Class Notes, Fall 2025

Includes news received August 1, 2024, through July 31, 2025.

70s

Allen Reel JD ’74 has published his seventh book: Slingers of the West. Full of Western poems that Reel presented at the Montana Cowboy Poetry Gathering, the book also has a true and compelling murder story from his days at Montana State which was a major influence in Reel attending L&C Law School and becoming a lawyer.

Greg Lynch ’75, a seasoned trial lawyer in Bend, Oregon, has practiced law for 50 years. While Greg’s accolades and professional activities could fill pages, two remarkable highlights stand out.

First, Greg achieved a $247,500 jury verdict in a civil case for the fatal shooting of his client’s three livestock protection dogs. After a three-and-a-half-year ordeal, and an eight-day trial, a jury awarded the rancher $7,500 for the dogs’ replacement value, $100,000 for emotional harm, and $139,500 for punitive damages.

Another landmark in Greg’s career involved writing the amicus brief for Physicians for Compassionate Care in the U.S. Supreme Court case of Gonzales v. Oregon. This assisted-suicide case questioned whether the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) authorized the Attorney General to ban the use of controlled substances for physician- assisted suicide in Oregon. The U.S. Supreme Court ultimately ruled that the CSA did not grant the Attorney General the power to interfere with physicians complying with state law.

Philip Jones ’76, is this year’s Distinguished Business Law Graduate. Read the story

Craig Metcalf JD ’77 was presented with the Albert Nelson Marquis Lifetime Achievement Award by Marquis Who’s Who.

Metcalf has established a distinguished career in the legal field, particularly in intellectual property law. As a shareholder at Metcalf IP, LLC since 2024, he manages the business while engaging in a mix of intellectual property, patent and trademark law. He also dedicates time to mediation, arbitration and pro bono work.

Metcalf’s professional journey is complemented by his earlier experience as a research biochemist at the University of Utah from 1972 to 1975. This scientific background laid the foundation for his transition into law, where he has achieved significant milestones, such as writing and executing over 1,500 patents. His work has supported clients who have achieved notable successes, including a Nobel Prize winner in genetics.

His over arching dedication to his field has been recognized with numerous accolades, such as Client Review Best Lawyer Awards from Martindale-Hubbell for 25 years and as a global IT Star for six years.

Outside his professional life, Metcalf is actively involved in civic organizations, such as Ronald McDonald House Charities and the Utah Tech nology Council.

80s

After serving nine years as an immigration judge, Monica Little JD ’80 “dropped the mic” and has retired with 32 years of federal government service.

Jeffrey Blatt JD ’81 was once again named by Lexology Index (previously Who’s Who Legal) as being among the top lawyers globally in Telecoms, Media and Entertainment as well as in the Southeast Asia category for Data for 2025. Blatt, a member of the California Bar since 1981, was admitted as an Experienced Attorney to the Idaho Bar in 2024. He continues to practice intellectual property and technology law based in Chiang Mai, Thailand and the Boise area under the service mark X Ventures.

Robin Pope ’81 and Lane Shetterly ’81 were instrumental in the passage of SB 163, legislation modernizing how parentage is legally established in Oregon. Shetterly, testifying in his role with the Uniform Law Commission, explained how the bill adapts the Uniform Parentage Act to Oregon’s needs by strengthening the marital presumption of parentage, expanding voluntary acknowledgments to include non-genetic and intended parents, and broadening court proceedings to address cases involving assisted reproduction and surrogacy. Pope, an attorney with over 35 years of experience in assisted reproduction and family formation law, served with Shetterly for three years on the workgroup that developed the bill and later testified in its support, emphasizing the vital clarity and legal protections it provides for intended parents, surrogates, and donors. Her testimony underscored the importance of ensuring legal security for children and families formed through assisted reproduction and gestational surrogacy.

Molly Marcum JD ’82 has been recognized by Best Lawyers as the 2025 Lawyer of the Year for Health Care Law. Only a single lawyer in each practice area and designated metropolitan area is honored as the “Lawyer of the Year,” making this accolade especially significant. Lawyers are selected based on impressive voting averages during peer review assessments. Receipt of this designation reflects the high level of respect a lawyer has earned among other leading lawyers in the same practice areas and communities for their abilities, their professionalism, and their integrity.

In addition to the 2025 Lawyer of the Year award, Marcum is also listed in the 2025 Edition of The Best Lawyers in America in the practice areas of Health Care Law and Medical Malpractice Law–Defendants. She was also recognized as Lawyer of the Year for Health Care Law in 2020 and 2023.

Brian (Sandy) Curtis JD ’83 has retired after a wonderful almost 40-year legal career in private practice and the oil and gas industry. He retired in 2022 after finishing an extended posting in Singapore and Jakarta, Indonesia managing Chevron’s Asian environmental and safety legal team. Now in Houston, he is enjoying a less hectic “career” managing his two grandchildren, playing tennis, being with family and friends, and traveling to unique locations. He is very thankful and appreciative of his time in Portland at Lewis & Clark Law School, and the opportunities that it gave him.

Janay Haas, JD ’83, recently published the second edition of her student self- help law manual, Oregon’s Legal Guide for College Students–“Everything a young person would never, ever ask a parent about sex, drugs, and copyrighted rock ‘n’ roll,” says Haas. The guide aims to help young people identify rights and potential problems relating to frat life, tenancy, consumer and employee rights, and avoiding problems with police and student loans.

Mike Scott JD ’83 is the 2024 recipient of the Oregon State Bar’s (OSB) Award of Merit. The Award of Merit is the highest honor that the OSB bar can bestow. If awarded to a lawyer, it recognizes the Oregon lawyer who has made outstanding contributions to the bench, the bar and the community at large, and who exhibits the highest standards of professionalism. The award does not have to be granted every year, and only one award may be bestowed in any year.

Dennis Treacy JD ’83 was awarded the 2024 Bridge Builder Award by VIRGINIAforever, a unique and diverse coalition of businesses, environmental organizations, and outdoor enthusiasts that advocate for increased government funding for water quality improvements and land conservation across the Commonwealth. Treacy is a longtime environmental steward and former organization chair. In addition to being a founding member of VIRGINIAforever and a former director of the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality, Treacy possesses decades of both private and public sector experience focused on public service and environmental advocacy. He is also involved with numerous boards and organizations throughout the Commonwealth.

