Page 1 of 1
Path to DoJ Honors/Fed Clerk/ADA
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2014 8:52 am
by crimorbl
End Goal: Be competitive for DoJ Honors Program/Fed Clerkships/ADA
Options:
1. State District Judicial Intern/Externship (Criminal)
2. Intern at top-20 US metro area DA's office
3. Prosecution Clinic
3. Mid-Big Law SA
4. Be an RA
5. Work at a small law firm (ideally crim defense)
6. Law Review
7. Mock Trial
8. Moot Court
Which options would be best for my career goals and in what order (1L, 2L, 3L)?
Re: Path to DoJ Honors/Fed Clerk/ADA
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2014 8:54 am
by FSK
This is cute.
Re: Path to DoJ Honors/Fed Clerk/ADA
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2014 9:12 am
by crimorbl
flawschoolkid wrote:This is cute.

thanks
Re: Path to DoJ Honors/Fed Clerk/ADA
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2014 9:59 am
by A. Nony Mouse
There isn't a formula you can follow. First, those are 3 different goals (and a clerkship is a step along the way to a career, not usually a career in itself). Second, DOJ Honors includes jobs ranging from antitrust to civil litigation to tax to environmental to immigration to criminal. Those jobs all require different kinds of qualifications. Finally, clerkships require top grades (and usually connections with profs), as well as usually law review; honors is also very grades-conscious but wants demonstrated experience with the area of law you're applying for; and getting an ADA job is best accomplished by interning with DA offices and getting as much in the ground experience and making as many connections as you can, and doesn't always care as much about grades. So it's not like you do the same thing to get any of these positions.
Re: Path to DoJ Honors/Fed Clerk/ADA
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2014 10:04 am
by crimorbl
A. Nony Mouse wrote:There isn't a formula you can follow. First, those are 3 different goals (and a clerkship is a step along the way to a career, not usually a career in itself). Second, DOJ Honors includes jobs ranging from antitrust to civil litigation to tax to environmental to immigration to criminal. Those jobs all require different kinds of qualifications. Finally, clerkships require top grades (and usually connections with profs), as well as usually law review; honors is also very grades-conscious but wants demonstrated experience with the area of law you're applying for; and getting an ADA job is best accomplished by interning with DA offices and getting as much in the ground experience and making as many connections as you can, and doesn't always care as much about grades. So it's not like you do the same thing to get any of these positions.
Thank you. Should clarify that I didn't mean how to do all 3 at the same time. But you answered my question anyway.