Law School Amplifies Critics Through SLAPP Suit 123
An anonymous reader writes "Michigan's Thomas M. Cooley Law School recently filed a lawsuit that appears to be boomeranging in the worst possible way. A little-noticed pseudonymous blogger respectfully disagreed with Cooley's self-awarded number-2 ranking, nationwide (well, perhaps not so respectfully), and had a few other choice things to say. So, Cooley went ahead and hired some lawyers (who had graduated from Georgetown and the University of Michigan) to file a lawsuit to unmask the blogger. And EFF cooperating attorney John Hermann got involved. "
What? (Score:3)
Can someone please make sense of that summary. All I can gather is a law school is suing a blogger from Georgetown?
Re:What? (Score:5, Interesting)
No; Cooley hired lawyers who had graduated from Georgetown and Michigan. (Both excellent schools.) They did this to go after a blogger who was claiming something bad about Cooley. The poster is implicitly pointing out that they did not trust Cooley graduates to bring their lawsuit.
To be fair, I would much prefer GULC (Georgetown) or Michigan grads. Georgetown's great for practicality, depth of curriculum, non-profit work, and DC connectedness. Michigan is great for Academia, just a notch behind Yale, really, and more like Yale than Harvard. Both have great students.
Re:What? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, if you are law school X, you might want to hire alumni for your legal matters - but more as a part of marketing than anything else. Oh, and avoiding bad press. I've never heard of Cooley before, but now my first impression is that they are idiots.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:What? (Score:4, Funny)
So you've worked with University of Phoenix graduates too, huh?
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Michigan_Law_School [wikipedia.org]
Michigan Law School consistently ranks among the highest-rated law schools in the United States. It was ranked third in the initial U.S. News & World Report [wikipedia.org] law school rankings [wikipedia.org] in 1987, only below Yale [wikipedia.org] and Harvard [wikipedia.org], and is one of seven schools never to appear outside the magazine's top 10. Michigan Law is also one of the "T14" law schools [wikipedia.org], that is, schools that have consistently ranked within the top 14 law schools since U.S. News began publishing rankings.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Thanks, I probably should have made that clearer.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
What are you, some kinda smartass?
If I wanted to read this so-called "article", I wouldn't be looking at a Slashdot summary, now would I? I read Slashdot so I don't have to read these "articles" of which you speak.
[what's an "article" anyway? is that like "a" or "the"?]
Anyway, screw you and the limb you climbed out on.
Re:What? (Score:5, Insightful)
Cooley, a law school I've never heard of, claimed to be the 2nd highest rated law school in the country. They got pissed when someone called BS. They hired lawyers from a couple of well-known law schools and sued the guy. This lead to us average joes hearing about it.
In other words, a bunch of scumbag cunts are writhing around like snakes in a pit trying to kill each other and a crowd is gathering.
Real Americans should pitch in by gathering up other cunt lawyers and throwing them into the same pit. That way we can burn them all with less impact on the environment.
I am not a lawyer and i would be very offended if anyone claimed that i am.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
No, Michigan refers to the state in which Thomas M. Cooley School of Law is in. The University of Michigan Law School at Ann Arbor is a T14 law school and is not named Thomas Cooley.
They ain't the same thing at all.
Re: (Score:3)
they (Cooley) are also the ones who make the rating system in the first place. Thus, the issue, and why people are calling BS on cooley (and quite appropriately so).
Re: (Score:2)
they (Cooley) are also the ones who make the rating system in the first place. Thus, the issue, and why people are calling BS on cooley (and quite appropriately so).
FTFA (emphasis mine):
Cooley's own rankings explanation says that they got rid of pesky things like "reputation"
If Cooley developed the ranking system, and they've removed reputation from how schools are ranked, how can they sue someone for saying something might affect their reputation?
Wait, what? Re:What? (Score:2)
From parent comment:
they (Cooley) are also the ones who make the rating system in the first place. Thus, the issue, and why people are calling BS on cooley (and quite appropriately so).
