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University of South Dakota School of Law - Howling Pixel
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The University of South Dakota School of Law (also known as South Dakota Law or USD Law) in Vermillion, South Dakota, United States, is a professional school of the University of South Dakota and the only law school in the state of South Dakota. It is located on the University of South Dakota campus in Vermillion in the southeastern part of the state, near the Iowa and Nebraska borders.

Established in 1901, the law school is home to approximately 195 students and has more than 3,000 alumni. It currently has the third smallest student population among the American Bar Association accredited law schools. In 2018, the U.S. News & World Report "Best Law Schools" rankings placed University of South Dakota School of Law at 128th out of 215 law schools in the United States.

The University of South Dakota School of Law has produced eight American governors including Bill Janklow, George S. Mickelson, and George T. Mickelson as well as other key figures important to the development of the state, nearly the historical entirety of the South Dakota Supreme Court and U.S. District Court for the District of South Dakota, twelve members of United States Congress, earning it the nickname "the Alma Mater of the State."


Video University of South Dakota School of Law



History

1901-1911 (The Sterling Years)

The University of South Dakota College of Law was founded in 1901. Thomas Sterling served as the law school's first dean until 1911 when he left to become the third U.S. Senator from South Dakota. During the Sterling years, the law school proved successful in developing attorneys for the new state. In fact, by the time Sterling was in Congress, two of his earliest graduates William Williamson and Royal C. Johnson were Congressmen themselves. Before Sterling and the College of Law, the few lawyers there were, came from eastern states or read law for admission into the bar.

Collaboration with Bartlett Tripp

Along with Sterling, U.S. Ambassador to Austria Bartlett Tripp, was an integral part of establishing the school. Tripp was returning to South Dakota from his diplomatic post in Austria at the turn of the century. Tripp had been initially considered to be the running mate of President William McKinley, his friend and Albany Law School classmate, but was overlooked in lieu of then-Governor Teddy Roosevelt. With no other political opportunities left to him, Tripp devoted his full attention to establishing the College of Law. He played many roles in the law school, not only was he the school's first taxation and constitutional law professor but he had served as President of the first bar association, the Constitutional Convention of South Dakota & the commission to codify South Dakota's laws, as well as the Chief Justice of the Dakota Territory. Tripp and his son-in-law Charles Hall Dillon provided much of the law library's contents and upon Tripp's death donated much of his estate to the College of Law. It is speculated that had William McKinley not overlooked him for Vice President of the United States the College of Law may not have been founded as soon as it was. Thomas Sterling's 1911 departure was partly led by the death of his colleague Bartlett Tripp.

1911-1984

In 1911, Marshall McKusick became the school's second and subsequent longest-serving dean, serving until his death in 1950. In 1982, the College of Law moved from its then-82 year old building to a new building and was renamed the 'School of Law'. During this period the law school was led by the 11th Deputy Attorney General of the United States, Ralph E. Erickson.

1984-present

In 1984, South Dakota abolished the nearly century old practice of diploma privilege which now barred School of Law graduates from joining the South Dakota bar, unless they took the newly created South Dakota bar exam. Also in 1984, Camden 28 member and Indian Law scholar Frank Pommersheim joined the faculty. From 1991 until 2011 Barry Vickery, a Vanderbilt law alumni, served as Dean of the School of Law. During Vickery's tenure, noted federalist professor Patrick Garry joined the faculty in 2003. Former CEO of the Mayo Clinic, Mike Myers served on the faculty as an elder law professor. Myers, known for his eccentric behavior, was forced to resign in 2012. In 2013, Thomas Earl Geu a Nebraska law alumni, was hired from his previous position of interim dean into full dean.


Maps University of South Dakota School of Law



Demographics and rankings

Admission is competitive; for the class entering in the fall of 2010, 220 out of 449 J.D. applicants were offered admission (48.9%), with 75 matriculating. They came from 46 colleges and 14 states. 58% percent were South Dakota residents, 42% were female, and 9% minorities. The 25th, 50th, and 75th percentile LSAT scores and GPAs for the class were 150/153/156 and 3.18/3.44/3.73 respectively.