Over Treacy’s storied career, he has served as an environmental attorney for a regulated business, the state’s chief environmental regulator, and the voice of business with the Virginia Chamber of Commerce. He retired from Smithfield Foods, Inc. where he served as executive vice president and chief sustainability officer. He is also a fellow of the American College of Environmental Lawyers (ACOEL) and currently chairs the Virginia Business Higher Education Council (VBHEC), which works to advance affordable, high-quality education to support Virginia’s business community.”

Richard Lewis Wolf JD ’87 has been selected for inclusion in Marquis Who’s Who. Wolf, an esteemed attorney at law, has dedicated almost four decades to the legal profession, with a significant focus on criminal and death penalty cases. Since 1990, he has been a pivotal figure at Richard L. Wolf P.C., in Oregon where he primarily handles death penalty cases at the state and federal level in both trials and appeals. His expertise in this challenging field is underscored by his profound impact on the state’s judicial landscape. He was lead counsel in the trial and subsequent appeal that led the Oregon Supreme Court to clear death row in Oregon in 2021.

Before establishing his practice, Wolf served as an attorney at law with the Metropolitan Public Defender from 1987 to 1990. His tenure there laid the foundation for his future endeavors in criminal defense. Additionally, he has shared his knowledge as a teacher of capital jury selection at the National College of Capital Voir Dire in Colorado, further demonstrating his commitment to the legal community.

His professional accomplishments have been recognized through various accolades, including the President’s Award from the Oregon Criminal Defense Lawyers Association and an Award of Appreciation. Wolf is also an active member of several professional organizations, such as the Oregon Criminal Defense Lawyers Association, the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, and currently serves as Oregon Capital Resource Counsel.

Matt Bergman JD ’89, founder of Social Media Victims Law Center, was recently featured on Amanpour & Co. on April 28, 2025 discussing the way digital media impacts the lives of children. At issue is the prevalence of AI chatbots that are capable of engaging in sexually explicit conversations with children — and even posing as children. Bergman and filmmaker Perri Peltz appeared on the show to discuss the harmful impacts of social media on children featured in the new documentary “Can’t Look Away,” which exposes the real-life consequences of these kinds of technologies. Bergman takes social media companies to court and holds them liable through his law firm, Social Media Victims Law Center.

90s

Joseph (Joe) Durham JD ’90 was recognized by his peers as the 2026 “Lawyer of the Year” in Environmental Litigation in Columbus, OH. A third- generation garbage man, Durham has litigated more than 1,000 environmental cases, advised local governments on solid waste and recycling collection contracts, and worked with clients regarding all types of enforcement and public health issues. Durham is a member of Eastman & Smith and has represented cities, counties, local health districts, solid waste management districts, townships and villages in environmental law, and litigation and public health law. Since 1991, Durham has advised local health district clients. He has litigated cases involving nuisances, solid and hazardous wastes, construction and demolition debris, landfills, recyclable materials, sewage, water, and air pollution.

Bryan Scott JD ’91 has been awarded the Silver Staircase Award by the Public Interest Law Association (PILA) at the William S. Boyd School of Law. This prestigious honor recognizes individuals whose careers reflect a steadfast and inspiring commitment to public interest work.

The Silver Staircase Award is one of the highest accolades bestowed by PILA, a student organization dedicated to raising awareness of public interest legal careers and empowering law students to explore opportunities in this vital field. Scott’s distinguished career serves as a powerful example of the impact legal professionals can have when they prioritize service and justice in their work.

Bob Miller JD ’91 has been awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Native American Bar Association of Arizona (NABA-AZ). He will receive the award at the 16th Annual Seven Generations Awards Dinner at the end of September 2025. This event recognizes individuals who have made significant contributions to Indian law and to Native communities.

Miller, an enrolled citizen of the Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma, is the Jonathan and Wendy Rose Professor of Law at the Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at Arizona State University and was formerly a professor at Lewis & Clark Law School. He specializes in areas such as Federal Indian Law, American Indian economic development, Civil Procedure, and Constitutional Law. He is the author of six books on Indigenous issues. He also serves as Interim Chief Justice for the Pascua Yaqui Tribe Court of Appeals and as a judge for other tribes. Additionally, he is the Faculty Director of the Rosette LLP American Indian Economic Development Program at ASU.

Michael Colbach JD ’94 celebrates 20 years as title sponsor of the Bicycle Attorney Cycling Team. In 1996, while serving as a Deputy District Attorney for Multnomah County and wanting more miles than his bicycle commutes into Portland for work, Colbach started racing cyclocross and doing stage races with the cycling team Presto Velo. Trying cases as DA and bicycle racing soon were his focus in life, training and 30 hours a week and riding many thousands of miles each year.

When Colbach started his personal injury law practice he quickly started receiving calls from cyclists, and his law practice evolved with him as a specialist in bike law. In 2005 Colbach became the title sponsor for the team he used to race with. BicycleAttorney.com/Presto Velo cycling team is one of Oregon’s oldest, continuously operating cycling teams. The Bicycle Attorney team and Colbach share an ongoing commitment to making a positive impact through cycling. The team members take on all kinds of bike related causes every year.

Katheryn Enters JD ’94 has been named a partner at the firm Oppenheim + Zebrak LLP (O+Z) and is based out of the firm’s Washington, D.C. office. An experienced litigator, Enters’ practice focuses on content protection and online piracy. Leveraging her decades of outside counsel and in-house experience, Enters brings to bear on clients’ behalf her deep knowledge of eDiscovery and data analytics, finding pragmatic solutions to complex problems, often of a tech nical nature. As a result, she leads the firm’s teams on eDiscovery and data analytics.

Prior to joining O+Z, Enters was Associate General Counsel at Celanese Corporation, serving as global environmental health and safety counsel. Prior to that, she was Special Counsel at Holme Roberts & Owen (now Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner), where her practice focused on complex commercial disputes in federal and state courts and enforcement matters before regulatory bodies. Enters is also a former nuclear engineer and, as an attorney, has represented clients in regulatory matters and policy making efforts, including experience in negotiations on behalf of clients at contaminated sites globally.

Peter J. Ayers ’95, Senior Counsel at the US Patent & Trademark Office (PTO), successfully lead a team of five US lawyers in a three-week trial in the longest-running and potentially most consequential cases in PTO history. On May 16, 2024, Judge Lamberth of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia issued a 102-page decision finding for the USPTO on the issue of prosecution laches. According to the court, “No other result is even colorable.” Hyatt v. Vidal, 2024 WL 2208581).

