Plagiarized a classmate's essay as a freshman and got caught, am I screwed?
Posted: Thu Jun 01, 2017 4:35 am
I will keep this short and simple. When I was freshman at a junior college in Southern California I was caught plagiarizing a fellow student's paper, and he and I were disciplined for it. We were told by our professor that we would receive academic warnings, and I was made to rewrite the essay. Almost nine years have passed since I did this, and for the rest of my university career I never once cheated, plagiarized, or did anything remotely unethical or dishonest. I finished my last semester as an undergrad in 2012 in good standing. Because of the time that had passed since my malfeasance I forgot about it until recently. I am currently taking an LSAT prep class, and I plan to take the test in September. I was a foolish and lazy teenager when I was caught cheating (in 2008), and I have changed a lot since then and I am a better man. However, my finishing GPA was nothing to shake a stick at, I graduated with a 3.04. My academic performance was good during my last two years of school (made the dean's list a few times) but was poor when I attended junior college. In spite of my mediocre GPA several of my professors agreed to write letters of rec for me, one even said he'd write me a 'sterling' letter. I want to know if any of you have any advice regarding my chances of getting into law school in light of my academic malfeasance and low GPA. Do I have a chance? I'm not fooling myself about my GPA, but as I stated above I had forgotten about my cheating incident until recently (it was almost a decade ago) and the memory of it now has me feeling leery about applying to law school. In the intervening years I have worked overseas, and done a bit of volunteer work at an elementary school. Please give me any advice that you might have.