An interesting question Forum
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- Posts: 137
- Joined: Mon Sep 21, 2009 5:18 pm
An interesting question
This is one of those, "one of my friends questions".....And in all honesty it is about a friend of mine, I am not trying to hide anything. Anyways, he is considering taking the LSAT and going to to law school if possible but is slightly hesitant due to some recent "issues" with the law. Haha, the irony is great. All in all, he has received a couple underage drinking tickets, a DUI, misdemeanor breaking and entering and misdemeanor malicious injury to property. No Felonies. The last of these happened to him about a year ago, and it would be about another year before he would be applying. I honestly don't know how these would effect someone in the process. Can someone shed some light upon this? I want to give him an honest answer, hes a wonderful kid and very very intelligent, just a dumbass...you know what I mean. Thanks guys.
- thelawguy777
- Posts: 65
- Joined: Tue Jan 26, 2010 3:46 am
Re: An interesting question
Every law school is going to ask some questions about criminal history. Depending on the law school they may want details. Some schools ask for an undergrad behavior statement from the dean of students. Some schools want to know only about convictions, some schools ask for all charges, etc, etc...
Personally I think any arrest is going to look extremely bad, especially if it's in the past five years...
Maybe schools are more forgiving, but I would say that a DUI, B&E, etc... are far from a stellar criminal record...
Personally I think any arrest is going to look extremely bad, especially if it's in the past five years...
Maybe schools are more forgiving, but I would say that a DUI, B&E, etc... are far from a stellar criminal record...
- eandy
- Posts: 2724
- Joined: Wed Dec 23, 2009 7:07 pm
Re: An interesting question
He needs to find out from the bar of the state he wants to practice in if that DUI is ok. DUI=very bad.
EDIT: This is not an interesting question. If you go to the Law School Admissions Forum there are dozens more just like it.
EDIT: This is not an interesting question. If you go to the Law School Admissions Forum there are dozens more just like it.
- TTH
- Posts: 10471
- Joined: Mon May 04, 2009 1:14 am
Re: An interesting question
Example of an interesting question:eandy wrote:He needs to find out from the bar of the state he wants to practice in if that DUI is ok. DUI=very bad.
EDIT: This is not an interesting question. If you go to the Law School Admissions Forum there are dozens more just like it.
My mom just stumbled into my meth lab, and I had to choke her to death. Would I be better off chopping her up and throwing her in the ocean or burying her in the woods? Also, should I disclose?
- reasonable_man
- Posts: 2194
- Joined: Thu Feb 12, 2009 5:41 pm
Re: An interesting question
Stop takling. You're not a lawyer and thus entirely unqualified to offer a real evaluation on the issue.eandy wrote:He needs to find out from the bar of the state he wants to practice in if that DUI is ok. DUI=very bad.
EDIT: This is not an interesting question. If you go to the Law School Admissions Forum there are dozens more just like it.
Op:
Tell your friend to contact an attorney that handles attornet licensing/ethics issues in the jurisdiction he intends to practice. The DUI is likely not a problem. The breaking and entering is more troubling, depending on the circumstances and the actual charge. I'm going to assume, this is something along the lines of him and his friends breaking into a building and getting drunk or something else along those lines and not him breaking into a building to steal something? If my guess is right, he's probably ok; but again, have him talk to a lawyer in the jurisdiction first.
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