Deconstructing the Bar Exam – course March 1, 2009
Posted by j in Uncategorized.add a comment
I’ve received a few of these over the past year or so and I thought I’d share it with you all – the NY County Lawyers’ Association is putting on a one day course on the bar exam – Deconstructing the Bar Exam.
Here is the extract:
Membership Event: Deconstructing the Bar Exam
Thursday, March 26, 2009 Location: 14 Vesey Street
Time: 6:00pm
YOU DON’T WANT TO MISS THIS PROGRAM! Learn specific techniques for increasing your essay scores! Learn how to avoid fatal mistakes!
Confirmed Speakers: Hon. Bryan R. Williams, Member of the New York State Board of Law Examiners; Eileen Shapiro, Senior Bar Examiner New York State Board of Law Examiners; James T. Shed, Secretary to the Committee, Character and Fitness, Appellate Division, First Department
Cost: Free for NYCLA members; Non members pay $25 for the program and receive a complimentary year of NYCLA Law Student Membership
FREE by invitation and for members only. Non-members pay $25 for the program and receive a free year of Law Student Membership.
RSVP: cfragliossi@nycla.org
Swearing in – Obama January 20, 2009
Posted by j in Constitutional Law.add a comment
And here is a little article on Constitutional Law I saw in the NY times today.
http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/01/20/i-do-solemnly-swear/?pagemode=print
January 20, 2009, 2:11 pm
I Do Solemnly Swear…(Line, Please?)
By Adam Liptak
For a couple of smooth-talking constitutional experts, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and President-elect Barack Obama sure had a hard time getting through the constitutional oath of office.
The oath of office being administered to Barack Obama by Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
There was, first of all, a false start from Mr. Obama, who started to respond before the chief justice had completed the first phrase. Mr. Obama ended up saying the first four words – “I, Barack Hussein Obama” – twice.
Then there was an awkward pause after Chief Justice Roberts prompted Mr. Obama with these words: “that I will execute the office of the president to the United States faithfully.” The chief justice seemed to say “to” rather than “of,” but that was not the main problem. The main problem was that the word “faithfully” had floated upstream in the constitutional text, which actually says this: “That I will faithfully execute the office of the president of the United States.”
Mr. Obama seemed to realize this, pausing quizzically after saying “that I will execute –”
The chief justice gave it another go, getting closer but still not quite right: “faithfully the office of president of the United States.” This time, he omitted the word “execute.”
Mr. Obama now repeated the chief justice’s initial error of putting “faithfully” at the end of the phrase. Starting where he had abruptly paused, he said: “the office of the president of the United States faithfully.”
It was smooth sailing from there. All of the words in the oath were uttered, along with “so help me God” at the end.
People will argue about what the failure to utter the words in the precise order required by the Constitution means. But it will be an academic argument. It is not clear who would have standing to raise the argument that Mr. Obama had not become president as a consequence, and it is hard to believe that any court – or other body – would want to adjudicate the question.
There is, in any event, no rule against a do-over. When questions were raised about whether Calvin Coolidge should have been sworn in by his father, a notary public, he took the oath again, this time from a Supreme Court justice.
NY Law – Evidence January 20, 2009
Posted by j in NY Law.add a comment
I saw this last week and thought it may be relevant to this year’s exam.
From the NY Times – http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/15/washington/15scotus.html?pagewanted=print
Supreme Court Eases Limits on Evidence
By ADAM LIPTAK
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that evidence obtained from an unlawful arrest based on careless record keeping by the police may be used against a criminal defendant.
The 5-to-4 decision revealed competing conceptions of the exclusionary rule, which requires the suppression of some evidence obtained through police misconduct, and suggested that the court’s commitment to the rule was fragile.
Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr., writing for the majority, said that the exclusion of evidence should be a last resort and that judges should use a sliding scale in deciding whether particular misconduct by the police warranted suppressing the evidence they had found.
“To trigger the exclusionary rule,” Chief Justice Roberts wrote, “police conduct must be sufficiently deliberate that exclusion can meaningfully deter it, and sufficiently culpable that such deterrence is worth the price paid by the justice system.”
That price, the chief justice wrote, “is, of course, letting guilty and possibly dangerous defendants go free.”
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, writing for the dissenters, argued for “a more majestic conception” of the exclusionary rule, and a more categorical one.
The rule requires more than a cost-benefit calculus to deter police misconduct, Justice Ginsburg wrote. It also protects defendants’ rights, she said, and prevents judicial complicity in “official lawlessness.”
The case began when methamphetamines and a gun were found after Bennie D. Herring, an Alabama man, was arrested based on police officers’ mistaken belief that he was subject to an outstanding arrest warrant.
That belief was based on incorrect information in the computer files of a neighboring county’s police department. The warrant had been withdrawn, but the database had not been updated.
