preLaw magazine Back to School 2022

Elisabeth Haub School of Law

The Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University was featured among its “Leaders in Technology” for its innovative Access to Justice Project (A2J).

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In The Media

Inspired by a Lifelong Connection to Nature

Elisabeth Haub School of Law
Environmental

"Every summer, my parents sent me to Nature Camp and let me play outside to my heart’s content. It was through these experiences that I felt a calling to try to mend the disconnect I saw between man and nature."

headshot of law student Megan Gaddy '23

This past summer, Megan Gaddy ’23, worked as a law clerk with the Department of Justice in the Environment and Natural Resources Division, specifically in the Environmental Enforcement Section. For Megan, this was an ideal opportunity as she finishes her studies at Haub Law, pursuing the Advanced Certificate in Environmental Law. Megan notes that, “Through my experience this past summer, I was able to witness a truly collaborative work environment. Significantly, I also got a glimpse into the breadth of issues involved in litigating environmental cases from start to finish.”

Megan applied to Haub Law with a laser focus on the environmental law program. With an eye towards nature from a young age, Megan knew her passions were with the environment. “Every summer, my parents sent me to Nature Camp and let me play outside to my heart’s content. It was through these experiences that I felt a calling to try to mend the disconnect I saw between man and nature. Over time, I witnessed the small patches of prairie lands and forests that I once played in as a child in Illinois being swallowed up by massive cornfields. Every day on my way to school, I passed the chemical processing plant where my dad worked fill the sky with grey, sulfur fumes. I knew that I wanted to work to change this and I felt Haub Law was a place that could set me on that path.”

“Every summer, my parents sent me to Nature Camp and let me play outside to my heart’s content. It was through these experiences that I felt a calling to try to mend the disconnect I saw between man and nature."

The summer after Megan’s 1L year, she participated in the DC Summer Externship Program. Due to the pandemic, she was remote and was able to be placed outside of the DC area. “I worked for a wonderful non-profit organization on the Navajo Nation called Indian Country Grassroots Support.” During her 2L year, Megan had the opportunity to work in the Honorable Cathy Seibel's chambers in the SDNY through the Federal Judicial Honors Program. Now, a 3L Megan is capping off her Haub Law experience as a student intern with Pace's Environmental Litigation Clinic.

“I have loved my time at Haub Law. I love the small, tight-knit culture of the School, especially within the environmental law community. Having come from a massive university with over 40,000 students, I love signing up for a class and being able to recognize almost every name on the roster. I hope that my career path leads me to a position that aligns with the protective, justice-centered values I developed as a child. Whether that is a position in government or at a non-profit, I am open to wherever that path leads me and feel Haub Law has prepared me well.”

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In the Media

Bennett Gershman, a former prosecutor and a law professor at Pace University, suggested that significant portions of the filing may be redacted “given the closeness to the upcoming election” but that many of the actions Trump took in his attempt to overturn the election results “clearly were not official acts.”

In the Media

Elisabeth Haub School of Law Professor Bennett Gershman provides insights to Reuters regarding the recent charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams and the challenges of removing him from office – and the story gets picked up by hundreds of publications around the world. In the article, U.S. prosecutors have charged Adams with accepting illegal campaign contributions and luxury travel accommodations from Turkish nationals attempting to sway his influence, capping an investigation that has sent the largest U.S. city's government into turmoil.

Catherine Gonzalez '15: An Advocate for Immigrant Rights

Diversity and Equity
Elisabeth Haub School of Law
Return on Investment

"I really wake up every day with that same goal I envisioned years ago – unapologetically committed to ensuring that people's most basic rights are protected."

Headshot of law alumna Catherine Gonzalez
Headshot of law alumna Catherine Gonzalez

Catherine Gonzalez (née Peña ) '15 began navigating the immigration system from an early age as an immigrant child. Born in San Jose de las Matas, a small town in the Dominican Republic, Catherine remained there until she was nine. Catherine recalls, “It was all I knew, and once I immigrated I was separated from my mother and from the only family I knew. I found myself in a big, strange world in New York City, with a new and strange language to match. Despite those struggles, immigrating offered me invaluable opportunities. This early exposure to immigration introduced me to the bureaucracies of the American immigration system—from consulates to individual immigration officers. As I pursued higher education, I decided I wanted to become a lawyer because I wanted to help the people of my community. I am proud to say I am now the first and only lawyer in my family.”

