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Clinic Courses

Please review the rules and regulations below the clinic course descriptions. Information regarding student practice as a legal intern pursuant to Admission to Practice Rule 9 can be found at the Washington State Bar Association Web site.

Courses

Administrative Law Clinic (3 credits) ADMN-400 (Spring)
Students will represent clients in administrative hearings before Washington State Administrative Law Judges. Student teams must maintain office hours in the Clinic offices two days a week for a total of four hours a week on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, or Thursdays between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m. The days and times for office hours will be determined based on each student team’s schedule. Students will be required to attend a clinic class one day per week. This course must be taken pass/fail.
Pre or Co-requisite: Administrative Law

Arts Legal Clinic (1 credit) INTP-401 (Offered each semester)
This course is a collaboration between the Law School and Washington Lawyers for the Arts, a non-profit organization. Students in the clinic will work with two experienced intellectual property attorneys who serve as adjunct faculty. On the second and fourth Mondays of each month, students will participate with the adjunct faculty in interviewing and advising artists and others seeking legal assistance regarding intellectual property issues. On the remaining Monday(s) of each month, the faculty will engage the students in a variety of lawyering skills activities, including discussions of interviews from the prior week, simulated skills exercises drawing on current developments in intellectual property law, and activities devoted to ethics and professionalism. This course must be taken pass/fail. This course does not fulfill the professional skills requirement for graduation.
Prerequisites: Intellectual Property and at least one of the following: Copyright Law, Trademark Law, IP Licensing, or Business Entities

Bankruptcy Clinic (1 credit) BANK-400 (Fall)
Students in this clinic will work with an experienced bankruptcy attorney supervisor and will interview and represent two to three clients who are seeking relief from their debts. Students must participate in a half-day orientation at the bankruptcy court. This orientation is usually held on a Friday morning during the first month of the semester. Students will also be required to attend Clinic classes one day a week and to meet regularly with their attorney supervisor at his or her office. Students will also have the opportunity to participate in an evening debt clinic run by local practitioners. Questions about this clinic should be addressed to Adjunct Professor Cynthia A. Kuno at
ckuno@crockerkuno.com. This course must be taken pass/fail.
Prerequisite or co-requisite: Bankruptcy Law

Capital Appeals Clinic
In this course, students will work on appellate briefs in capital cases from the state of Louisiana. Through their work, students will gain experience with legal writing and research while also taking part in designing strategy for cases raising cutting-edge issues regarding the death penalty, race, and the criminal justice system. The course will include a seminar component which will meet once a week. Students will be expected to meet regularly (outside of class time) with their faculty supervisor to discuss their casework.
Prerequisite: Legal Writing II
Corequisite: Capital Punishment Seminar

Community Development and Entrepreneurship Clinic (4 credits) BUSN-400 (Fall and Winter)
Law students will be teamed with Management students from the Albers School of Business to assist local residents with new and existing business ventures. Clients will be referred to the Clinic by area microlenders. Interdisciplinary student teams will work with law and business faculty and also volunteer mentors from the legal and business communities. Students will need to be available outside of class time for meetings with clients, partners, supervising faculty and others involved in the projects. Class sessions will emphasize principles, skills and values in forming a company from both business and legal perspectives, and will provide an opportunity to pinpoint and discuss significant issues or themes arising in the course of the client representation. The Clinic will run 10 weeks in the fall and 10 weeks in the winter, consistent with the University’s (i.e., not the Law School’s) standard Academic Calendar.
Prerequisite or co-requisite: Business Entities

Family Law Clinic (6 credits) FAML-401 (Fall)
The Family Law Clinic is a six-credit clinical course whose goal is to provide students with the skills and knowledge to practice family law in Washington.

Students must be eligible for admission to limited practice under Rule 9.
Pre or Co-requisites: Professional Responsibility and one of the following: Family Law, Family Formation, or Family Dissolution

Immigration Law Clinic (3 credits) IMMG-400 (Spring)
Students enrolled in the Immigration Clinic will provide legal representation to clients in immigration proceedings. Students will get involved at various stages of these proceedings, which may include proceedings before Immigration Officers, Immigration Courts, Board of Immigration Appeals or Circuit Courts of Appeals. The primary responsibilities would include: interviewing clients in immigration custody, investigating facts, conducting legal research, preparing memoranda, motions and legal briefs, and conducting oral argument. The typical advocacy involves disputing the legal grounds for inadmissibility and/ or deportability, and seeking relief from deportation in the form of adjustment of status, cancellation of removal, asylum from persecution (because of race, religion, nationality, political opinion or social group), and deferral of removal under the United Nations Convention Against Torture (CAT).