Robin Kundis Craig, JD ’96 has been recently appointed as the Robert A. Schroeder Distinguished Professor of Law at the University of Kansas. She will deliver her public inaugural lecture, “Just Add Water: Private Property Rights and Environmental Protection in a Panarchical Reality,” in October 2025. Craig joined the KU Law faculty in July 2024 and specializes in all things water, including the relationships between energy-food nexus; the Clean Water Act; the intersection of water issues and land issues;ocean and coastal law; marine biodiversity and marine protected areas; water law; ecological resilience and the law; climate change adaptation, and the relationships between environmental law and public health.

Joan Wilson JD ’96 was appointed by the Alaska Governor Mike Dunleavy to serve as the Chief Administrative Law Judge of the Alaska Office of Administrative Hearings. This Office handles most initial challenges to state administrative actions. Wilson resigned her most recent assignment as the Director of the Alaska Alcohol and Marijuana Control Office to take this appointment. This appointment is a five-year term subject to legislative confirmation.

Christopher Marshall Frost JD ’97 has completed his PhD in Public Affairs and Policy from the Hatfield School of Government at Portland State University in 2024. His field of study was Public Administration with an emphasis on organizational theory and meta- governance. His dissertation is titled, “The Bonneville Power Administration in a Transformative Decade.”

Johnson County District Judge Christopher Jayaram JD ’97 is one of three candidates being considered by the Kansas judicial nominating commission for a vacancy on the Kansas Supreme Court. Jayaram, who was appointed a district court judge in Johnson County by Governor Laura Kelly in 2021, said his 20-year legal career before that point focused on business litigation and health care matters as an attorney at Horn Aylward & Bandy.

George Sexton JD ’97 was recently featured on the show Nature Nuggets Episode #59 on Radio Kingston WKNY 107.9. The show takes listeners on a journey to the extraordinary Klamath- Siskiyou Bioregion of Southwest Oregon and Northwest California. This special bioregion includes many millions of acres of public land full of old growth forests and wild rivers, a natural legacy of the United States. Sexton is the Conservation Director of Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands Center and has worked to protect forests and watersheds in the Pacific Northwest for the last thirty years. His efforts have ended the old-growth logging program on several National Forests, established 9th Circuit case law protecting Late- Successional Reserves from salvage logging, and facilitated small-diameter fuels projects and prescribed burning on hundreds of thousands of acres.

Tamara Hanlon JD ’98 has accepted the position of Deputy Prosecuting Attorney at the Benton County Prosecuting Attorneys Office in Kennewick, Washington. She will be handling criminal appeals.

Joshua Husbands JD ’99 has been named Holland & Knight’s executive partner of the firm’s Portland office. Husbands will oversee the day-to-day management of the office while continuing to manage his practice, which focuses on private wealth services and tax counsel for private companies and their owners. Husbands has been with Holland & Knight for more than 25 years and represents clients in an array of business, tax, philanthropy, business succession and estate planning matters, including business reorganizations, acquisitions and divestitures. He frequently writes and speaks on business tax, life insurance and asset protection matters concerning businesses and high-net-worth individuals.

Husbands was named the 2025 Lawyer of the Year in the category of Closely Held Companies and Family Businesses Law by The Best Lawyers in America, and he is consistently recognized as a top Private Wealth Law attorney by the Chambers High Net Worth guide. He is also a fellow of the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel.


Class of 1999 gathers for their 25 year celebration. (L to R) Christine Golightly, Ezekiel Carder, Erin Kearney-DeClark, Lyndon Ruh nke, ... Class of 1999 gathers for their 25 year celebration. (L to R) Christine Golightly, Ezekiel Carder, Erin Kearney-DeClark, Lyndon Ruh nke, and Scott Lee.


00s

Steve Wehling ’01 was selected as the Civil Rights Director & Title IX Coordinator for Augustana College in Rock Island, Il. In this role, Steve will oversee the college’s civil rights policies and lead initiatives to foster a more inclusive campus. Steve has spent more than 20 years in various roles in higher education, including investigation and compliance work at the University of Iowa and University of Illinois.

Cindy Matsushita JD ’03 has been appointed to the role of Licensing Administrator for the Department of Commerce and Consumer Affairs (DCCA) Professional and Vocational Licensing Division (PVL) by the state of Hawai‘i. Matsushita’s career spans 25 years, primarily in legal and administrative capacities within the public sector, including stints at the Tri-County Metropolitan Transportation District of Oregon, the Honolulu Authority for Rapid Transportation Board of Directors, and most recently as the Student Transportation Services Administrator for Hawai‘i State Department of Education. These positions have prepped her for the responsibilities at PVL, which encompass the administration of 25 licensing regulatory boards and commissions, in addition to 27 licensing programs that operate without any board or commission, according to a statement published by the DCCA.

The duties of her new role include staffing support to licensing regulatory boards, managing licensing applications and renewals, and ensuring adherence to licensing laws and administrative rules. Professionals in the state rely on PVL’s four branches—Licensing, Examination, Administration, and Real Estate—to navigate the licensing landscape, a process that DCCA strives to make more accessible and streamlined.

Gina Delahunt JD ’04 recently served on a roundtable on how business community is focusing on the health and wellness of employees sponsored by the Portland Business Journal. Delahunt is the vice president of Human Resources for Bridgetown Natural Foods. Delahunt spent the first decade of her career in the insurance and risk management industry. She began her legal career as an attorney at Davis Rothwell Earle & Xochihua and United Employers Association before transitioning to an HR leadership role at Dave’s Killer Bread. Delahunt joined the Bridgetown Natural Foods team in 2016 and has led the HR department and been a member of the Senior Leadership Team since then. In addition to her JD, Delahunt received her MBA from the University of Portland.

Stephanie Engelsman JD ’04 won the Portland Public Schools (PPS) Zone 6 election held in May 2025. Engelsman, a juvenile public defender and parent with three children in PPS, secured a decisive victory, winning with over 80% of the vote. Her campaign focused on reducing chronic absenteeism and expanding access to apprenticeship and college prep opportunities. Engelsman was endorsed the Portland Association of Teachers (PAT) and three sitting school board members, including the outgoing Zone 6 representative, Julia Brim-Edwards. She defeated challengers Rob Galanakis and Simone Crowe.

