Alumni of UCLA Law's Cappello Program in Trial Advocacy
L to R: Kyle DeCamp ’19, Delaram Kamalpour ’19, and Aidan Welsh ’19 are alumni of UCLA Law's A. Barry Cappello Program in Trial Advocacy.

A year and a half after graduating from UCLA School of Law and starting her “dream job” as a public defender in Los Angeles, Delaram Kamalpour ’19 has already taken three trials through to a verdict. Shortly after one ended in a hung jury and dismissal, her client learned that it had, in fact, been her first trial. But, she recalls, that fact surprised him: “He thought it was my hundredth.”

UCLA Law Professor Sharon Dolovich
UCLA Law Professor Sharon Dolovich heads the COVID Behind Bars Data Project.

UCLA School of Law Professor Sharon Dolovich co-wrote an article on rates of COVID-19 infection and death in U.S. prisons that has been published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, the country’s leading medical journal.

When UCLA School of Law hosts a new tournament called the Verdict, starting on Oct. 16, it will be presenting a first-of-its kind law school jury-trial competition.

While most trial advocacy competitions ask lawyers or judges to score students on their courtroom performances as a proxy for what lay jurors would find persuasive, the Verdict includes lay jurors who submit verdicts on the merits. Like in real trials, the winning team will be the one that best persuades the juries.

Law professor Lindsay Wiley
Photo credit: American University

Lindsay F. Wiley, an internationally renowned expert and leader in health law and policy, will join the UCLA School of Law faculty as a professor of law starting in January 2022.

A widely published author and frequent speaker in the field, Wiley comes to UCLA Law from American University Washington College of Law, where she has served on the faculty for more than a decade and directs the Health Law and Policy Program.

Students in UCLA Law's Appellate Prisoners' Rights Clinic
L to R: Appellate Prisoners’ Rights Clinic students Benjamin Levine ’21, Ilse Gomez ’21, Amaris Montes ’21, and Alberto De Diego Carreras ’21.

When the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit convened over Zoom on May 4, a panel of judges heard oral arguments that were delivered by several highly skilled advocates — four of whom were UCLA School of Law students.

Subscribe to Faculty
News
See All