From TFA:
Meanwhile, it appears that some others were similarly flabbergasted by Cooley Law presenting itself as the 2nd highest ranked law school
What sucks more than making up your own popularity contest? Losing it.
That's kind of sad. How bad must you suck if you can't self-delude your way into the top slot?
Maybe this "la
Re: (Score:3)
And, just to be clear ... this is a rating system that nobody BUT Cooley is using.
So, a not-so-well-known law school (which isn't considered the second best law school in the US by anybody else) came up with a rating system that makes themselves sound like the second best law school in the country.
Various people called bullshit, and the law scho
Re: (Score:2)
http://www.epinions.com/review/educ-Law_Schools-All-Thomas_M_Cooley_Law/content_133879139972 [epinions.com]
Re:What? (Score:4, Interesting)
To summarize the parent link, some current student begins his review by praising Cooley's liberal admissions policy and explaining that Cooley will take you if no one else will. He goes on to complain that the grading system is severe, A's and B's are "hard to come by", and the school flunks out students in their first, second, or third year. "To stay afloat and not flunk is difficult once you get accepted," he complains.
Well, damn. The kid finally found a law school to accept his mediocre ass, and now he's complaining because the academic standards aren't as lax as the admission standards. IT'S LAW SCHOOL, kid. I think he might be better suited to a community college.
Re:What? (Score:4, Interesting)
There appears to be a lot more to his complaint, such as
Cooley registrar's office personnel and professors are known to prolong or refuse to give letters of good standing and recommendations to students seeking to leave-like blocking a professional swimmer wearing a life jacket from jumping off the Titanic
He also indicates an incredibly high attrition rate, and a very low bar passage rate. In other words, youre likely to flunk out, and if you dont, youre still unlikely to pass the bar. That does sound like a rather awful university. I think he cited 60% attrition rate and 40-50% bar passage rate (so 15-20% of people who enter the school will actually be able to practice).
Re: (Score:2)
If a university is willing to take people who are not deemed qualified enough to gain entry to a different law school, does it really indicate that the university is "awful" if a high percentage of those do not pass?
It shows they don't know a crap student (Score:1)
It shows they don't know a crap student when they interview one.
Think of staff turnover at a company.
It hires liberally from an external company, but finds that huge numbers (80%+) are sacked during the first year because they're unable to do the job.
Is the external company putting candidates up for employment that are no good a reflection on JUST the candidates?
No.
Re: (Score:1)
Total failure of an analogy. Allow me to provide a much more accurate analogy.
Company A needs employees.
Company A contracts with Company B to find applicants.
Company B accepts any and all resumes from anyone who would submit one.
Company B then weeds out 80% or so of the applicants, passing the remaining 20% on to Company A.
Company A hires all the applicants that Company B passed on to them, all of which are exceptional workers.
Re: (Score:1)
If they aren't clear up-front about the students' chances of being successful with their goal, yes, I'd call that "awful". It's one thing to offer an opportunity to students that might not be admitted in other universities. Sometimes under-performing students can rise to the challenge if they are given the chance. But you have to tell them what to expect, and tell them that they aren't going to make it if they don't get off their butts and work harder than they have traditionally thought was necessary.
Re: (Score:1)
Since the service those students payed for is being trained to practice law, their percentage of accepted students who pass the bar is a pretty good metric for how well the school provides that service.
Now if their admission standards are lax than they may be aiming for the "safety school" niche in which case it's not terrible that they have a poor success rate, because they give opportunities tot hose who wouldn't otherwise have them. However that doesn't really excuse the fact that they're clearly not pre
Re:What? (Score:5, Funny)
See, now that's how you write a summary.
Re: (Score:2)
lol
Obligatory Schlock Mercencary reference (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
How can it be an obligatory reference when few people will have ever heard of Schlock Mercencary? An obligatory reference is something from Futurama, Simpsons, Star Trek, Star Wars, etc.
Re: (Score:2)
Ahem.