Brooks Foster JD ’04 joins Schwabe’s Portland office as a member of the Natural Resources and Real Estate & Construction industry groups. He focuses on environmental issues, insurance disputes, and real estate and development matters and represents clients in trial and appellate courts, arbitrations, regulatory proceedings, and local hearings. He has extensive experience with environmental claims, contaminated property, permitting, commercial leases, and property damage cases.

Shannon Anderson JD ’05 is switching gears to work on the clean energy solutions to our climate crisis full-time, helping to make our power grid more affordable, reliable, and resilient. After 17 years working for Powder River Basin Resource Council, Anderson will start work at Solar United Neighbors as their Virtual Power Plant Policy Director. For those wonky people working for our nation’s sunny future, she looks forward to connecting with you! You can still find her at the home office in Sheridan, Wyoming.

Diana Bob JD ’05 received the 2025 Distinguished Alumni Award from her alma mater, Pitzer College. Bob is an attorney focusing on Indian law and environmental issues related to public policy. She has served as a civil legal aid attorney for the Northwest Justice Project in Spokane, WA; a policy attorney for the National Congress of American Indians in Washington, D.C.; and a tribal attorney for the Lummi Nation in Bellingham, WA. She is recognized as an ethical negotiator and conflict navigator known for crafting innovative solutions for deeply complex, entrenched issues that result in satisfying outcomes for all involved parties.

Bob grew up on the Lummi Indian Reservation on the north coast of Puget Sound, in Washington state. She is an enrolled member of the Lummi Nation, a federally recognized Indian tribe. She is the owner of Native Law PLLC, a Washington state-based law firm focused on Indian law that serves clients throughout the U.S. She has been appointed or elected to serve on the boards of Mt. Baker Planned Parenthood, Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Northwest Justice Project, Northwest Indian Bar Association, the Washington State Bar Association, and the Northwest Straits Commission. In addition, she serves on the Washington State Truth and Reconciliation Tribal Advisory Committee.

Sunrise Ayers JD ’06 became the Executive Director of Idaho Legal Aid Services (ILAS), a statewide nonprofit law firm committed to serving the civil legal needs of low-income Idahoans, in November 2024. Her journey with ILAS began in 2006 when she joined as a staff attorney, driven by her passion for public service and commitment to supporting those in need. Over the years, she’s held several key leadership roles, including Managing Attorney of the Boise Office and Deputy Director. As Executive Director, she plans to continue to be a strenuous advocate for access to justice for all Idahoans, and is honored to have this opportunity to serve her client communities. She notes that, “ILAS is an incredible organization, supported by a talented and compassionate staff and a dedicated Board, all of whom work tirelessly to improve the lives of low-income Idahoans.” Ayers believes deeply in the mission and the impact of the work and she can’t wait to see what we can accomplish in the years ahead.

Chad Colton JD ’06 developed a knack for “parachute” lawyering, where he steps in as counsel far along the legal process, even at the eleventh hour. For the Portland Business Journal, Colton says, “I realized I’ve become kind of good at this, and I love it, which was a change because it used to terrify me.” Turns out, his previous experience working on misdemeanor cases at the Multnomah County District Attorney’s office came in handy. Colton stepped in on Odell Bekham Jr.’s lawsuit against Nike in 2022 for $20.6 million and was successful in beating Nike. Colton was also successful as a “parachute” lawyer in beating the “Wolf of Montreal,” an international penny stock scammer, and the jury ultimately awarded Colton’s client $23.4 million in damages. Although he wouldn’t want to do parachute trials all the time, he does bill himself as the “Parachute Trial Counsel” on LinkedIn.

Heath Curtiss JD ’06 was reappointed by Governor Tina Kotek to another four-year term starting in March 2025 to the Board of Forestry. Curtiss looks forward to continuing his service. Curtiss, of Silverton, serves as General Counsel for Hampton Lumber. He grew up in the mountains of northeast Oregon, earned his degree in Agricultural and Resource Economics from Oregon State University, and graduated from Lewis & Clark Law School with a certificate in environmental law. Before working at Hampton, Curtiss was General Counsel for the Oregon Forest Industries Council and an attorney at Stoel Rives, LLP, specializing in natural resources law and policy. He also serves on the Oregon FFA Foundation Board.

Lynne McConnell JD ’06 is the next executive director of Housing Works, the largest provider of affordable housing in the Central Oregon region with more than 2,000 units under ownership and management in Crook, Deschutes, and Jefferson Counties. Prior to coordinating housing programs for the City of Bend since 2017, McConnell was the Deputy Director of Community Services for NeighborImpact in Redmond. Before that she led multiple nonprofits in Alaska and was a former staff attorney for Legal Aid.

Graham St. Michel JD ’08 has accepted the position of General Counsel to the Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, where he will oversee compliance cases, violation settlements, and other legal issues for the bi-state agency. St. Michel, who is a graduate of South Tahoe High School, has served as TRPA’s associate counsel. St. Michel has practiced law for 16 years including private practice and serving as in-house counsel with the California Department of Conservation and the California Tahoe Conservancy.

Laura Wanlass JD ’08 was featured in a webinar titled “The Evolving Regulatory Environment and What Employers Need to Consider.” Wanlass is a Partner and a global leader on Innovation & Strategy within Aon’s Executive & Board Advisory practice, providing strategic guidance to boards and executive leadership teams across the globe, on data led approaches to the oversight, strategy, and execution of corporate governance, human capital (including executive compensation), sustainability, and other emerging topics of importance. Wanlass was named to the 2024 NACD Directorship 100 list for Governance Professionals and is a frequent industry & NACD speaker and author on corporate governance, human capital management and sustainability. She is also the Vice President of the Phoenix Chapter of the National Association of Stock Plan Professionals (NASPP). When not at work, Wanlass’ hobbies include driving on an eight-day, off-road navigation rally raid obstacle course across the deserts of California and Nevada. In 2019, her team finished 11th out of 29 teams.

Christine Taylor JD ’09 was recently elected to serve on the Board of Directors of the Court Appointed Special Advocates (CASA) for Children of Multnomah, Washington, Columbia & Tillamook Counties. CASA advocates for the best interests of children who have experienced abuse and neglect and who are in the custody of the state and under the protection of the court. The organization dedicates resources to recruiting, training, and supporting citizen advocates to provide quality advocacy to as many children as possible. Taylor is an attorney at Miller Nash, where she represents a wide range of government and public institutions and focuses her practice on government, municipal, and administrative law, including public records and meetings and public contracting.

