality of its programs and the success of its graduates.

Luke Bierman in a suit on a stage with the ELon University seal and behind an 黑料不打烊 Law podium.
Dean Emeritus Luke Bierman speaks May 12, 2026, in 黑料不打烊 Law Library.

鈥淓verything that distinguishes 黑料不打烊 Law today traces back to Luke鈥檚 vision and the decisions he made to reimagine legal education,鈥 said Dean Zak Kramer. 鈥淥ur students learn the law by living it, and that distinctive model continues to shape every graduate who walks across our stage.鈥

Faculty, staff, university leaders and friends gathered May 12 in the 黑料不打烊 Law Library to celebrate Bierman鈥檚 career and unveil an impressively detail portrait painted by Laurel Boeck, honoring a teacher, scholar and dean whose influence continues to impact every 黑料不打烊 Law student.

鈥淲ithout question, Luke was the right person to lead 黑料不打烊 Law when he arrived in 2014,鈥 said Vice Dean Alan Woodlief, who has served as an associate or vice dean since the law school鈥檚 inception, on May 12. 鈥淟uke is truly an innovator, and his innovations at 黑料不打烊 Law have been central to the school鈥檚 success and prosperity over the past 12 years.鈥

When Bierman arrived, legal education faced a crisis of cost, time and relevance. Applications were plummeting nationwide, and critics 鈥 including then-President Barack Obama 鈥 argued that law school took too long, cost too much and left too many graduates unprepared for the realities of practice.

Bierman turned that critique into an opportunity.

Working with 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 faculty and staff, he led the curriculum redesign, shortened the path to a law degree and embedded every student in full-time legal residency before graduation. 黑料不打烊 Law students now complete their degrees in seven trimesters over 2.5 years and spend a full trimester in a course-connected Residency-in-Practice that pairs them with judges and lawyers in judicial chambers, law firms, businesses, government agencies and other organizations. Tying the residency program to academic requirements emphasizes professional development and mentorship from both faculty and site supervisors.

The redesign reduced average student loan debt by nearly 30 percent 鈥 a fact he鈥檚 most proud of 鈥 and propelled 黑料不打烊 Law to record enrollment, stronger academic credentials, improved bar passage and employment outcomes, and sustained national recognition for practical training. In 2021, the American Bar Association reaccredited the law school following a successful review under Bierman鈥檚 leadership.

鈥淟uke Bierman鈥檚 contributions to 黑料不打烊 extend far beyond his tenure as dean of the School of Law,鈥 said 黑料不打烊 President Connie Ledoux Book. 鈥淗e guided 黑料不打烊 Law through a period of transformative change and continued to invest in our students as a teacher and mentor. His legacy is reflected in the strength of the law school, its distinctive place in legal education, and the generations of lawyers who will continue to find their purpose at 黑料不打烊 Law.鈥

鈥満诹喜淮蜢 has been fortunate to have the right dean at the right time in the evolution of its young law school,鈥 said Leo M. Lambert, 黑料不打烊鈥檚 president emeritus and professor of education. 鈥淒ean Bierman brought a tremendous spirit of innovation and experimentation to 黑料不打烊 Law, building on 黑料不打烊鈥檚 national reputation for experiential learning. It was a perfect DNA match.鈥

鈥淟uke is first and foremost a teacher, and a lawyer second,鈥 said Steven D. House, who served as 黑料不打烊鈥檚 provost from 2009 through 2019. 鈥淗is focus has been and always will be transformation. The program he built transforms students鈥 lives while strengthening and serving the broader legal and civic community.鈥

An Educator First

Bierman always carries two items with him: A Bic pen and a pocket Constitution.

For him, they symbolize a commitment to teaching and to the institutions that sustain democracy. As dean, he began the tradition of giving every 黑料不打烊 Law student a pocket Constitution.

鈥淓ducation is important to us because we know how important it is to America,鈥 Bierman said May 12. 鈥淭homas Jefferson, James Madison and all those folks from 250 years ago thought that education was incredibly important to the American experiment in self-government. That鈥檚 the rule of law. That鈥檚 what we鈥檙e here at this law school and across the country thinking about and are terribly worried about at this moment in our national history.鈥

He is a third-generation lawyer but didn鈥檛 grow up anticipating a legal career. Perhaps because of that, his career rarely followed a straight line.

He moved among roles in legal practice, public service, policy and higher education, pursuing work that interested him and challenged him. Before joining 黑料不打烊 Law in 2014, he served as associate dean for experiential education at Northeastern University School of Law, executive director of the Institute for Emerging Issues at North Carolina State University, general counsel to the New York State Comptroller and leader of the American Bar Association Judicial Division. These responsibilities reflect academic and professional achievements that include election to Phi Beta Kappa and the American Law Institute.

