V50 Offer v. Clerking
Posted: Mon Jul 30, 2012 10:33 pm
Thanks for the suggestions!
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Sound advice.thesealocust wrote:Take the job offer then look for clerkships. If and only if you get a clerkship you can negotiate with your firm, but generally you'll get hired back after the clerkship and possibly with a bonus. If you don't get the clerkship, you've already accepted the job.
There's really no choice to be made right now - the right move is accepting the firm job either way. It's totally fine to clerkship hunt with an accepted law firm offer.
Anonymous User wrote:(1) What is your deadline for accepting the firm offer? It should be reasonable for you to ask until after the law clerk hiring plan has run to accept. You should be applying now and on plan for the clerkships -- you should know quickly.
It's the regular NALP deadline. As I mentioned, I don't intend to even bother applying for a clerkship unless I'm certain that I would accept it if offered. That's why I'm not applying now (thought I have LORs and all that stuff ready to go from profs if I do decide to apply.
(2) I would only turn down the V50 offer for an A3 judge or a bankruptcy judge in a busy/relevant location. Magistrate judges do important work and give their clerks great experiences, but I'm not sure if the overall cost is worth it.
I would do the same. Magistrate is out, but I just listed it to cover it as a possibility.
(3) That said, it will be an uphill battle for you to get an A3 clerkships. Top 10% at a T14 is (probably) guaranteed an A3 clerkship if they apply very, very broadly. At a T75, I'd be surprised if anyone outside the top 5 people in the class (not percent) have anywhere near a decent chance.
(4) I hope you know that federal clerks make better than $40k. Right now, a new grad law clerk (JSP-11) will make between $57,408 (rest of US) and $67,963 (SF/Bay area). Yeah, it's not big law salary, but its not that bad of a hit either.
I'm aware of the salary. I was just exaggerating., but ~$60k still pales in comparison to twice that amount at the V50.
Final thought, what's the general range of districts are you looking at (e.g., SDNY,EDNY, CDCA, NDCA, EDVA versus DWyo, other rural areas)?
Rural area (though not nearly as rural as Wyoming) -- good bankruptcy courts in particular.
Any particular reason for that?anon168 wrote:If you can get a DCt. clerkship or better, then clerk. NO brainer.
Assuming your choice comes down to (1) take job or (2) clerk and then look for a new job, your best bet is (2) because you have to think long-term, esp. if OP wants to teach down the line.Anonymous User wrote:Any particular reason for that?anon168 wrote:If you can get a DCt. clerkship or better, then clerk. NO brainer.
FWIW, the only bankruptcy courts worth clerking for are in the SDNY or the D. Del, neither of which I would describe as "rural."Anonymous User wrote:Anonymous User wrote:(1) What is your deadline for accepting the firm offer? It should be reasonable for you to ask until after the law clerk hiring plan has run to accept. You should be applying now and on plan for the clerkships -- you should know quickly.
It's the regular NALP deadline. As I mentioned, I don't intend to even bother applying for a clerkship unless I'm certain that I would accept it if offered. That's why I'm not applying now (thought I have LORs and all that stuff ready to go from profs if I do decide to apply.
(2) I would only turn down the V50 offer for an A3 judge or a bankruptcy judge in a busy/relevant location. Magistrate judges do important work and give their clerks great experiences, but I'm not sure if the overall cost is worth it.
I would do the same. Magistrate is out, but I just listed it to cover it as a possibility.
(3) That said, it will be an uphill battle for you to get an A3 clerkships. Top 10% at a T14 is (probably) guaranteed an A3 clerkship if they apply very, very broadly. At a T75, I'd be surprised if anyone outside the top 5 people in the class (not percent) have anywhere near a decent chance.
(4) I hope you know that federal clerks make better than $40k. Right now, a new grad law clerk (JSP-11) will make between $57,408 (rest of US) and $67,963 (SF/Bay area). Yeah, it's not big law salary, but its not that bad of a hit either.
I'm aware of the salary. I was just exaggerating., but ~$60k still pales in comparison to twice that amount at the V50.
Final thought, what's the general range of districts are you looking at (e.g., SDNY,EDNY, CDCA, NDCA, EDVA versus DWyo, other rural areas)?
Rural area (though not nearly as rural as Wyoming) -- good bankruptcy courts in particular.
This is not wrong, but emphasizes too much on "down the line." Sure, long term career prospects are important, but so is a year after clerkship.anon168 wrote:
Assuming your choice comes down to (1) take job or (2) clerk and then look for a new job, your best bet is (2) because you have to think long-term, esp. if OP wants to teach down the line.
A clerkship (again, DCt or better) will open more doors later in life than just working at a firm. It never hurts to know one extra federal judge, and your co-clerk will likely be your contemporary and someone in position of power to help you down the line in your career.
TLS wisdom seems to be that even a CoA clerkship won't get you into US Attorney's office straight out of law school, exceptions may be made if you have amazing credentials and the CoA is some super prestigious feeder, but it's definitely the exception.Anonymous User wrote:As a summer who has been less than thrilled with his summer ass. firm, does anyone have any insights regarding where at CoA clerkship can land you--US Att. Office, V?--or does even a CoA clerkship no longer guarantee (make it likely) that you can move up in the world? Sorry OP for anon hijacking your thread.
Depending on the COA clerkship (e.g. judge, circuit, etc.), it will definitely open doors to V10 firms.Anonymous User wrote:As a summer who has been less than thrilled with his summer ass. firm, does anyone have any insights regarding where at CoA clerkship can land you--US Att. Office, V?--or does even a CoA clerkship no longer guarantee (make it likely) that you can move up in the world? Sorry OP for anon hijacking your thread.
anon168 wrote:Clerking will not only make you a better lawyer, but a better person.
This was the second response and should have ended the thread.thesealocust wrote:Take the job offer then look for clerkships. If and only if you get a clerkship you can negotiate with your firm, but generally you'll get hired back after the clerkship and possibly with a bonus. If you don't get the clerkship, you've already accepted the job.
There's really no choice to be made right now - the right move is accepting the firm job either way. It's totally fine to clerkship hunt with an accepted law firm offer.
Bros go 13k+ posts so you know its the truthrayiner wrote:This was the second response and should have ended the thread.