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1987-88

ABA National Appellate Advocacy Competition

  • Regional Co-Champion

All-Illinois Moot Court Competition

  • First Place

1986-87

ABA National Appellate Advocacy Competition

  • Regional Co-Champions

All-Illinois Moot Court Competition

  • First Place

1985-86

National Moot Court Competition

  • Regional Finalists
  • National Qualifier

Chicago Bar Association Moot Court Competition

  • Best oral advocate

Frederick Douglass Moot Court Competition

  • Regional Champion

1984-85

Jessup International Law Competition

  • Undefeated team

Frederick Douglass Moot Court Competition

  • Semifinalists
  • Best brief

1983-84

Chicago Bar Association Moot Court Competition

  • First Place

1982-83

Chicago Bar Association Moot Court Competition

  • First Place

Giles Rich Patent Law Competition

  • Regional Champions
  • National Third Place

2017 Tryout Results

Thank you to the ~130 Chicago-Kent students who tried out this week for the Moot Court Honor Society. The quality of brief-writing and oral advocacy was high; the choices were difficult. We’re thrilled to invite these 31 students to join us in 2017-18:

Invited to Join the Moot Court Honor Society

2017-18

Jack Amaro

Taylor Brewer

Nicole Chimienti

Brian Crush

Emily Edwards

Daniel Flores

Meaghan Fontein

Giana Gizzi

Maggie Kamm

Tracey Klees

Joshua Locke

Keisha McClellan

Stacey Meyers

Mahira Musani

Javier Ortega Alvarez

Pauline Panayi

Yuliya Patlata

Alida Pecanin

Colin Pochie

Rebecca Quade

Alex Romano

Samantha Ruben

Betul Serbest

Carl Sessions

Tamara Sonenshein

Stephen Spector

Rebecca Spira

Alexi Spiratos

Katherine Stryker

Blake Thompson

Jin To

Flowers and Ford at ABA NAAC 2017 Competition

ABA NAAC regional champion winners!

Congratulations to Stephanie Flowers ’18 and Quinn Ford ’18, who won a regional championship at the 2017 ABA National Appellate Advocacy Competition regional tournament, held March 2 to 4 in Boston!

Stephanie and Quinn will compete in the national tournament April 6 to 8 in Chicago.

Twitter coverage:

Fall 2014 Teams

The John Marshall Law School International Moot Court Competition in
Information Technology & Privacy Law

Chicago, Illinois
October 23-25, 2014

Amay Awad, Kelly O’Neill & Arlo Walsman

National Health Law Moot Court Competition
Carbondale, Illinois
November 7-8, 2014

Emily Herbick & Abe Wehbi

Appellate Lawyers Association Moot Court Competition
Chicago, Illinois
November 7-8, 2014

John Chambers, Vincenzo Chimera & David Repking
Melody Gaal, Paulina Lopez & Hannah Tuber

National Moot Court Competition
Region VIII Tournament
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
November 8-9, 2014

Iman Boundaoui & John Jefferson
Teri McClerklin, Jake Radecki & Eric Shinabarger

National Veterans Law Moot Court Competition
Washington D.C.
November 15-16

Michael Albert & Ryan Hanneken
Lyal Fox III & Jared Reynolds

Andrews Kurth Moot Court National Championship
Houston, Texas
January 2015

Matt Jarka & Jerry Urbik

22th Annual Ilana Diamond Rovner Competition Results

November 13, 2013

Koplan Nwabuoku, a third-year student at IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law, has won the 22nd annual Ilana Diamond Rovner Appellate Advocacy Competition, sponsored by the law school’s Moot Court Honor Society. The competition is named for IIT Chicago-Kent graduate Ilana Diamond Rovner, judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.