The U.S. News & World Report law school rankings placed South Dakota at 128 of 215 law schools in the U.S. in 2018.

In 2013, The National Jurist listed South Dakota Law in the top 5 schools for "Best Value". In 2013, The National Law Journal listed South Dakota Law #5 for employment in the government and Public Interest sector.

University of South Dakota School of Law is accredited by the American Bar Association and is a member of the Association of American Law Schools. According to South Dakota's official 2013 ABA-required disclosures, 60.6% of the Class of 2013 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment nine months after graduation, making it the best in the region with the exception of the University of Minnesota Law School.


List of colleges and universities in North Dakota - Wikipedia
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Noted Faculty

Current

  • Frank Pommersheim, American Indian Law Professor, Camden 28 member, Chief Judge for the Cheyenne River Sioux Tribal Court of Appeals and the Chief Justice of the Rosebud Sioux Supreme Court
  • Patrick Garry, Constitutional Law Professor
  • Brendan Johnson, adjunct Law Professor and former U.S. Attorney for the District of South Dakota.

Former

  • Thomas Sterling, 1st Dean of the College of Law and U.S. Senator from South Dakota. Namesake of Sterling Honors.
  • Bartlett Tripp, 1st Professor of Law, 25th U.S. Ambassador to Austria, last Chief Justice of Dakota Territory Supreme Court, and first president of the South Dakota Bar Association.
  • Ralph E. Erickson, 5th Dean of the College of Law and 11th Deputy Attorney General of the United States during the Nixon Administration.
  • Charles Hall Dillon, Professor of Law, U.S. Representative from South Dakota and Associate Justice of the South Dakota Supreme Court. Namesake of the Dillon Lecture Series.
  • Roger Baron, Professor of Law, ERISA scholar, and counsel in Sereboff v. Mid Atlantic Medical Services, Inc.
  • Mike Myers, Professor of Law, CEO of Mayo Clinic, and candidate for Governor of South Dakota.

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Noted alumni

The University of South Dakota School of Law has produced a number of noted alumni among which include eight governors, eight U.S. Representatives, four U.S. Senators, and the majority of state and federal judges of South Dakota. Currently, USD law alumni head two of South Dakota's branches of government Brian Gosch as Majority Leader of the South Dakota House of Representatives and Chief Justice David Gilbertson of the South Dakota Supreme Court. Current members of the executive branch include Lieutanant Governor Matt Michels, Attorney General Marty Jackley, and Chief of staff Tony Venhuizen.


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Academia


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Attorneys General


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Business


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Governors and Lieutenant Governors


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State Supreme Court Justices


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United States District Attorneys


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United States District Court


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United States Court of Appeals


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United States House of Representatives


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United States Tax Court


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United States Senate




United States Military




State Legislature

  • William Garner Waddel (1904), Member of South Dakota Senate
  • Roswell Bottum (1924), Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Donald A. Haggar, Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Scott Heidepriem (1980), Minority Leader of South Dakota Senate.
  • Anne Hajek, Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Marc Feinstein (1995), Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Lance Russell (2000), Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Craig Kennedy, Member of South Dakota Senate
  • Joni Cutler, Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Ervin E. Dupper, Member of South Dakota Senate
  • Ron J. Volesky, Member of South Dakota Senate
  • Timothy Johns, Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Roger W. Hunt, Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Margaret V. Gillespie, Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Mike Stevens, Member of South Dakota House of Representatives
  • Brian Gosch (1996), current Majority Leader and former Speaker of the House of South Dakota House of Representatives.
  • David Lust (1997), Majority Leader of South Dakota House of Representatives.



Tribal, Sovereign, Foreign Courts

  • Creighton Leland Robertson (1976), Chief Judge of the Sisseton Wapheton Oyate Reservation Tribal Court
  • Charles Abourezk (1992), current Chief Justice of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe Supreme Court, 2014-present.



See also

  • Attorney General of South Dakota
  • South Dakota Supreme Court
  • United States Attorney for the District of South Dakota



References




External links

  • Official website

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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