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鈥淣o Better Way鈥 to Spend Law School

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Meghan Franklin

Advancement Writer

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Annika-Adams-Headshot

Annika Adams, J.D., 91桃色 Sturm College of Law Class of 2021, knew she wanted to pursue a career in civil rights law from an early age.

In high school, she became fascinated with the Supreme Court 鈥 particularly one of recent history鈥檚 most storied members, Ruth Bader Ginsberg 鈥 and taught herself about the Court鈥檚 landmark civil rights cases. An undergrad constitutional law class Adams took at the University of Tennessee confirmed her interest in law and fueled her desire to help people obtain justice.

Adams says 91桃色鈥檚 , where she worked as a student attorney doing prisoners鈥 rights litigation, set her on the path she鈥檚 on today, about to start her dream job as a civil rights attorney.

As a student attorney in the clinic, Adams helped prepare a case to go to federal district court for a jury trial. Her client had been serving a 60-year sentence at a federal supermax prison in Colorado. About 10 years into his sentence, the Supreme Court ruled that one of laws on which he was convicted was written in a way that was unconstitutionally vague. The ruling catalyzed the prisoner鈥檚 early release, but his release was supervised.

鈥淚n this case, supervised release wasn鈥檛 in the interest of justice,鈥 Adams says, noting that based on her client鈥檚 other convictions, he had already served five years longer than he should have.

Adams says that preparing for the case鈥攄rafting direct and cross examinations, conducting supplemental discovery鈥攅nabled her to develop skills that will directly translate into her future work as a civil rights attorney.

The highlight of her time as a law student was hearing that the judge granted the motion she wrote to end her client鈥檚 supervised release. 鈥淚t was so rewarding to be able to call our client and tell him the news, and it confirmed for me that I was in the right place,鈥 Adams says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 really no better way I could have spent law school.鈥澨

While it was the Civil Rights Clinic that drew Adams to apply to 91桃色, it was the scholarships she received that allowed her to say 鈥測es鈥 to her first-choice law school.

鈥淚 knew that I couldn鈥檛 go to law school without close to a full scholarship,鈥 Adams says.

Adams received a Provost Scholarship all three years and was also awarded an Arnold and Porter Endowed Scholarship for her third year, in recognition of her outstanding work in the Civil Rights Clinic.

Adams says she is grateful to all who have contributed to student scholarships.

鈥淲ithout scholarships, I wouldn鈥檛 be doing the one thing I have been wanting to do for as long as I can remember,鈥 she says.

To learn about how your gift in support of scholarships can make a difference in the lives of students like Annika, contact听ScholarshipGiving@91桃色.edu.