Third-year student Koplan Nwabuoku (top, right) argued against second-year student John Jefferson (top, left) to win IIT Chicago-Kent's 2013 Ilana Diamond Rovner Appellate Advocacy Competition. Bottom row, from left: The Honorable Robert E. Gordon, the Honorable Ilana Diamond Rovner '66, and Distinguished Professor Sheldon H. Nahmod judged the final round of the competition.

 
Third-year student Koplan Nwabuoku (top, right) argued against second-year student John Jefferson (top, left) to win IIT Chicago-Kent’s 2013 Ilana Diamond Rovner Appellate Advocacy Competition. Bottom row, from left: The Honorable Robert E. Gordon, the Honorable Ilana Diamond Rovner ’66, and Distinguished Professor Sheldon H. Nahmod judged the final round of the competition.

Students in the Rovner Competition each prepare a brief in a case that raises an issue of national concern, as well as oral arguments supporting both sides of that issue. Students present those arguments before panels consisting of IIT Chicago-Kent faculty, practicing attorneys and experienced moot court students. The top-scoring students advance through a series of elimination rounds.

This year, students argued Woollard v. Gallagher, a Second Amendment case out of Maryland challenging that state’s so-called “may-issue” concealed carry law. At issue is whether state officials violate the Second Amendment by requiring that individuals wishing to exercise their right to carry a handgun for self-defense first prove a “good and substantial reason” for doing so.

In the final round, Koplan Nwabuoku argued against second-year student John Jefferson. As the winner of the final round of competition, Nwabuoku received the Ilana Diamond Rovner Award for Outstanding Appellate Advocate and a $500 scholarship. Finalist Jefferson received a $250 scholarship from the Edmund G. Burke Scholarship Fund.

Rovner Competition winner Koplan Nwabuoku graduated from Tulane University with a bachelor’s degree in international relations and international development. He served as president of the Tulane Organization for Global Affairs and was also a member of Tulane’s track and field team. He is originally from Kaduna, Nigeria, and calls Houston, Texas, home. Finalist John Jefferson graduated from Westmont College with honors and then taught seventh-grade English in Tulsa, Oklahoma, with Teach for America. Jefferson is a judicial extern for United States District Court Judge Ruben Castillo and is a member of the Chicago-Kent Law Review.

Second-year student Nicholas Bartzen received the Fay Clayton Award for Outstanding Oralist and a $250 scholarship. Fay Clayton, who graduated with honors from IIT Chicago-Kent in 1978, is a partner in the Chicago law firm of Robinson, Curley and Clayton, P.C. Her legal experience includes numerous trials, appeals, mediations, and arbitrations in tribunals, including the United States Supreme Court.

Melody Gaal, a second-year student, received the Ralph L. Brill Award for Best Brief and a $250 scholarship. Professor Ralph Brill, a member of the faculty since 1961, founded the law school’s groundbreaking legal research and writing program and its award-winning moot court program.

The final round of the competition was judged by a distinguished panel that included the Honorable Ilana Diamond Rovner, the Honorable Robert E. Gordon of the Illinois Appellate Court, and IIT Chicago-Kent Distinguished Professor Sheldon H. Nahmod.

Established in 1992, the Ilana Diamond Rovner Program in Appellate Advocacy provides training for students in IIT Chicago-Kent’s Moot Court Honor Society. Students in the program complete intensive course work in appellate litigation, represent the law school in appellate advocacy tournaments throughout the United States, and are eligible to participate in the Ilana Diamond Rovner Competition.

Founded in 1888, IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law is the law school of Illinois Institute of Technology, a private, Ph.D.-granting institution with programs in engineering, science, psychology, architecture, business, design and law. In 2008 and 2009, IIT Chicago-Kent won the National Moot Court Competition, the largest appellate advocacy tournament in the United States. In 2008, IIT Chicago-Kent became the first law school to win both the National Trial Competition and the National Moot Court Competition in the same year.

– See more at: http://www.kentlaw.iit.edu/news/2013/rovner-appellate-advocacy-competition-2013-winners#sthash.NZm9YrCQ.dpuf

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