Mike Jacobs ’09, Erik Wilson ’09, and Joshua Callahan ’10 have formed the law firm Jacobs Wilson Callahan. The Portland law firm provides compassionate and dedicated legal representation for individuals in Oregon who have been impacted by an injury caused by another’s negligence. The trio are committed to helping you navigate the challenges of recovery and secure the compensation you deserve.

10s

Lindsey Hueer JD ’10 has recently joined the Association of Washington Business as a policy expert to its Government Affairs team.

Hueer is the Association’s new expert on labor, employment law and immigration, including legal affairs, wage and hour issues, workers’ compensation, unemployment insurance and workplace safety. Hueer worked as a government relations advocate for the Association of Washington Cities and as staff counsel to the Washington House of Representatives focused on labor and employment issues. She started her career in private practice, representing self-insured employers in workers’ compensation cases.

Nawneet Vibhaw LLM ’10 has set up a pro bono environmental organization called Panchtattva Foundation. Vibhaw, who had recently joined JSA, a leading law firm in India, as a Partner from Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas, has resigned to pursue an independent practice in environmental law. Through his pro bono organization, Panchtattva Foundation, he aims to address environmental issues in India.

Apart from being a partner focussing on environmental disputes and regulatory advisory at top-tier law firms, Nawneet has also been a professor of environmental law and energy law at the National Law University (NLU) Delhi and Jindal Global Law School (JGLS) in the past.

Rohit Kapuria JD ’12 was named top 25 Real Estate and Hospitality Attorneys of 2025 by Attorney Intel. Kapuria is a partner at Saul Ewing LLP and serves as Vice Chair of the firm’s Global Immigration & Foreign Investment Practice. His practice focuses on general corporate and securities law, representing a large number of private companies in matters involving mergers and acquisitions, private securities offerings related to real estate financing matters, SEC disclosure, and corporate governance. He also maintains, in particular, significant experience handling private offerings under the EB-5 financing program. To date, Kapuria has structured over $7.1 billion worth of EB-5 related financing transactions, of which 40% are related to hospitality transactions. Kapuria also represents a large number of real estate developers, private equity lenders, commercial banks, EB-5 specific lenders, and even foreign brokers. In addition, Kapuria serves as Vice Chair of the firm’s Opportunity Zones and Qualified Opportunity Funds Practice, where he addresses complex tax, real estate, corporate, and securities issues related to investments in designated Opportunity Zones.

Ben Pirie JD ’12 has joined Sussman Shank LLP’s Business Department as Special Counsel. Pirie brings over 12 years of diverse experience providing legal counsel to stakeholders across multiple industries. His expertise includes mergers and acquisitions, multi-state operations, securities law, regulatory compliance, intellectual property transactions, and cannabis law. He has been recognized by Chambers USA and The Best Lawyers in America.

Tiffany A. Johnson JD ’14 was recently hired as the new City Attorney for the City of Newport, Oregon. The Newport City Council unanimously voted to hire Ms. Johnson. Her background is in law and policy with a focus on Oregon government, land use, and environmental law. She previously served as Co-Chair on Governor Kate Brown’s Racial Justice Council, Environmental Equity Committee, and as a Board Member of the OSB Environmental and Natural Resources Executive Committee.

Courtney N. Moran LLM ’14 received the Leland R. Berger Lifetime Achievement Award from the Oregon State Bar. The Oregon State Bar Cannabis and Psychedelics Law Section Leland R. Berger Lifetime Achievement Award was established in 2018 to recognize Lee Berger for his contributions and trailblazing in cannabis law. It is the highest recognition that the section bestows on one of its members, and Moran is the first woman and only the second individual to receive the award. Receiving the award at only 38 years old is a testament to the immense impact that Moran has had on shaping state and federal agricultural hemp laws and regulations and winning landmark legal victories in such a “compressed” amount of time. Berger passed the torch of the Lifetime Achievement Award to Moran in a heartwarming and emotional speech that exhibited the friendship and collegiality among members of the Law Section. Moran is the founding principal, attorney, and counselor at law at Earth Law LLC.

Amber Buker JD ’15 is the new chief research officer for Travillian, a financial services executive recruiting and advisory firm. Buker, an enrolled citizen of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, brings extensive experience in financial tech nology and banking innovation to the role. She previously served as founder and CEO of Totem Tech nologies and as executive director of business development at Percapita. Buker has worked as a tech nology advisory board member at Chesapeake Bank and served as director of insights at Alloy Labs Alliance. Buker also hosted the Breaking Banks Fintech Podcast and has experience in arts administration and legal practice.

Captain Jace D. Cook JD ’15, Linn County Deputy District Attorney, has been deployed to Kosovo with the Oregon National Guard. He serves as a JAG officer, specifically as the Trial Counsel and an Ethics Counselor. As Trial Counsel, he helps maintain Soldier discipline to meet military standards. He also turns complex laws—like the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ) and Military Rules of Evidence (MRE)—into guidance, readying him for courts-martial if needed, while protecting the mission’s integrity abroad.

Stephanie Grant JD ’15 was named one of the 40 under 40 for 2024 by the Portland Business Journal. Grant is a partner in Tonkon Torp’s Litigation Department. She represents entities and individuals in a range of complex litigation matters, including product liability defense, intellectual property disputes, and contract and ownership disputes. She has extensive experience guiding clients through cases in state and federal courts, arbitration and mediation, and administrative forums. Grant supports Tonkon Torp’s diversity and inclusion work as a member of its DEI Steering Committee and serves on the board of Girls Build, a nonprofit inspiring curiosity and confidence in girls and women through skill-building in the trades. Before joining Tonkon Torp, Grant served as a judicial law clerk at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit. During law school, she worked as a summer associate at Tonkon Torp. She graduated first in her class and she was also an Associate Editor of Environmental Law Review. Prior to her law career, Stephanie worked for several years in the environmental industry—both at an environmental consulting firm and at a conservation nonprofit, where she served as Executive Director.

Patrick P. Green JD ’15 was sworn in in January 2025 as Jackson County’s new District Attorney. Green was elected in the May’s primary elections. Like his predecessor Beth Heckert, Green has also spent his entire professional career in the county DA’s office.