Once she was in college, Catherine pursued internships with lawyers and sought to learn all she could to forge a path for herself in the law. “I gravitated towards immigrant rights issues. I volunteered at an Immigrant Rights Law Clinic in college and worked with a criminal defense attorney who worked as assigned counsel on state and federal cases.” Once she was at Haub Law, Catherine volunteered anywhere she could to gain additional experience with immigration law and in trial advocacy, having several impactful experiences along the way. “One of the most impactful professors I had the privilege of meeting and working with at Pace was Professor Louis Fasulo. Professor Fasulo and The Advocacy Program – its academic curriculum as well as the moot court and mock trial competitions – were integral to helping me hone the skills I now use daily as a public defender. I am eternally grateful to Loretta Musial, Professor Fasulo, and The Advocacy Program at Pace for teaching, guiding, and supporting me. It is in large part thanks to all of them that I wake up every day to do work I love and am passionate about,” noted Catherine.

“I gravitated towards immigrant rights issues. I volunteered at an Immigrant Rights Law Clinic in college and worked with a criminal defense attorney who worked as assigned counsel on state and federal cases.”

After she graduated from Haub Law, Catherine began her legal career in the Criminal Defense Practice at Brooklyn Defender Services (BDS), representing clients against criminal charges. It was there she found herself gravitating towards cases that resonated with her, often those that involved immigration-related issues. Today, Catherine is a Supervising Immigration Attorney & Policy Counsel in the Criminal Defense Practice at Brooklyn Defender Services. “I witnessed how the criminal legal system funnels people into the immigration deportation system, which led me to join BDS’s Padilla Team where I advise clients and attorneys about the immigration consequences of criminal and family court cases and represent non-citizens fighting to remain in the US.”

Recently, Haub Law’s Trial Advocacy Program at the 2022 Gavel Gala honored Catherine with the Rising Star Award. “I feel so honored to have been selected to receive the Rising Star Award. When I was a little girl, newly arrived in the United States, I began to dream of becoming a lawyer. Based on what I saw on television, I imagined myself standing in a courtroom, vehemently defending the rights of people during some of the most challenging times in their lives. Years later, working at Brooklyn Defender Services I feel incredibly privileged. There, as a public defender, I have been able to work towards accomplishing this dream of being an advocate for the people in my community. I really wake up every day with that same goal I envisioned years ago – unapologetically committed to ensuring that people's most basic rights are protected. Receiving the Rising Star Award serves as an affirmation for all of the hard work and sacrifices that were integral to achieving my goals and dreams.”

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More from Pace

In the Media

Bennett Gershman, a former prosecutor and a law professor at Pace University, suggested that significant portions of the filing may be redacted “given the closeness to the upcoming election” but that many of the actions Trump took in his attempt to overturn the election results “clearly were not official acts.”

In the Media

Elisabeth Haub School of Law Professor Bennett Gershman provides insights to Reuters regarding the recent charges against New York City Mayor Eric Adams and the challenges of removing him from office – and the story gets picked up by hundreds of publications around the world. In the article, U.S. prosecutors have charged Adams with accepting illegal campaign contributions and luxury travel accommodations from Turkish nationals attempting to sway his influence, capping an investigation that has sent the largest U.S. city's government into turmoil.

Professor Jonathan Brown Recognized with 2022 Ottinger Award for Faculty Achievement

Elisabeth Haub School of Law

Professor Jonathan Brown has been named the recipient of the 2022 Ottinger Award for Faculty Achievement. The Richard Ottinger Faculty Achievement Award is awarded annually by the Faculty Development Committee, in consultation with the Dean, in recognition of a full-time professor’s outstanding service to the law school, the legal profession, or both. The award generally is based on the faculty member’s outstanding service during the previous academic year.