鈥淭he attraction was to do something different where I could learn something,鈥 Bierman said recently. 鈥淐oming to 黑料不打烊 to think about curriculum and curricular programs and activities was natural for me.鈥

Luke Bierman holding a small Constitution speaking to an audience behind a podium that says 黑料不打烊 Law
Dean Emeritus Luke Bierman displays the pocket Constitution he always carries during a reception May 12, 2026, in 黑料不打烊 Law Library.

That motivation 鈥 to learn, to experiment, to acquire new skills 鈥 stemmed from a core family value: Education.

鈥淚 think of myself as an educator, maybe even more than I think of myself as a lawyer,鈥 Bierman said.

He is the second of three generations of teachers. His mother taught in public schools. His sister leads a school in Vermont. Two of his daughters work in education, and all three have earned doctoral degrees.

Reflecting on his legacy at 黑料不打烊 Law, he returned to the same concerns that guided 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 transformation.

鈥淚 do hope the work that we did at 黑料不打烊 Law remains. The ideas about cost, length and relevance: I hope those remain top of mind. Higher education is critically important in the world. We need to be responsive to how the world functions and operates.鈥

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黑料不打烊 Law journals select new members /u/news/2026/05/11/elon-law-journals-select-new-members/ Mon, 11 May 2026 14:04:53 +0000 /u/news/?p=1046902 Thirty-six 黑料不打烊 Law students in the Class of 2027 have been selected for membership to the 黑料不打烊 Law Review and We The People 鈥 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Constitutional Law Journal. Professor David S. Levine announced the selection of new staff members Wednesday, May 6, following a competitive process.

黑料不打烊 Law Review

  • Aleezah Adams
  • Trinity Barata
  • Vivian Camplin
  • Megan Chen
  • Kali Crooks
  • Samantha Davis
  • Frank Deronja
  • Avery Ferrigno
  • Lauren Heist
  • Jordan Hicks
  • Isabela Latorre
  • Maya Mahs
  • Carson Patterson
  • Bryanna Rediger
  • Queen Salaam
  • Alex Sarmiento
  • Andrew Stark
  • Baron Turner

The 黑料不打烊 Law Review was established in 2008 as the student-run and student-edited scholarly journal of the 黑料不打烊 School of Law. With each issue, the journal strives to advance legal education and scholarship through the contribution of intelligent discussion and analysis of the law. In addition to publishing an annual issue that examines novel and significant topics of legal scholarship, the 黑料不打烊 Law Review hosts an annual symposium on an emerging topic in the legal field.

Professor David S. Levine and Professor Eric Fink serve as advisors to the 黑料不打烊 Law Review.

We The People 鈥 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Constitutional Law Journal

  • Madison Curtis
  • Kayleigh Foster
  • Jacqueline Gardner
  • John Grice
  • John Grosso
  • Noah Jackson
  • Kyla King
  • Michael Maroney
  • Gordon McKeehan
  • Kassidy Neuner
  • Grant Paramore
  • Cole Payne
  • Karly Pins
  • John Prather
  • Emily Radcliffe
  • Lily Sanders
  • Kaitlyn Sella
  • Leah Shaw

We The People 鈥 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Constitutional Law Journal aspires to promote the contribution of intelligent discussion and analysis of the U.S. Constitution and constitutional law-related issues. The online journal was founded in 2022, aiming to foster healthy dialogue on timely legal issues in a respectful manner that its founders observed is often missing in contemporary debate.

Professor David S. Levine serves as the journal鈥檚 advisor.

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Peering into the Supreme Court鈥檚 shadows at 黑料不打烊 Law /u/news/2026/05/11/peering-into-the-supreme-courts-shadows-at-elon-law/ Mon, 11 May 2026 13:55:14 +0000 /u/news/?p=1046769 The legitimacy of the U.S. Supreme Court and the rule of law depend on transparency, accountability and public trust. All of those are increasingly under strain, said .

Speaking during 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Joseph M. Bryan Distinguished Leadership Lecture on Wednesday, May 6, at Greensboro鈥檚 Proximity Hotel, Kantor discussed her reporting on the Supreme Court, including extensive behind-the-scenes investigations of the Court鈥檚 internal processes and the justices themselves.

Jodi Kantor speaks on a stage with a maroon backdrop and 黑料不打烊 seal behind her
Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times investigative journalist Jodi Kantor

This spring, she and colleague Adam Liptak examining the Supreme Court鈥檚 growing use of its emergency or 鈥渟hadow docket,鈥 through which consequential rulings are often issued rapidly and with limited explanation or legal reasoning. At a moment of declining trust in institutions and the judiciary itself, Kantor warned that the practice can bypass some of the traditional safeguards associated with judicial deliberation and further erode public confidence in the court.

鈥淛udges write opinions as an act of transparency and humility and faith,鈥 Kantor said. 鈥淎n opinion says to the public: 鈥榊ou may disagree with this decision. It may put your brother in jail. It may mean the end of your business. But I want you to know that I鈥檓 being sincere, and that I diligently worked through the law to come to this conclusion.鈥欌

Kantor鈥檚 lecture series appearance featured an extended conversation with Professor Catherine Ross Dunham, a charter member of 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 faculty whose scholarship focuses on civil procedure and complex litigation.