Calling the error “isolated negligence attenuated from the arrest,” Chief Justice Roberts said the lower courts had been correct in allowing the jury in Mr. Herring’s case to consider the evidence. He was convicted and sentenced to 27 months in prison.
The ruling itself is relatively narrow and is arguably merely a logical extension of a 1995 decision, Arizona v. Evans, which recognized an exception to the exclusionary rule for arrests resulting from erroneous computer records kept by court employees (as opposed to the police).
The decision in the case, Herring v. United States, No. 07-513, may have broad consequences, said Craig M. Bradley, a law professor at Indiana University.
“It may well be,” Professor Bradley said, “that courts will take this as a green light to ignore police negligence all over the place.”
Chief Justice Roberts, who was joined by Justices Antonin Scalia, Anthony M. Kennedy, Clarence Thomas and Samuel A. Alito Jr., said the exclusionary rule was unlikely to deter isolated careless record keeping and should be reserved for “deliberate, reckless or grossly negligent conduct, or in some circumstances recurring systemic negligence.”
“The deterrent effect of suppression must be substantial and outweigh any harm to the justice system,” the chief justice wrote. “Marginal deterrence does not ‘pay its way.’ ”
Justice Ginsburg, joined by Justices John Paul Stevens, David H. Souter and Stephen G. Breyer, wrote that the majority “underestimates the need for a forceful exclusionary rule and the gravity of record keeping violations,” particularly given the heavy reliance by law enforcement on the electronic databases that “form the nervous system of contemporary criminal justice operations.”
In a separate dissent, Justice Breyer, joined by Justice Souter, called for a “clear line” to be drawn between “police record keeping errors and judicial ones.”
That, Justice Breyer said, “is far easier for the courts to administer that the chief justice’s case-by-case, multifactored inquiry into the degree of police culpability.”
The decision in the Herring case divided along familiar lines. A second case, about the role of the jury in sentencing decisions, was also decided Wednesday by a 5-to-4 vote, but it had a less predictable lineup.
That decision marked either a pause or a stopping point in a judicial march that began with the court’s 2000 decision in Apprendi v. New Jersey that the Constitution bars judges from making factual findings leading to increased sentences.
The question in the new case, Oregon v. Ice, No. 07-901, was whether the requirement established in Apprendi applied to the decision whether a defendant convicted of multiple crimes must serve consecutive or concurrent sentences if the harsher punishment required a judge to find facts not determined by the jury.
Justice Ginsburg, joined by Justices Stevens, Kennedy, Breyer and Alito, wrote that the Apprendi rule did not apply to that situation “in light of historical practice and the authority of the states over the administration of their criminal justice systems.”
It was undisputed in the case that some state systems that give judges discretion on this point are constitutional, including those in which judges have complete freedom and those in which they are allowed to opt for more lenient concurrent sentences.
The system used in Oregon, however, introduced an additional element in allowing judges to impose harsher sentences. The Oregon law required judges wishing to impose consecutive sentences in some cases to make factual findings about, for instance, the defendant’s “willingness to commit more than one criminal offense,” before imposing the longer prison terms.
An Oregon judge did so in the case of Thomas E. Ice, who was convicted of sexually assaulting an 11-year-old girl on two occasions. The judge effectively increased Mr. Ice’s sentence to 340 months from 90 months.
Justice Antonin Scalia, joined by Chief Justice Roberts and Justices Souter and Thomas, dissented, saying the majority opinion was “a virtual copy of the dissents” and filled with “repeated exhumation of arguments dead and buried” in the Apprendi line of cases.
“I do not understand,” Justice Scalia wrote, “why we would make such a strange exception to the treasured right of trial by jury.”
Past exam questions – Feb 2007 November 12, 2008
Posted by j in The Exam.Tags: Add new tag
add a comment
It dawned on me that I never reflected on the exam questions that were asked. Almost 2 years on, I reflect on it…. The questions are located here. Wow, I can only recall little bits of it!
I think it’s fair to say that the examiners really did pick out top notch answers and you don’t need to write to that level to pass. You can probably guess from the writing on this blog that I choose to keep fairly simple words, short sentences and I love bullet points. It’s the way I worked in the exam and it served me OK!
Questions, follow up, general comments October 22, 2008
Posted by j in Reflections.1 comment so far
Hi
I haven’t posted to this blog for a while – I got admitted ages ago and don’t really log back in!
Questions – if you post a comment with your reply email address I can reply back to you personally.
To answer some of the questions that some of you have:
- You can only get the Barbri audio files from Barbri itself – it’s supplied as a home teaching solution. There probably is a way to get it off an iPod but please note that Barbri says they have some protection measures in place that should you try to sync the iPod the whole iPod will erase and you will pay a large fee to get a replacement iPod with the lessons in it.