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Professor Jonathan Brown has been named the recipient of the 2022 Ottinger Award for Faculty Achievement. The Richard Ottinger Faculty Achievement Award is awarded annually by the Faculty Development Committee, in consultation with the Dean, in recognition of a full-time professor’s outstanding service to the law school, the legal profession, or both. The award generally is based on the faculty member’s outstanding service during the previous academic year.

In announcing the award to Professor Brown, Professor Leslie Y. Garfield Tenzer, as chair of the Faculty Development Committee, remarked:

“This past year, Jonathan Brown has done incredible work bringing new funding for our Food and Farm Business Law Clinic. Through this hard work and lobbying, he secured significant additional funding for the Clinic. His work and this funding raised the profile of the clinic across the state, allowed the clinic to retain a staff attorney that we hired last year and to make an additional hire to assist with the administrative and programmatic work of the clinic, freeing up Professor Brown and the staff attorney to have more time for students and clients, and further expanding the reach of the clinic by allowing for a broader capacity for intake and referrals. Professor Brown’s work is good for current students, for clinic clients, for the food system across New York state, and as the clinic’s reputation grows, it is good for attracting new students to Pace. Thank you, Professor Brown!”

The Ottinger Award for Faculty Achievement is named in honor of Richard L. Ottinger, who served in the United States House of Representatives for eight terms, from 1965 to 1971 and from 1975 to 1985. Ottinger was Dean of the Law School from 1994 to 1999 and is the founder of the Pace Energy Project, now known as the Pace Energy and Climate Center.

Jonathan Brown has been a member of the Pace faculty since 2016. He is the founder and director of the school’s Food and Farm Business Law Clinic (formerly the Food and Beverage Law Clinic), which launched in January 2017. The Food and Farm Business Law Clinic provides pro bono transactional legal services to small farm businesses, artisan food manufacturers, craft beverage entrepreneurs, and related nonprofit organizations. Through this work, the Clinic seeks to facilitate the development of a more just and sustainable regional food system and economy. Prior to joining the Pace faculty, Professor Brown was a Clinical Lecturer in Law and Eugene Ludwig/Robert M. Cover Fellow in Law at Yale Law School, where he co-taught the Community and Economic Development Clinic. Previously, Brown was a senior associate at Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy LLP, in New York. Professor Brown serves on the board of the Northeastern Organic Farming Association of New York (NOFA-NY), New York’s leading non‐profit organization providing programs and services to promote sustainable, local organic food and farming.

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Elisabeth Haub School of Law Professor Bennett L. Gershman Honored with New York Law Journal's Lifetime Achievement Award

Elisabeth Haub School of Law

Pace University Distinguished Professor Bennett L. Gershman was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the New York Law Journal’s 2022 New York Legal Awards on Thursday, October 6. The New York Legal Awards honor attorneys who have made an impact on the legal community and the practice of law over an entire career. Professor Gershman is one of 10 distinguished honorees to receive the 2022 Lifetime Achievement accolade in recognition of his decades of service in the field of law and his record of extensive, extraordinary research, scholarship and teaching.

Professor Bennett L. Gershman Honored with New York Law Journal's Lifetime Achievement Award
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Professor Bennett L. Gershman Honored with New York Law Journal's Lifetime Achievement Award

Pace University Distinguished Professor Bennett L. Gershman was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award at the New York Law Journal’s 2022 New York Legal Awards on Thursday, October 6. The New York Legal Awards honor attorneys who have made an impact on the legal community and the practice of law over an entire career. Professor Gershman is one of 10 distinguished honorees to receive the 2022 Lifetime Achievement accolade in recognition of his decades of service in the field of law and his record of extensive, extraordinary research, scholarship and teaching.

Professor Gershman has led a remarkable career as prosecutor, scholar and teacher. His pioneering work in prosecutorial ethics has influenced reform in our criminal justice system,” said Horace E. Anderson Jr., Dean of the Elisabeth Haub School of Law. “As an exceptional educator for the past 48 years, his knowledge and passion have helped to shape the future of our profession.