Kantor earned international recognition for her work with colleague Megan Twohey in exposing decades of sexual abuse allegations against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein. That reporting helped ignite the global #MeToo movement. Kantor and Twohey won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service in 2018, and their work was later published in later adapted into an acclaimed film. Her other work has focused on technology and the modern workplace, leading to changes at companies like Amazon and Starbucks, and the Obamas鈥 life inside the White House. Most recently, she joined the New York Times鈥 Supreme Court team.

Investigating the Supreme Court

鈥淚nvestigative journalism is about taking secrets that are in the public interest and putting them into sunlight,鈥 Kantor said.

She described her reporting on the Court 鈥 in her words, 鈥渙ne of the most secretive institutions in American life鈥 鈥 as seeking to better understand how power operates within one of the nation鈥檚 least transparent institutions, including questions surrounding internal negotiations among justices, the role of clerks and the long-term effects of lifetime appointments.

鈥淗ow much do they bargain with one another? What role do clerks play? How does power really flow?鈥 Kantor asked. 鈥淲hat does it mean to hold power at that level for 20 or 30 years? How do people age in those jobs?鈥

At the same time, she acknowledged the tension between transparency and judicial independence, arguing that 鈥渏udges need room to think, to deliberate, to change their minds.”

She emphasized that she isn鈥檛 interested in exposing pending Court decisions because that 聽鈥渨ould interfere with the judicial process.”

鈥淚鈥檓 not trying to know everything about the Supreme Court,鈥 she said. 鈥淏ut I still think there are important questions worth answering.鈥

Privacy, secrecy and institutional power

Kantor repeatedly turned to the distinction between privacy and secrecy 鈥 a theme connecting both her Weinstein reporting and her more recent investigations into the Supreme Court.

Jodi Kantor and Catherine Dunham on a stage. The backs of audience members' heads are visible in the foreground.鈥淲hat I learned from the Weinstein investigation is that there鈥檚 a difference between privacy and secrecy,鈥 Kantor said, referencing the nondisclosure agreements now required of Supreme Court staff and the stifling secrecy of settlement agreements in Weinstein鈥檚 case.

鈥淰ictims deserved privacy,鈥 Kantor said of the Weinstein investigation. 鈥淏ut was the system benefiting from blanket secrecy that enabled predation? No. Legal culture is very invested in confidentiality, but confidentiality can run amok in ways that deprive the public of enough information to understand what is happening.鈥

She warned that excessive confidentiality inside powerful institutions 鈥 including courts, workplaces and corporations 鈥 can ultimately weaken public understanding and democratic trust.

鈥淛ournalism is one of democracy鈥檚 valves,鈥 Kantor said. 鈥淚 would rather us have rigorous coverage of the Supreme Court that leads to productive debate than a thousand other things, including the really disruptive political violence we鈥檙e seeing across the (political) spectrum.鈥

Resisting political caricatures

Jodi Kantor listens as Catherine Dunham asks a questionThe conversation explored the dangers of reducing Supreme Court justices to simplistic political caricatures. Kantor pointed to Justice Amy Coney Barrett as an example of a jurist who was immediately misunderstood by both the political right and left when she was appointed in October 2020.

Kantor described Barrett as 鈥減erhaps the most independent of the Republican-appointed justices,鈥 adding that even some of Barrett鈥檚 ideological critics view her as intellectually serious and institutionally minded.

鈥淪he鈥檚 very conservative,鈥 Kantor said, 鈥渂ut she has this independent streak. She wants to be trusted by a broad swath of Americans. She does not want to be pigeonholed.鈥

Starting a meaningful career

Kantor also reflected on questions of professional purpose and career-building, themes explored in her new book, Drawing on her workplace reporting and conversations with students navigating political uncertainty, economic anxiety and rapid technological change, Kantor encouraged young professionals to identify their talents, develop a craft and identify a societal need their craft addresses.

When evaluating early-career opportunities, Kantor said she encourages young professionals to focus less on prestige and more on growth, mentorship and intellectual curiosity. Taking calculated risks to gain experience and further develop craft will pay off.

鈥淎re you learning?鈥 Kantor said. 鈥淎nd are you working for good people?鈥

Earlier in the day, Kantor met with 黑料不打烊 Law students, faculty and staff for a smaller discussion centered on identifying purpose and launching meaningful careers in a challenging time.

About 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Distinguished Leadership Lecture Series

The Distinguished Leadership Lecture Series presented by The Joseph M. Bryan Foundation is an integral part of 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 commitment to learning, lawyering and leadership. Endowed through a generous gift from The Joseph M. Bryan Foundation of Greensboro, N.C., the series brings accomplished leaders from a variety of disciplines to 黑料不打烊 to share their experiences and perspectives with students and faculty.

 

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