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General

General Membership Meeting (in person)


SCOTUS Update: What Happened and What To Expect in the Next Term

Speaker
Professor Rory K. Little | Hon. Raymond L. Sullivan Professor of Law

MCBA begins its Fall Programming with Law Professor and SCOTUSblog contributor Rory Little’s update on What Happened and What To Expect in the Court's next term. This annual and very popular discussion offers MCBA members a glimpse of the U.S. Supreme Court's justice positions and their summarized discussions. Professor Rory Little of UCLawSF is a frequent NPR commentator on Supreme Court issues.

There were some blockbuster decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court this past year, and the coming Term has some fascinating issues granted for review. Professor Little will provide a fast-paced look at the Term that ended in June and the one starting on October 7th; he will also offer his more “gossipy” views on the Justices themselves. This lively program is an annual favorite for the MCBA -- come ready to be entertained as well as informed, and bring your probing questions!

Note: This Event will NOT be recorded.

Event Date: Thursday, September 26, 2024
Networking & Registration begins at 11:30 AM
Presentation & Lunch: 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
Location: The Club Restaurant at McInnis Park/Golf Center

This activity is approved for Minimum Continuing Legal Education credit by the State Bar of California. MCBA is a certified provider: Provider #411

Accessibility: People with disabilities and/or special requests should contact MCBA regarding reasonable accommodations.

Photographs and/or video will be taken at this event. By taking part in this event, you consent to having your image captured by official photographers and videographers for the Marin County Bar Association (MCBA). You also grant the MCBA full rights to use the resulting images for publicity or other purposes to help promote the MCBA, without any compensation to you. This might include (but is not limited to), the right to use images in the MCBA’s printed and online publicity, website, social media, and press releases. If you do not wish to be photographed at this event, please inform an MCBA event organizer.

Substitution, Cancellation, and Refund Requests: For MCBA in person Meetings and Events a refund (less $15 Administrative fee) is available if you cancel by Friday, September 20, 2024. After this date, if you are unable to attend, you may send a substitute (Non-Members will need to pay price difference). Please email your request to events@marinbar.org.


1.0 CLE | General


Lunch includes choice of three entrees:

- Grilled Salmon, with mango papaya salsa served with starch and vegetables
- Chicken Marsala, marsala wine, garlic, mushrooms, served with starch and vegetables
- Penne Pomodoro (v), garlic, tomato, basil, olive oil

Iced Tea and Coffee
Bread and Butter
Dessert: Brownie Delight with ice cream and chocolate sauce


Contact

Julie Cervetto | Email
Denise Belli | Email


09/26/2024 12:00 PM 09/26/2024 1:00 PM America/Los_Angeles General Membership Meeting (in person) SCOTUS Update: What Happened and What To Expect in the Next Term The Club Restaurant at McInnis Park, 350 Smith Ranch Road, San Rafael, CA, 94903 Marin County Bar Association info@marinbar.org false MM/DD/YYYY

Registration

Member Registration

Non-member Registration

Registration ends Sep 23, 2024

Maximum attendance is 100. Register today!


Early Bird Members: $70
Early Bird Non-Members: $100

Members: $90
Non-Members: $125

Early Bird pricing ends FRI, Aug. 23rd. Discount for Members Admitted 5 Years or Less in practice (2019-Sept 2024). Late Fee (after Sept 23, space permitting) increases by $10

Date and Location

Thursday | September 26, 2024
12:00-1:00P

The Club Restaurant at McInnis Park
350 Smith Ranch Road
San Rafael, CA 94903
415-491-5990

Speaker Information

Professor Rory K. Little

Hon. Raymond L. Sullivan Professor of Law

Professor Little is the Emeritus Joseph W. Cotchett Professor of Law at UC Law SF. He joined the faculty in 1994, after a distinguished 12-year career as a practicing litigator, prosecutor, criminal defense and appellate lawyer. He is today a nationally recognized authority on constitutional issues, civil and criminal litigation ethics, federal criminal law and appellate litigation. He instituted and has chaired the Hastings Faculty Committee on Judicial Clerkships for many years; and on three occasions he has been awarded the “Best Professor” designation by the UC Law SF third-year class.

Professor Little regularly teaches Constitutional Law One and Two; first-year Criminal Law; Constitutional Criminal Procedure; Federal Criminal Procedure, and Professional Responsibility – although not all in the same academic year. His top priority – and favorite part of his job! — is counseling students in formulating career strategies and addressing varied professional and other issues. In addition, he does substantial pro bono work for the profession; and he appears regularly in print as well as radio, television, and other media. For example, he has been writing about U.S. Supreme Court criminal law cases for Scotusblog.com for over a decade. He has been very active in the American Bar Association and other Bar groups. For example, he annually publishes a “Review of the Supreme Court’s Term: Criminal Cases” for the ABA and runs their annual “showcase panel” on that topic. He has also served for over a decade as the Reporter to the ABA’s Task Force to Revise the Criminal Justice Standards, Prosecution and Defense Functions. He has in the past been appointed a member of the ABA’s national Committee on Professional Responsibility; the ABA’s national Amicus Briefing Committee; the Council of the ABA’s Criminal Justice Section; and the Executive Committee of the Federal Bar Association (N.D. Cal. chapter).

Professor Little is an active member of the California State Bar, and an inactive member of the Washington D.C. Bar. He occasionally serves as an expert witness in litigation matters; and he does a small amount of paid litigation work as an Of Counsel to the international law firm of McDermott, Will & Emery.

In 1996-97, Professor Little took a leave from Hastings and served as an Associate Deputy Attorney General (“ADAG”) for Attorney General Janet Reno and Deputy Attorney General Jamie S. Gorelick. Before joining Hastings Professor Little served as the Appellate Chief for the Northern District of California U.S. Attorney’s office; he has orally argued over 60 federal (and a few state) appeals, and briefed hundreds more. He also served for 2½ years as a Trial Attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice’s Organized Crime and Racketeering Strike Force. Prior to joining the Department of Justice Professor Little worked on white collar criminal defense and complex civil litigation matters with the Washington D.C. law firm of Miller Cassidy Larroca & Lewin. He began his litigation career representing federal prisoners with the Yale Law School Prison Litigation Project and successfully won an unconditional habeas corpus release for an unlawfully imprisoned person after arguing the case in federal district court as a second-year law student (see 496 F.Supp. 1111). He was also honored to represent Georgia death row inmate Brandon Jones, whom the state executed (after a 6-5 vote in the Eleventh Circuit) in 2016.

After graduating from Yale Law School, Professor Little served as law clerk to U.S. District Judge Louis F. Oberdorfer (Washington DC); and then Justice Potter Stewart (ret.), working on matters before the First, Third and Sixth Circuit Courts of Appeal, as well as Justices William J. Brennan, Jr. and John Paul Stevens at the U.S. Supreme Court. In that same year (OT 1984) Professor Little also did work for Justices Powell and Chief Justice Burger—a unique, and hard-working, one-year experience. His published account of that unique year is here.

Professor Little was born and raised in New Jersey, holds a double B.A. from the University of Virginia, and raised three children in northern California with his wife who is a prominent white collar defense attorney. He used to run marathons and can occasionally be seen in running regalia, still staggering along.

Email | Website