Professor Gershman has been a professor of law at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law since its founding as the Pace Law School in 1976. Prior to coming to Pace, he was a prosecutor in the New York State Anti-Corruption Office, where he argued cases in state and federal courts involving public and political officials charged with corruption.

Professor Gershman has written four books, over 100 articles in law journals, and hundreds of book reviews, essays, and op-ed pieces. His treatise, Prosecutorial Misconduct, initially published in 1985 and now in its 2nd edition, has become a preeminent resource for scholars and practitioners seeking guidance on wrongful convictions.

As a leading authority in the country on prosecutorial misconduct, Gershman is continuously called upon by the news media for his expertise. He has served as an expert witness on prosecutorial misconduct in numerous criminal cases and devoted much of his time to training prosecutors and judges.

Professor Gershman was named a Pace University Distinguished Professor in 2020, the highest honor the University bestows upon faculty. He has been a recipient of the Law School’s Outstanding Professor of the Year award eight times in the past 20 years. In addition, his lifetime work was recognized in a special edition of the Ohio State Journal of Criminal law dedicated to and “In Honor of Prof. Bennett L. Gershman” in 2019.

Thomas Hoffman, a lawyer who has spent his career devoted to the exoneration of innocent people, outlined Professor Gershman’s successful career in an article for the New York Law Journal, reflecting on his extraordinary expertise as a leading resource for scholars, practitioners and judges regarding the proper and ethical role of a prosecutor. He writes, “Professor Bennett L. Gershman has devoted his career to the ideal of equal justice for all. His body of work and accomplishments are revolutionary. Yet he is humble and unpretentious. When asked to name his greatest accomplishment, he replied, ‘I was able to retain my integrity.’”

Read the full article in the New York Law Journal.

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Federal judge halts key parts of New York's new gun law

Dyson College of Arts and Science

Dyson Professor Darrin Porcher speaks with CBS New York about the latest court developments in NY’s gun battle.

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In The Media

Digital Divide Reveals Tech Disparities Along Racial Lines in Westchester

Dyson College of Arts and Science

Pace’s MPA program teams up with The Westchester Children’s Association to explore the digital divide in the county.

The WCA/Pace survey, authored by Sydney Moraitis, a graduate student working on her master’s in public administration, and Dr. Gina Scutelnicu-Todoran, a Pace associate professor, revealed that 31 percent of the respondents believed technology made their child’s learning more difficult and 27 percent experienced stress due to technology at least once a week.

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In The Media
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Lifetime Achievement: Bennett L. Gershman

Elisabeth Haub School of Law

Haub Law Professor Bennett Gershman receives a Lifetime Achievement Award from The New York Law Journal.

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In The Media

Equal Protection

Pace President

President Marvin Krislov provides legal insights and expertise for The Hechinger Report’s in-depth series exploring the origins of affirmative action and the arguments before the Supreme Court that are challenging this practice today.

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In The Media

Building Bridges Across Disciplines

Dyson College of Arts and Science
Pace Path/Student Success

For over four decades, Dyson’s Society of Fellows has nurtured outstanding interdisciplinary scholarship and continues to foster strong relationships amongst students, faculty, and alumni.

Three Pace students in New York City overlooking skyline with One Pace Plaza
Three Pace students overlooking NYC skyline with One Pace Plaza in background

“Any major in Dyson who wants to engage in research and scholarship, there needs to be an opportunity to present that and engage with others.”

These are the words of Associate Professor of Anthropology and Chair of the Society of Fellows Judith Pajo, PhD. Ever since becoming a member of the Pace Community over a decade ago, Pajo has been heavily involved in the Society of Fellows—the premier honors organization housed within Dyson that continues to push the boundaries of student and faculty scholarship, interdisciplinary research, and conversation across a diverse range of fields.

Comprising more than 700 Fellows across its 42-year history, the Society of Fellows is a storied organization that stretches deep into the past—consisting of current students, faculty, as well as a large contingent of active alumni. Each year, the Society inducts a new class of students who exemplifies the ideals of liberal education and a commitment to undergraduate scholarship.

One recent inductee, Kailey Liddell ’23, considers her involvement in the Society of Fellows to be one of the most formative of her college experience.