And you call yourself a geek! rofl
Re:2nd Highest Rated (Score:2)
Wait, here's what I got out of the summary:
Thomas M. Cooley Law School, claiming to be the 2nd highest rated law school in the country, is accused of lying. They got pissed because *none of their own graduates* were good enough to defend them. So then they went for the swoosh by hiring graduates from ... wait for it ... *two other schools* ... thus cementing the oppositions case that either A, they are at best Third Best in the country, or B, they purposely spent additional money hiring substandard lawyers
Re: (Score:1)
It's obviously a clever ploy on Cooley's part. When they lose the lawsuit, they can say that it was because the lawyers they hired from other schools were not good enough. They can then postulate how well they would have won had they hired Cooley grads.
Re: (Score:1)
I conquer, the editors here is worse and worse yearly.
Re: (Score:1)
I can tell you're an Oxonian, sir, and I gratingly admire you for your pithy, well phrased comment
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
*woosh*
Re: (Score:3)
I conquer...
Should have spent more time studying spelling and less time listening to the lamentations of their women, mate.
Re: (Score:2)
http://blogzarro.com/2007/07/100-greatest-simpsons-quotes/#comment-4431/ [blogzarro.com]
Re: (Score:2)
Crap, stupid made-up URL untag, drop the trailing slash
http://blogzarro.com/2007/07/100-greatest-simpsons-quotes/#comment-4431 [blogzarro.com]
A little help for you, Archie. (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
1. Cooley Law School claims to be second-ranked law school in the country after only Harvard. The fact is that when they were last ranked, they were very near the bottom.
2. Someone called them on their bullshit. They decided to sue.
3. In bringing the lawsuit, rather than hiring lawyers from their own graduates, they hired lawyers who graduated from Georgetown University and University of Michigan, thereby demonstrating that even they don't believe their own bullshit.
hmmm (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You have to pass the bar exam to practice law; certainly that counts as an "absolute minimum"?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
So my
Re: (Score:2)
A singer and a lawyer, now that's talent . . . (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I do agree but what do you mean by "I could train anyone?"
I would like to subscribe to your school; how much does this training cost?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Given "I could train anyone in three months", I would guess that he's a lawyer, and he would charge you his normal rates. And that he would bill 24 hours/day. And that you would be constrained to not do anything but train (and a minimum of feeding and hygiene).
Also that you would only learn how to pass the bar exam. He didn't promise anything else. E.g., he didn't promise to make you a decent lawyer, and in fact indicated that this wasn't required to pass the bar exam. This is known as teaching to the
Re: (Score:2)
No. Passing the Bar is irrelevant to graduating from Law School with the appropriate degree.
You can get the degree without passing the Bar, and you can pass the Bar without getting the Degree.
Note that passing the Bar is the requirement to practice law in the USA. Law school is not required. Though getting a job as a lawyer tends to require a degree from a more-or-less presti
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
There are only 5 jurisdictions that allow you to enter the bar without law school in the US now. California, surprisingly, has the most well-developed program to become a lawyer without law school, and that requires 4 years of study (basically free labor) under a practicing lawyer or judge.
Nice. (Score:3)
If the school were any good, wouldn't it sue with its own graduates instead of those from highly respected schools?
SLAPP? (Score:2)
Re:SLAPP? (Score:5, Informative)
Honestly, I think the term's fallen out of use because so goddamn many suits are the result of this tactic now.
This is called the Streisand Effect (Score:2, Informative)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
I hope its by Kate Middleton.
If not, you could still go for Elizabeth Alexandra Mary, right?
I'm down for some QILF action.
Re: (Score:2)
...if they unknowingly hired the people blogging about the school as the lawyers to file suit?
Except that the persons taking the case would then know that there were a conflict of interest, because they would know that they are the defendants. So, maybe it might be hilarious, but the lawyers representing Cooley would be handing the school their disbarment on a silver platter, and thus likely to NEVER happen.
Re: (Score:2)
Umm, no.
It is NOT a "conflict of interest" to want the side you are on to win. It is a "conflict of interest" to want the side you are on to lose.
It would be a conflict of interest if the blogger's attorneys were graduates of Cooley, but not so much if Cooley's attorneys' were graduates of Cooley.