Daniel Housley JD ’15 was profiled in Vanguard, a digital publication that showcases the incredible diversity of the modern in-house counsel. Housley is currently the senior lead intellectual property attorney with Kryndryl Holdings, Inc., one of the world’s largest IT infrastructure services providers, born from IBM’s 2021 spin-off of its infrastructure business. Headquartered in New York City, Kyndryl designs, builds, manages, and modernizes large-scale information systems globally for thousands of enterprise clients. The company supports critical systems for banks, airlines, retailers, and government agencies, ensuring uptime, cybersecurity, and technological agility at a massive scale. With over 80,000 employees in over 60 countries, Kyndryl is a key player in shaping how industries handle complexity, risk, and innovation. In addition to his role as an IP attorney for Kyndryl, Housley is also an adjunct professor at Lewis & Clark where he teaches patent drafting and supervises the Patent Legal Clinic that provides patent services to small businesses.

Merissa Moeller JD ’15 has been elected to partnership at Stoel Rives. Moeller is a natural resources attorney in the firm’s Environmental group who specializes in water resources and rural land use law. In her water and natural resources practice, she provides strategic counsel, regulatory compliance, administrative and appellate litigation, and permitting services to clients in diverse industries and advises clients on issues related to water resource development, water rights, water quality, and compliance with fish and wildlife laws.

In her land use practice, Moeller represents developers in negotiations and proceedings with local governments and at appellate court levels. She also advises renewable energy developers in the successful siting of projects on agricultural and forest land. Moeller was selected as one of “America’s Leading Lawyers for Business” (Oregon) by Chambers USA (Environment), Associates to Watch, 2024, and is listed among the Best Lawyers®: Ones to Watch in America (Environmental Law, Natural Resources Law), 2021–present.

Shane A. Riedman JD ’15 was the guest speaker for a webinar titled, “Navigating the AI Arms Race in Claims,” in December 2024 for Carrier Management, a resource for C-suite executives.

Riedman is Verisk’s Vice President and General Manager for Anti-Fraud Analytics. He drives customer and shareholder value by delivering innovative and impactful claims solutions, including ClaimSearch, to the US market.

Riedman joined the Claims Solutions team at Verisk in 2017 and brings more than 20 years of P&C claims experience. He transformed and modernized the largest P&C medical claims database in the U.S., brought foreign acquired assets to the U.S. market, and reconfigured an organization to bring better focus on the client.

Before joining Verisk, Riedman was Director of SIU at CNA Insurance and lead western expansion for one of the nation’s largest claims services firms. He has served as CLM Chapter President, and he speaks regularly at industry gatherings.

Farah Naz Rishi JD ’16 (she/they) just published her second book titled,It All Comes Back to You, in 2021. Rishi is a Pakistani American Muslim writer and voice actor, but in another life she’s worked stints as a lawyer, a video game journalist, and an editorial assistant. She received her BA in English from Bryn Mawr College, her JD from Lewis & Clark Law School, and her love of weaving stories from the Odyssey Writing Workshop. When she’s not writing, she’s probably hanging out with video game characters. She is also the author of I Hope You Get This Message (2019). You can find her at home in Philadelphia or on Twitter/Instagram at @farahnazrishi.

Cam Jimmo JD ’16 is a now Senior Assistant Attorney General with the Alaska Department of Law’s Environmental Section in Anchorage, Alaska. Representing the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, Cam’s background includes agency advising, managing compliance and enforcement actions, and defending agency decision-making.

Erica Clausen JD ’17 has been promoted to partner at Miller Nash LLP. Based in Portland, Clausen has been an integral part of the firm’s litigation team since joining as a staff member in 2011. She worked at the firm while pursuing her law degree. After graduation, she became an associate at Miller Nash, where she has made significant contributions to some of the firm’s most complex and high-profile cases. Notably, Clausen played a key role in the landmark 2021 antitrust case that successfully challenged the National Women’s Soccer League’s minimum age rule in U.S. District Court as an illegal boycott in violation of federal antitrust law on behalf of 15-year-old professional soccer player Olivia Moultrie, enabling her to sign with the Portland Thorns.

Clausen’s practice focuses on a hybrid of dispute resolution for private and public entities, including eminent domain, public records and real estate. She also has broad familiarity with various types of complex civil litigation. Clausen has diverse experience representing local, national and international clients in complicated and often high-profile disputes in state and federal court. Resulting from her time as a D1 college athlete at the University of Iowa, Clausen is also passionate about her work in the sports and entertainment industry, and specifically prioritizes ways she can support community efforts to empower the next generation of women athletes and leaders.

Jarell Hunt JD ’17 has been promoted to partnership at Tonkon Torp. Hunt joined Tonkon Torp in 2017 as an attorney in the Business Department, following a successful stint as a Tonkon Torp Summer Associate during law school. His practice is focused on corporate governance, mergers and acquisitions, and securities offerings. He also advises clients on regulatory compliance and general business matters, regularly serving as external general counsel to his clients.

John Peckler JD ’17 was one of thirteen attorneys elected to partnership at Spencer Fane in 2025. Peckler helps clients navigate complex development projects and real estate transactions, working with individuals, businesses, and developers on all aspects of land use and real estate law. Relying on his background in finance and experience with Colorado water law, he brings a unique perspective to understanding his clients’ needs and finding solutions for each project that avoid or minimize delays and extra costs. As land use counsel, Peckler assists property owners and developers in applying for and obtaining approvals for new land use entitlements that facilitate the success of a project, helping clients anticipate and better manage land use, water, and other real estate issues and potential challenges.

Sam Roleru JD ’17 has accepted a position as an Associate at the Seattle office of Williams Kastner. He focuses on civil litigation, including employment, construction, and malpractice. Roleru is licensed in Washington.

Evan R. Christopher JD ’18 has been hired as Senior Counsel to the National Labor Relations Board beginning in 2025. Christopher previously served as counsel to the vice chair of the Federal Election Commission and to the majority on the U.S. House Judiciary Committee. He is a member of the Oregon and Washington, D.C. bars and a former chair of the Constitutional Law Section of the Oregon State Bar; he has volunteered with the Washington Legal Clinic for the Homeless, Habitat for Humanity, and the ACLU of Oregon. Christopher lives in northwest D.C. with his wife, Katherine, and their dog, Tito.