International Human Rights Clinic (4 credits) INTL-402 (Offered each semester)
The International Human Rights Clinic offers students the opportunity to work with foreign and domestic clients before international and regional human rights bodies. Students will also collaborate with human rights organizations on research and advocacy projects. In addition, there may be opportunities to work on cases filed in U.S. courts under state, federal, and international law. Class will meet 1 day per week for 2 hours. Students will be required to keep 8 hours (total) of office hours in the Clinic spanning 3 different weekdays. The International Human Rights Clinic is a graded course; it may not be taken as pass/fail.
Prerequisite or co-requisite: International Human Rights, Public International Law, or Rights of Women: Intl. and Comparative Law

Mediation Clinic (3 Credits) ALDR-410 (Fall)
The Mediation Clinic offers students the opportunity to delve deeply into the theory and practice of mediation by serving as co-mediator in employment discrimination cases. The class will be comprised of a classroom component and a casework component. In the classroom component, students will explore and develop the skills necessary to serve as mediators and will participate in a series of mock mediation sessions. In the casework component, students will observe, prepare for and co-mediate (with faculty support) actual employment discrimination cases. Students will also be required to engage in on-going debriefing sessions, to keep a journal of their observations and experiences and to submit their journal to the instructor. The EEOC schedules its mediations for an 8-hour period. Any particular mediation may take less or more than this.
Prerequisites: In order to be eligible to enroll in this course, a student must have:

  1. Taken the Mediation course (also called Problem Solving II); or
  2. Completed (or commit to completing before the start of the fall semester) a 40-hour Basic Mediation Training offered by an approved organization; or
  3. Had sufficient experience/training as a mediator (as decided by the Mediation Clinic instructor in advance of registration).

Not for Profit Organization Clinic (2 credits ) TAXL-400 (Spring)
Students in this Clinic will have the opportunity to put their interest in and knowledge of business and tax law into practice. Working in teams of two, students will work with individuals and community groups interested in creating a non-profit organization. Students will counsel their clients on the most appropriate entity for their purposes and prepare and file the documents necessary to create the organization, such as articles of incorporation, bylaws and state and federal tax documents. Students will also advise their clients about the various state laws and regulations with which the clients will need to comply. Students will receive the additional knowledge and skills necessary to do this legal representation in a classroom component. Beginning the third week of the semester, students must also maintain office hours in the Clinic offices twice a week for two hours each session. Office hours will be established based on the schedules of each student team. This course must be taken pass/fail.
Prerequisite: Individual Income Tax and Taxation of Charitable Organizations

Predatory Lending Clinic (Civil Practice Clinic) (6 credits) ADVC-410 (Year long - 3 credits each semester)
The Predatory Lending Clinic is a year-long 6 credit course which will focus on consumer protection and civil litigation. Students will represent clients in predatory lending matters relating to home mortgages, debt collection practices, and other unfair lending practices. Students will have the chance to engage in the entire range of civil practice on behalf of their clients: factual investigation, pleading and discovery, counseling, negotiation, pretrial or settlement conferences, and trial. Students will also engage in community projects, educating laypersons on topics such as debt collection, mortgage lending laws, payday loans, refund anticipation loans, check cashing institutions, and other forms of alternative financial services. In addition, students will engage in legislative analysis and reform, with the possibility of presenting positions before the Washington State legislature. Finally, this year, enrolled students will have the option of traveling to New Orleans with the professor to perform legal work related to housing, lending, or debt and credit on behalf of individuals displaced by Hurricane Katrina and the broken levees. Students will travel at their own expense, yet we will work to make the travel and accommodations as cost-effective as possible. (Time frame TBD, but will occur during either winter or spring break). If you enroll, you must attend the classroom component (which will be 75 minutes twice per week) and maintain office hours in the Law Clinic. As you will be conducting pre-trial motions and discovery and trials under supervision, you must be Rule 9 eligible.
Pre- or co-requisites: Professional Responsibility and Comprehensive Pretrial Advocacy. Students must complete both semesters in order to be awarded any credit. Maximum enrollment 8.