Re: (Score:2)
I think the hypo was for Cooley to unknowingly hire the bloggers themselves. The problem would then be that the defendant was representing the plaintiff.
Strong irony, or any publicity is good publicity (Score:1)
The google ad on this page right now is for Thomas M. Cooley Law School. It links to one of their student recruitment pages. No joke. I wonder if google needs to adjust their ad selection algorithm? I clicked on the link a couple of times just to pour a little salt in the wound.
You can't sign away the 1ST amendment rights (Score:2)
Also any contract that you sign can not brake the law or force you to have to rights in a cases of fraud.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Are you kidding in your subject line? Signing away first amendment rights is a common practice. Security Clearances, employment agreements, settlement agreements, nondisclosure agreements, all kinds of things let you sign away your rights. (Though consult a lawyer if it matters to you in a particular situation, obviously.)
Re: (Score:3)
Are you kidding in your subject line? Signing away first amendment rights is a common practice. Security Clearances, employment agreements, settlement agreements, nondisclosure agreements, all kinds of things let you sign away your rights. (Though consult a lawyer if it matters to you in a particular situation, obviously.)
This is spot on. The issue is that one cannot be forced to forfeit their 1st amendment rights, however, if one willingly and voluntarily signed a contract to forfeit their 1st amendment rights in some way, then that contract can be enforced in court.
Now, there are certain unconscionable conditions for contracts that you cannot do. You cannot contract to consent to slavery, as well you cannot consent to be intentionally killed. (You can however consent to be involved in potentially lethal physical combat, so
Re: (Score:2)
Also any contract that you sign can not brake the law
Of course not. Contracts don't have feet and laws don't have brakes.
Whenever I hear the name of this school (Score:1)
I automatically think "Cooley High Law School" http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0072820/ [imdb.com] .
Looks like my knee-jerk reaction isn't too far from the actual academic prowess of this institution.
Wow, this school has balls. (Score:4, Interesting)
For a good laugh, have a look at the blatantly cherry-picked ranking system they built for themselves:
http://www.cooley.edu/rankings/search/report-byschool.php [cooley.edu]
Now select Harvard, Yale or whatever you think are actual good schools and do the comparison... Well, whaddaya know! Cooley comes out first overall, as well first in such important metrics as:
* Foreign National Enrollment
* Part-Time Faculty
* First-Year Section Size
* Library Hours per Week with Professional Staff
* Library Seating Capacity
* Law School Square Footage Excluding Library
* Total Law School Square Footage
* Number of States in which Graduates Employed
Here's the kicker: Percentage of Graduates Employed is only 78.8%, meaning you are roughly twice as likely as the average person in this country to be unemployed after having graduated from their program! But the median of all their useless metrics puts them at number one, because their ranking system gives equal weight to Library Seating Capacity as Percentage of Graduates Employed.
Reverse INAL disclosures! (Score:2)
Hi!
You appear to be a "A little-noticed pseudonymous blogger respectfully disagreeing with Cooley's self-awarded number-2 ranking, (well, perhaps not so respectfully), and have a few other choice things to say.!"
So let me get this straight, are they in fact stumbling onto the most important free speech case of the decade? Forget the S-Effect laughter part, did they accidentally attack the entire concept of rationally expressed pseudonymous dissent on the internet? So if they lose this case, are they handing
Important case -- probably so. (Score:1)
At least one blogger, who is somewhat less anonymous than Rockstar05, apparently agrees:
http://alleducationmatters.blogspot.com/2011/08/eric-grimms-take-on-cooley-what-used-to.html [blogspot.com]
I will be very eager to follow this one.
Re: (Score:2)
I can guarantee you that this number is vastly, dramatically, overstated, and includes graduates working at Applebee's and
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Now, it's no secret that Cooley's reputation amongst the legal profession at large may not be the rosiest. I myself am cognizant of this fact as I prepare to get a job out there. However, I'm not certain that the litigious nature of this administration (or at least in this particular case) should reflect badly on the institution as a whole.
Simply having a low ranking by US New