TLC Internships

“I tell young people that if they want to be fine trial lawyers, indeed, if they want to be successful in any calling, they should learn as much as possible about every aspect of the human condition, hopefully by experience. I argue that young people, as a part of their education, as a part of preparing for a lifetime of play, should work a lot. They should learn what it is to pinch a penny, to worry about coming up with the rent, to come home at night tired, to do without, to experience the joy of completing small tasks. I want my children to know a wide variety of things: how to clean a latrine, how to frame a house, how to carry wood, to lay a brick. They should know how to attend the sick, to irrigate a pasture, to climb a mountain, to write a poem, to sing the songs of people, to lie by a stream and dream, to know the joy of love and the pain of loss. I consider the young who have never had to work, worry, or struggle to be seriously underprivileged in much the same way that young people who grow up in the ghettos are underprivileged.”
-Gerry Spence in How to Argue and Win Every Time
TLC-July 2011 interns Marcos Rodriguez, Ike Kaludi, Gerry Spence, John Maroney, Franklin Gehres
TLC-July 2011 interns (L-R):
  • Marcos Rodriguez
  • Ike Kaludi
  • (Gerry Spence)
  • John Maroney
  • Franklin Gehres

By Chris Jackman, Summer 2011

I arrived at the Trial Lawyers College late in the summer of my second year of law school with a line from The Great Gatsby in my head: "And so with the sunshine and the great bursts of leaves growing on the trees, just as things grow fast in movies. I had that familiar conviction that life was beginning over again with the summer."
My breezy optimism was not disappointed.
The feeling of renewal, of emerging from the College with an altered perspective and a deeper understanding of the human condition is as much a part of the character of the College as the surrounding mountains and vast skies. For five revealing days and nights I worked intimately with some friends whose spirit and strong moral engagement I will not soon forget. At the Trial Lawyers College, I was embraced by lawyers who had won cases in nearly every state, in both appellate and supreme courts, including one lawyer who had tried over 500 cases and another who had successfully represented a detainee at Guantanamo Bay. From opening statement to voir dire to cross examination, the faculty and the students at the Trial Lawyers College unerringly explored the anatomy of a case and the story the client relies on the attorney to give utterance to with quiet compassion. My week at the College was not only one of the best of my law school career, but of my life, and I returned to the law school in the fall feeling as though I had found a higher purpose and glimpsed a measurable expanse of some secret life, the life whose story we as attorneys both aspiring and established, are privileged to tell.

Applying for an Internship


REQUIREMENTS

 - Minimum 2nd year law student.
 - Must pay your own travel expenses. The costs of the course, as well as your room and board, are covered by the Trial Lawyers College.
 - Must divulge/acknowledge any criminal history and state your commitment to upholding the ethics of the Trial Lawyers College.

AVAILABLE COURSES

- Death Penalty Seminar in June
- Trial Lawyers College 3-Week Course in July
- Trial Lawyers College 3-Week Course in September

For the college's current offerings, visit the Courses page.
  
HOW TO APPLY

Send an e-mail to laurieg@triallawyerscollege.com expressing your interest in becoming a TLC intern. Please attach your resume, and include in the body of your e-mail a 350-word essay (maximum) detailing your interest in being an intern. Interns will be selected and notified by Laurie Goodman, TLC's Executive Director.

DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

TLC interns are welcome to sit in on all classes and participate fully in our training sessions, except for the personal psychodrama work.  In return, they are expected to assist with various chores including: A/V tasks during the courses; keeping the classrooms tidy; assisting with merchandise sales; and helping with the occasional outdoor ranch task of painting or yard-work.  We encourage our interns to stay engaged with the college after their internship is completed, perhaps by submitting an article for publication in The Warrior magazine, arranging for a TLC presentation at your law school, and coming back for additional courses after your graduation from law school. While you will be given a certificate of appreciation for your internship, you will not be eligible to receive a graduation certificate from TLC unless you are a member of the bar in good standing. 
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