Professional Responsibility Clinic (1 credit) PROF-400 (Not offered in 2006-07)
This clinical course is a joint effort between the law school and the Washington Bar Association Office of Disciplinary Counsel. Future opportunities for volunteer service to the Bar Association and for entry into the limited group of lawyers who represent the Bar Association disciplinary cases will be enhanced. Students will work on actual ethics complaints filed with the Washington State Bar Association. Students will be required to attend a once-a-week seminar reviewing the procedural law of discipline in Washington and will be assigned in teams of two to examine a complaint for probable cause. Each team will be required to prepare a memorandum that includes: Identification of RPCs which might be involved; Research of Case Law/Ethics Opinions, etc., interpreting the legal requirement for each RPC; Preparation of an opinion recommending either conditional dismissal or a finding of probable cause; Written analysis of how the complaint (whether founded or not) could have been avoided; and, Presentation of the substantive and procedural ethics issues to the seminar. Contact Professor John Strait at
straitj@seattleu.edu or (206) 398-4027 to confirm registration. This course must be taken pass/fail.
Prerequisite or co-requisite: Professional Responsibility

Trusts and Estates/Indian Trusts and Estates Clinic (3 credits) ESTA-400 (Fall)
Students will represent a low-income elderly or disabled person in an estate planning matter, including preparation of wills, powers of attorney and health care directives. Student teams must maintain office hours in the Clinic offices for a total of four hours per week. Office hours must be scheduled on Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday between 1 and 8 p.m. This clinic is available as an evening clinic. This course must be taken pass/fail.
Prerequisite or co-requisite: Trusts and Estates

Youth Advocacy Clinic (6 credits) ADVC-310 (Offered each semester)
Working with attorneys from The Defender Association (a King County public defense law firm) and under the supervision of Clinic faculty, students will engage in various forms of advocacy including: (1)the representation of youth accused as juvenile or status offenders; (2) representation of youth seeking Special Immigrant Juvenile Status; (3) direct representation and policy-based advocacy related to the detention and/or shackling of children in truancy, criminal and/or dependency cases and the denial of the right to counsel to children and/or adults in a variety of criminal justice settings. The trial skills component of the Clinic includes a day-long Trial Skills Workshop (on a Friday) and a day-long Mock Motion Hearing before an actual judge (on a Saturday). Interested students can learn the dates of these mandatory sessions by contacting the Clinic faculty or Office Manager.
Prerequisite: Evidence. Co-requisite: Professional Responsibility. Must be Rule 9 eligible. Students completing the Civil Advocacy focus area must take Comprehensive Pretrial Advocacy before taking the Youth Advocacy Clinic. Two of the six credits awarded for this course are graded. The other four are pass/fail.

Externships
Externships are law-related placements outside the law school, where students do legal work in law offices, agencies or courts and receive academic credit. Externships students are closely mentored by an on-site supervising attorney or judge. In addition, students must participate in a seminar conducted by the Externship Director. For more information, please see the
Externship Web site or contact Danielle Armstrong at (206) 398-4128 or armstrod@seattleu.edu or Professor Susan McClellan at (206) 398-4010 or susanmcc@seattleu.edu.

Rules and Regulations

Conflicts of Interest

As a functioning law office, the Law Clinic must comply with all rules governing conflicts of interest. Because the Law Clinic is a single entity, any student enrolling in any clinic course (except Arts Legal and Bankruptcy) must be screened for conflicts with respect to any of the Clinic’s work. Thus, no student can enroll in any clinical course while also working (in any capacity, for pay or not) for an organization which is adverse to any of the clinic’s clients. For example, students may not work for a prosecutor’s office while enrolled in any clinic course because the Youth Advocacy Clinic collaborates with The Defender Association as defense counsel on cases. Students interested in taking any clinic course are encouraged to consult with clinic faculty to be sure that their employment or other activities will not present any conflicts of interest.

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