“Being an artistic person, rather than a science or mathematical person, you don’t really hear a lot about research opportunities that you can actually do,” said Liddell. “When I found out my creative documentary was considered something valuable for other people to learn and listen to, that really expanded my own perception of what I could do with my major and my interests.”

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Pace Professors and students at Annual Meeting
Society of Fellows Chair Judi Pajo, PhD (left) alongside students and Assistant Provost for Research Maria Iacullo Bird, PhD (right).

Liddell was first invited to present at the Society of Fellows’ Annual Meeting—the organization’s showcase event every spring where students present their scholarship completed under the supervision of faculty mentors. Liddell was first invited in 2021 after Assistant Professor in Media and Communication Studies Melvin Williams, PhD, encouraged her to submit a short film she had made about race and representation, specifically addressing the lack of biracial characters in children’s media. This past spring, she was invited back as a plenary presenter for research she conducted under the supervision of Professor of English Sid Ray, PhD, and was formally inducted in the Society of Fellows.

The Annual Meeting showcases the outstanding work of students, but just as instrumental to the success of the Society of Fellows is a group of dedicated and encouraging faculty. On the faculty side, Pajo believes it is essential to promote the intellectual curiosity of bright students like Liddell, who intuitively understand that learning isn’t confined to the classroom.

“There’s always going to be one or two students who stand out in each course, because they want to do more research than what happens to be assigned that semester,” notes Pajo. “I think the Society of Fellows is an outlet for students who don’t feel like the research is done once the course is done and they got their grade—they want to do more, they want to reach a wider audience so that their research makes an impact.”

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Society of Fellows presentation
A presentation in progress at the 2022 Annual Meeting.

In addition to the Annual Meeting, the Society also holds an annual Weekend Seminar every fall to discuss a particular interdisciplinary issue in depth. This year’s seminar, which will be held in Connecticut on the weekend of October 28, is centered around the question Can Computers Make Art?, and will feature a panel of faculty and alumni from both art and mathematics about the role of machines in the creative process.

As Pajo notes, seminars often start out with an academic question that requires interdisciplinary conversation—something the Society is readily equipped to dive into.

“This particular year, the idea for the seminar topic started out with Mathematics Professor Meng Xu, who was reading about some people using the statistical programming language R to create art,” said Pajo. “Normally R is used for charts, and graphs, and statistics. He wanted to get students to use R to create art but also wanted to collaborate with faculty in art for this project so he came to the Fellows.”

In addition to fostering dialogue about a wide range of issues—and simply being a place where scholarship and intellectual curiosity can grow, students over the years have found the experience to have valuable practical benefits. Liddell, for one, has noticed how the niche ideas and topics she has been exposed to through the Fellows has been useful for interviews, and has significantly strengthened her confidence in terms of conducting research and applying for grants.

“Participating in the Fellows is a great way to get higher-level academic experiences,” added Liddell. “You build relationships with faculty, get great presentation experience, and build public speaking skills. It helps you learn how to be an upper-level learner.”

“You build relationships with faculty, get great presentation experience, and build public speaking skills. It helps you learn how to be an upper-level learner.”

Above all, the Society of Fellows fosters an environment in which intellectual curiosity, mentorship, and a commitment to great scholarship is not only encouraged, but is celebrated—in turn, broadening the richness of the Pace experience for faculty, students, and alumni alike.

“We really value tackling problems of society from multiple angles,” says Pajo. “Any one student can’t do all of that, so by bringing students and faculty together, we try to evaluate those problems that academia is here to help solve.

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Faculty and Staff

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Balancing internships, travel, class, and leadership roles may be a challenge for some, but for Seidenberg student Ava Posner '18 , she knows it is her code to success for rising to the top as a woman in technology and landing a job at a leading startup after graduation.

Pace Magazine

At the intersection of Pace’s strategic priorities and opportunities for outstanding academic growth comes the drive to move Pace forward. We're meeting the challenges facing higher education and putting our unique positioning and competitive advantages to work, strengthening our reputation as we move into the future.

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