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.

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.

UCLA Law alum Dana Ontiveros

When recent UCLA School of Law graduate Dana Ontiveros ’21 sits down to work each day in the Los Angeles office of Snell & Wilmer, she is able to tap into the vast array of skills that she gained during her time in law school. While she spends the bulk of her hours working in the firm’s commercial litigation group, with additional projects in corporate and securities law and real estate, she consistently finds her mind returning to many of the lessons she enjoyed most at UCLA Law — the ones centering on tax law.

UCLA Law student Enrico Trevisani
UCLA Law Trial Team member Enrico Trevisani ’22 delivers the opening statement at the Tournament of Champions.

The annual ranking of the top law school trial advocacy teams in the country has been released, and the A. Barry Cappello Trial Team at UCLA School of Law is No. 1 for the second year in a row. The success comes after a record-breaking season for the law school’s trial team, including landmark wins in the most esteemed competitions in the country.

UCLA Law clinics support Yurok Tribe
The first day of commercial fishing in 2019 on the Klamath River.

For thousands of years, the Yurok people have looked to the Klamath River Basin close to California’s northern border for a rich variety of nutritional and cultural sustenance: salmon from the river, elk and berries from the forests, and mussels and clams along the coast, among other culturally significant species. But the arrival of European settlers in the 19th century brought changes that impeded tribal members’ ability to harvest on their ancestral territories.

Lowell Milken and Jill Horwitz
Lowell Milken and Jill Horwitz

With the philanthropy world on the precipice of revolutionary change, UCLA School of Law has established the Program on Philanthropy and Nonprofits, devoted to cutting-edge research, training, and policy in this dynamic and evolving area of the law and society. It will reside within the law school’s Lowell Milken Institute for Business Law and Policy (LMI).

UCLA School of Law 1L Convocation

As the 2021-22 school year got underway, UCLA School of Law welcomed a class of new students who are among the most accomplished ever to join the law school.

Crowd gathered outside the U.S. Supreme Court on June 26, 2015, after the court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges.
A crowd gathers outside the U.S. Supreme Court in 2015 after the decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, which relied on data from the Williams Institute, legalized same-sex marriage.

When a same-sex marriage ban was overturned in California, a federal court cited research from UCLA School of Law's Williams Institute 30 times. President Barack Obama used Williams's research in an executive order prohibiting workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. And after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in favor of marriage equality, Justice Anthony Kennedy described the institute's research as the deciding factor.

Subscribe to Alumni
News
See All