Tatiana Gamache JD ’18 joined the Nevada County District Attorney’s Office, where she serves as a Deputy District Attorney. Her caseload primarily focuses on the prosecution of Domestic Violence and Child Abuse cases, working to ensure justice for vulnerable victims. As part of her commitment to improving services for victims, Gamache is instrumental in the development of a Family Justice Center and the creation of a Special Victims Unit in Nevada County. With a deep focus on interpersonal violence, Gamache collaborates closely with Crime Victims and Victim Advocates to provide comprehensive support to survivors, guiding them through the legal process while advocating for their safety and well-being. Her efforts also extend to educating the community and law enforcement on the complexities of domestic violence and child abuse cases, and she is dedicated to improving the resources available to those affected by these crimes.

Alex Kubitz JD ’18 became a partner of Landye Bennett Blumstein LLP in Anchorage, Alaska, effective January 1, 2025. Since joining LBB in 2019, Kubitz has demonstrated exceptional service to clients across multiple practice areas, including Alaska Native law, mergers and acquisitions, corporate law, and real estate development and transactions.

Jason Evans JD ’19 has joined Schwabe’s Consumer Products, Manufacturing & Retail and Real Estate & Construction groups at the firm’s Portland office. He has handled cases of varying complexity, from matters under $10,000 to multimillion-dollar disputes in Federal Court. He also has experience defending large and catastrophic auto, commercial trucking and railroad injury cases. Jason tailors his strategies to meet the unique needs of each client and case.

Hayley Hollis JD ’19 has joined Baker Sterchi Cowden & Rice LLC as an associate in Portland, Oregon. Hollis represents clients in the construction and insurance industries, with a practice encompassing class actions, multidistrict litigation, complex commercial matters, employment and professional liability defense. She is licensed to practice in Oregon and Washington.

Erin Tannock JD ’19 has worked in-house in Colorado since late 2019 and is currently Compliance Counsel for Viega, LLC. Erin leads the compliance function across her company, focusing on centralization for a fast-growing manufacturer where she develops and implements policy, oversees policy governance, mitigates compliance risk and serves as a thought partner for the General Counsel. Prior to joining Viega, Tannock spent time advising companies in the electronics and semiconductor space on sanctions, export control and other various compliance topics.

20s

Vanessa Aaron JD ’20 was featured in the 2025 Oregon Super Lawyers magazine. After she graduated, she and her husband Ed sailed their boat, Serenity, from the Eastern Seaboard and into the Caribbean for two years, beginning in September 2020. Newly empty nesters—both had children from previous marriages—the couple sold most everything they owned before setting sail so they wouldn’t be tempted to return to their old lives. That included their old boat, Free Time, as they went shopping for one that would accommodate their plans. They found it in Florida, and renamed it Serenity—after the memorable “Serenity now!” mantra on Seinfeld. Aaron spent plenty of time in the air before taking to the sea. She was an air traffic controller in the U.S. Air Force, while earning her pilot license, then continued working as an air-traffic controller for the Federal Aviation Administration. Eventually she felt she needed a change, and it was her husband who suggested the law. Now back on land, Aaron has been working as a senior associate in Bullivant Houser’s litigation group focusing on aviation, personal injury litigation, and product liability matters.

Jessica Bernardini JD ’21 has joined Miller Nash’s environmental team. Bernardini, based in the firm’s Portland office, focuses her practice on providing clients with regulatory advice and representation in energy and environmental law matters. Bernardini’s environmental law experience is bolstered by her more than 10 years of experience as an engineering consultant to private and public entities. In this capacity, she concentrated on environmental permitting and compliance and the design of waste management and renewable energy development projects.

Before joining Miller Nash, Bernardini practiced at law firms in Oregon where she focused on energy and environmental matters. In this role, she handled contested cases before the Public Utility Commission of Oregon and the Energy Facility Siting Council. She also completed a secondment at Avangrid Renewables, LLC.

Bernardini works on complex, multi-party, federal and state Superfund sites involving claims under the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA) and its state law equivalents. She assists clients with environmental permitting and compliance issues and handles settlement negotiation or appeals of environmental penalties.

Rachel E. Timmins JD ’21 has joined the Portland office of Ogletree Deakins as an associate. Her practice focuses on employment law. Timmins is an experienced employment litigation associate and has successfully handled cases involving discrimination, wrongful termination, breach of contract, wage and hour violations and retaliation claims. She also advises clients on various employment-related issues. Timmins has a passion for learning about her clients’ businesses, allowing her to tailor legal strategies and advice that align with their goals and operations. During law school, Timmins was the Lead Article Editor of the Lewis & Clark Law Review, Research Assistant to Professor Joh n T. Parry, and mentor to incoming law students. Timmins also worked in the legal department of adidas and served as an extern to the Honorable Magistrate Stacie F. Beckerman at the U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon.

Clarens Emrich JD ’22 has joined Baker Sterchi Cowden & Rice LLC in the Portland office as an associate. Emrich focuses on complex commercial, personal injury defense and product liability matters. He previously served as a law clerk in the Office of the Metro Attorney and in the U.S. District Court of Oregon with the Honorable Joh n V. Acosta. Emrich is licensed to practice in Oregon and Washington.

Nate Haberman JD ’22 was selected as one of four attorneys by the Portland Business Journal to share their noteworthy cases in 2024. Haberman helped secure a jury verdict for a Portland woman who had sued her landlord for disability discrimination after repeatedly seeking a disabled parking spot. This case was more about the vindication than the money. This was also Haberman’s first trial in federal court. Haberman is an attorney with the Oregon Lawyer for the Underdog, where their focus is class action, landlord/tenant, corporate fraud, student loans, debt collectors, and more.

Corinne Zycherman Brooks JD ’23 has joined Tonkon Torp’s Business Immigration Practice Group. Her work will be focused on non-immigrant and immigrant visas as well as PERM applications for employment-based green cards. Brooks joined the firm from Samuels Yoelin Kantor LLP, where she tailored business structures for clients and drafted shareholder and operating agreements, as well as various court filings for business and estate litigation cases. Prior to law school, Brooks worked for several years in the immigration field, as a paralegal and legal assistant, preparing applications for employment-based and family-based adjustment of status and non-immigration visas. Brooks is a cum laude graduate of Lewis & Clark Law School where she was a recipient of the Dean’s Scholarship.