- How you study will depend on whether you think the distance option is good for you. I thought it was good for me to do it at my own pace and I am not into group studying so it didn’t matter whether I was in class or not. Although, it was good that I found a “study buddy” online (I was googling for others who was blogging about their NY Bar experience that winter) that I could share my grievances and stresses with.
- Ultimately a large element of the NY Bar exam relies on your exam technique. If you are good at pacing yourself, writing essays under an exam situation and don’t get too stressed, then you’re in a good position to pass.
- I know people who crammed the last 3 weeks, and didn’t have time to study much leading up to the NY Bar exam – and they passed. I know people who studied a lot more and failed. (These are all good lawyers coming from top tier firms going into white shoe/ magic circle firms in NYC . To give you a sense of what type of people I am talking about).
- I know people who didn’t do Barbri, they got notes and they passed. Barbri is good for those not disciplined enough to do it on their own, but there are plenty of materials online that can guide you. There is a link to those sites somewhere on this blog and you may wish to update it.
20 days to go February 8, 2008
Posted by j in Uncategorized.1 comment so far
Good luck to those who are taking the bar exam in 2 weeks.
Don’t stress! Just keep working, and spend the last 7 days memorizing. You will get through it!
Preparing for exam day July 13, 2007
Posted by j in Reflections, The Exam.1 comment so far
Because this is the last weekend that you’ll have to maybe idle and procrastinate, here are a few things that you could do to constructively prepare.
- do a dry run to the examination centre, and time it (and allow for traffic jams etc) – this way you know exactly where it is. I recommend even trying to get in so you can see the room. Go right up to the entrance or walk around the building so you know where you’re actually going to in.
- book the car service/ mom/ dad/ friend/ gf/ wife to get you to the exam
- prepare your exam day bag – pens, highlighers, eraser, pencil, pencil sharpener, tissues, snacks, lunch (because you wont’ have time to buy it, in all likelihood), water, earplugs, watch (make sure it works)
You get about an hour in between each session. If you go to a large testing centre, it may take a while to get out and pick up your bag (at bag check). I took my notes to the exam just in case I wanted to look at it at lunchtime. My testing room was tiny and everyone left their stuff outside on racks so you could get your things easily and fast. If you’re lucky, maybe you can arrange for a friend to meet you there with all your notes and stuff.
I know that for a lot of people, they say there is no point in looking over your notes the day of the exam etc. But for me, it was great to have a safety blanket “just in case”, plus looking over at notes helped me remind myself that I DID know stuff. Just make sure that when you look at your notes during lunch that you’re not looking back at the topics that was covered in the morning going ‘oh shit i missed that point’. Once it’s over it’s over. So focus on the topics that were not covered in the morning’s session.
10 days to go… Ganbatte! July 13, 2007
Posted by j in Burnout, Reflections.add a comment
Ganbatte is what the japanese would say to encourage and say good luck.
It’s 10 days left to go – I’ve just been speaking to a friend and I hope that these words of encouragement and “advice” is helpful. You are probably stressed right now, reading this blog in procrastination, wondering why nothing is soaking in and being dismal at low scores that you’re getting in your practice questions and exams. (and if you are not, then that is awesome).
I found an email that Jeff Adachi sent me, after I asked what I should be doing in the last 10 days of the exam. He wrote “Memorization is key in the last 7 days. You should focus on memorization exclusively at this point.”
I could agree to that. In my last 10 days, this is what I did. I ditched the pace program that Barbri gave me (because it was stressing me out) and did the following:
Things to keep in mind:
- don’t panic
- you got through high school, college, law school and all those exams, you can do this again, just one more time
- you know more than you think you know
- if you did do most of the work in the paced program you are in good shape – you’ve come across a lot of the issues that will probably appear in the exam (if you didn’t then it’s too late to panic anyway)
Good luck, you’ve gotten this far, there is not much more to go!
Funny way to announce it May 4, 2007
Posted by j in Uncategorized.add a comment
To the person who made the comment below on my blog, seriously did you think I would just put a red herring out there on my personal blog (ie not like jdjive) if it wasn’t true?
And you should check your facts before you make such accusation. Did you even test it out on your browser? If you have set your browser’s status bar to on (and usually on most people’s browsers, it is on), and/or permit javascript to be running you would have seen it.
The Bar Examiners have chosen a funny way to make such announcements. See the picture below confirming now that the exam results are out and going public on Monday.
I passed, apparently May 4, 2007
Posted by j in General.add a comment
Well, I am waiting for that official letter to arrive but apparently I passed.
The State Board of Law Examiners congratulates you on passing the New York State bar examination held on February 27-28, 2007. An official notice has been mailed and will contain your Multistate Bar Examination (MBE) scaled score. Although every effort is made to ensure the accuracy of this lookup screen, each applicant must rely on the official notification (via U.S. Mail) as to whether he or she has passed the examination.

