
Law Students Get a
Head Start in the Real World
Out of the classroom and at a newly created clinic, they practice
immigration law and learn to serve the community.
May 23, 2007
By Anna Gorman
Erubey Lopez began law school at UCLA two years
ago knowing he wanted to become an immigration attorney.
But Lopez, an immigrant himself, got an earlier start than expected this
spring.
In an effort to provide real-world experience to students and attract young
talent to the specialty, UCLA School of Law created an immigration clinic this
year.
The clinic, a joint project between the school and the Public Counsel Law
Center, allows students to work with attorneys on actual cases while learning
the ins and outs of immigration law.
“As Latinos, a lot of us were going to school to help people in that area,
but we weren’t being trained,” said Lopez, 24, who lobbied school
administrators for the program.
The clinic changed that, he said. Instead of simply listening to lectures,
students are preparing petitions, interviewing clients and appearing in
Immigration Court.
“We’re learning immigration law, but not through a book,” Lopez said.
Nine students, who worked with supervising attorneys on more than 20 asylum, trafficking and other immigration cases, just
finished a semester course at the clinic.
“Los Angeles is ground zero for immigration in this country,” said Michael Schill, dean of the law school. “It made sense that we
teach our students both how to practice immigration law but also to serve the
community.”
USC has a similar clinic, which started in 2001, provides pro bono
representation and has served clients from more than 25 countries.
One of Lopez’s clients at the UCLA clinic was a Guatemalan woman who fled
the war in the 1980s and is trying to get a green card through her husband, who
is a U.S. citizen. But the mother of four hit an obstacle because of two old
petty theft convictions on her record. She could face deportation if she
doesn’t win her case.
Even though school is out, Lopez is continuing to volunteer on her case. The
responsibility he and his fellow students felt was daunting, he said.
“If we don’t do it right, someone’s life, someone’s family could be
destroyed,” said Lopez, who begins his third year of law school in the fall.
Judy London, who teaches the UCLA course, said the students learn crucial
skills, including how to interview clients and gain their trust.
London, directing attorney of the immigrants’ rights project at Public
Counsel, the pro-bono arm of the Los Angeles County Bar Assn., said she hopes
the clinic will encourage more students to pursue immigration law — or to
work as volunteer attorneys while at corporate firms.
Aref Afsari, 27,
recently graduated and hopes that he will be able to continue doing pro bono
immigration cases after he takes the bar and begins his job at the Orange
County office of Paul Hastings, an international law firm.
As part of the clinic course, Afsari helped file
an asylum petition for a man from Zimbabwe who said he had been tortured by
government forces and had watched the murder of his father. Because the asylum
petition was filed more than a year after the man’s arrival, the case was
referred to Immigration Court.
Afsari said the case made him realize the
overwhelming need for legislative reform.
“To think he would be sent back because of what is really a technicality
— the one-year deadline — is just kind of tragic,” he said.
Afsari said he met with his client about 15 times
and developed a close relationship with him. He added that he stopped clocking
in and out after the first week, because there was no question he was going to
meet the required hours.
Ana Paula Noguez, 29, a licensed attorney in
Mexico who came to UCLA for a master’s in law, said representing clients here
and learning about the legal options available to them was fascinating and
challenging. Her clients included a Salvadoran woman sexually abused by her
spouse and a Guatemalan trafficking victim.
“It was hard because it’s difficult to make them talk about something so
stressful,” she said. “You feel a big responsibility trying to do your best to
help them to get relief from their suffering.”