Calvin Duncan JD ’23 and Sophie Cull have published a book titled, The Jailhouse Lawyer (2025). Duncan was incarcerated for thirty years after a wrongful murder conviction. Duncan was nineteen when he was incarcerated for a 1981 New Orleans murder he didn’t commit. The victim of a wildly incompetent public defense system and a badly compromised witness, Duncan was left to rot in the waking nightmare of confinement. Armed with little education, he took matters into his own hands.

At twenty-one, he filed his first motion from prison: “Motion for a Law Book,” which launched his highly successful, self-taught legal career. Trapped within this wholly corrupted system, Duncan became a legal advocate for himself and his fellow prisoners as an inmate counsel at the infamous Louisiana State Penitentiary, Angola. Literature sustained his hope, as he learned the law in its shadow.

During his decades of incarceration, Duncan helped hundreds of other prisoners navigate their cases, advocating for those the state had long since written off. He taught a class in the midst of Angola to empower other incarcerated men to fight for their own justice under the law. But his own case remained stalled. A defense lawyer once responded to Duncan’s request for documents: “You are not a person.”

Duncan is the founder and director of the Light of Justice program, which is focused on improving legal access for incarcerated individuals.

Mia Gutierrez JD ’23 has joined Tonkon Torp LLP in its Business Department. Her practice will be focused on transactional, intellectual property, and information privacy matters. Gutierrez’s additional experience includes a tenure with adidas as legal counsel and manager of their brand protection department. At adidas, Gutierrez managed all anti-counterfeiting enforcement for North America, oversaw local counsel litigation efforts against infringing parties, and advocated for more robust intellectual property policies and enforcement practices before government agencies and global e-commerce and social platforms.

Radhika Shah JD ’23 has joined Miller Nash’s construction team. Shah, based in Portland, supports general contractors, subcontractors, design professionals, and public and private owners and developers throughout the Pacific Northwest. She also has additional experience with intellectual property and environmental matters. During law school, Shah worked at Lewis & Clark Law School’s Small Business Legal Clinic in their patent program. In 2019, she gained unique experience working as a legislative intern for Oregon Senator Michael Dembrow. Before joining Miller Nash, Shah practiced law in Oregon.

River E.M. Sterne JD ’23 has joined the firm Landye Bennett Blumstein in Anchorage, Alaska as an associate attorney. He will focus his practice on Alaska Native law, subsistence and natural resources law, transactions, and litigation.

Andrew (Drew) Sullivan JD ’23 has been appointed as the first Procurement Executive of the Supreme Court of the United States.

Adelaide Beeman-White JD ’24 was recently featured in ABA Journal article about practicing as a criminal defense attorney while immersing herself in the 1800s. Like most lawyers, Beeman-White answers emails, hops on conference calls, and spends her days hunched over the computer, but as soon as she comes home, she transforms into what “she feels is her true identity: a woman living between 1893 and 1898.” This includes turning on her oil lamps, peeling off her work suit, and replacing it with a handmade 19th century style dress, complete with a full bodice, corset, skirt, collars, gloves, wool stockings and cuffs. Beeman-White’s passion for the 19th century began in the sixth grade, and she discovered then that “moving too quickly led her to making more mistakes,” and moving to the 1800s allowed her to move at a slower pace (and make fewer mistakes).

Sun Kim JD ’24 has joined McKean Smith as an associate and will be focusing on family law. Kim served as Editor-in-Chief of the Lewis & Clark Law Review and Vice President of External Affairs for the Asian Pacific American Law Student Association. Kim has interned with the Child Advocacy and Protection Division of the Oregon Department of Justice and the United States District Court for the District of Oregon.

Paul Napoli, LLM ’24, has been named one of the 2024 Law360 Environmental MVPs, recognizing his exceptional contributions to environmental litigation. This prestigious accolade highlights Napoli’s successful negotiations in the ongoing multi-district litigation (MDL) over the contamination of drinking water with toxic per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) resulting from the widespread use of aqueous film-forming foam (AFFF).

As Plaintiffs’ Co-Lead Counsel in the MDL, Paul has been instrumental in the $15+ billion in settlements that are expected to provide compensation to Public Water Systems across the country that are grappling with PFAS, commonly referred to as “forever chemicals,” contamination in their drinking water supplies.

Napoli’s commitment to advocating for communities affected by pollution has only grown as public awareness of environmental issues has increased. He is a partner at Napoli Shkolnik, a national law firm known for its client-centric approach in delivering justice for the survivors and victims of injuries and wrongs in high-profile litigations.

Sowmiya Raju JD ’24 graduated magna cum laude from Lewis & Clark Law School, where she was a member of the South Indian Law Students Association and inducted into the Cornelius Honor Society. As a law student, Raju worked at Tonkon Torp as a 1L Diversity Fellow and 2L Summer Associate. In these roles, she prepared corporate law and litigation memoranda on a variety of matters, including on issues of contract force majeure and product liability.

Mei Brunson JD ’25 was recently on a panel for the Food & Water Watch—Against All Odds—virtual conference in May 2025. A recent grad, Brunson has worked with Animal Partisan, Center for Animal Law Studies, Earthjustice, Farm Sanctuary, Animal Legal Defense Fund, and the Humane Society as well as Food & Water Watch. During law school, Brunson was the submissions editor for the Animal Law Review and served as a student success fellow for Dean Emeritus and Professor Robert Klonoff.

Nadia Dahab, an adjunct faculty at Lewis & Clark Law School, who has taught Consumer Protection Litigation, served as the lead trial counsel in a lawsuit brought by a kayaker and open-water swimmer in 2012 challenging the city of Lake Oswego’s resolution barring access to the lake from non-residents of the city. In November, the Clackamas County Circuit judge ruled that the city ordinance was in violation of state law under the Public Trust Doctrine, and public access should be allowed at Millennium Park (in Lake Oswego). The Lake Oswego City Council declined to appeal this ruling.

Weddings

Teddy Rickford JD ’24 married Tanya Rickford Animal Law LLM, ’23, whom he met at Boley Law Library. The maid of honor was Diane McMillan JD ’24, a friend from Lewis & Clark Law School. The ceremony was presided over by Rob Truman ’94, associate dean and director of Boley Law Library.

Kya Marienfeld JD ’14 married Luke Wojciechowski on June 22, 2024 in Moab, Utah.

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Dean Alicia Ouellette chats with law students.