BU School of Law Commencement 2012

Congratulations Class of 2012!

In Review…

On May 20, the Boston University School of Law community convened at the Agganis Arena for the 139th Commencement ceremony. Roderick L. Ireland, Chief Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts delivered the Commencement speech and joined the graduates and their families in the celebration.

Following Chief Justice Ireland’s address, LLM student Michelle Phillips and JD student Jarrod Schaeffer delivered two exceptional speeches. Having received their degrees, the 477 graduates mingled and rejoiced at a reception following the ceremony.

Commencement 2012 Slide Show

About Chief Justice Ireland

Roderick L. Ireland is the Chief Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court. A native of Springfield, Massachusetts, he received his Bachelor of Arts from Lincoln University; Juris Doctor from Columbia Law School; Master of Laws from Harvard Law School; and Doctor of Philosophy in Law, Policy, and Society from Northeastern University. Chief Justice Ireland began his legal career in 1969 as a Neighborhood Legal Services attorney, then worked as a public defender with the Roxbury Defenders Committee, as chief attorney, deputy director, and executive director. He was Assistant Secretary and Chief Legal Counsel for the Massachusetts Executive Office of Administration and Finance, and Chair of the Massachusetts Board of Appeal on Motor Vehicle Liability Policies and Bond.

Chief Justice Ireland has been a jurist for more than 34 years, serving as a judge of the Juvenile Court from 1977 to 1990, after which he was appointed an Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Appeals Court (1990-1997). He was first appointed as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court in 1997, by Governor William F. Weld. He became the Senior Associate Justice in 2008. In 2010, he was appointed as the 36th Chief Justice by Governor Deval Patrick and was sworn in on December 20. Chief Justice Ireland has been an adjunct faculty member at Northeastern University since 1978, and on the faculty of the Appellate Judges Seminar at New York University Law School since 2001. He is the author of the Juvenile Law volume of Thomson/West Publishing’s Massachusetts Practice Series, the second edition of which was published in 2006, as well as law review articles. When he was appointed to the Supreme Judicial Court in 1997, he was the first African-American Justice in its then 305 year history, and he now serves as its first African-American Chief Justice.

Michelle Renee Phillips (LLM in Taxation) Delivers LLM Student Address

Michelle Phillips, a dual Australian-U.S. citizen, earned her JD from the University of Melbourne in 2010 and her bachelor’s degree in computer science from Carleton College in Minnesota in 2004. Prior to law school, she worked as a marketing and project manager for a commercial website company in Melbourne and Sydney. Originally from Milwaukee, she has interned for the Rhode Island Center for Law and Public Policy and is admitted to practice in the state of Wisconsin. Michelle is fluent in French and speaks German and Japanese at an intermediate level. After completing the LLM with a strong focus on international taxation, she will begin as an associate in the tax practice group of Baker & McKenzie LLP in their Washington, D.C. office.

Jarrod L. Schaeffer Delivers JD Student Address

Before coming to BU Law, Jarrod Schaeffer graduated magna cum laude from Cornell and interned with Senator Charles Schumer in his home state of New York. As a 1L, he received a book award in Constitutional Law and was selected as an editor of the Law Review. He has served as a research assistant to Professor Kristin Collins, an officer of Outlaw (BU Law’s student group for gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and allied students), and a national Co-Chair for the Law Democrats of America. Last fall, his Note, entitled “The Incorporation of Democracy: Justice Kennedy’s Theory of Political Participation in Citizens United,” was published by the BU Law Review. This spring, he interned at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and represented BU Law on the team that won the National Sutherland Cup Moot Court Competition in Washington, D.C. After graduation, Jarrod will clerk for the Honorable Barbara Jones on the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. He will then join the litigation practice of Ropes & Gray in San Francisco.

Awards and Prizes

Sebastian Horsten Prize for Academic Achievement, to the LLM in American Law student who has achieved the highest cumulative average in the class of 2012: Dooho Choi

American Law Outstanding Achievement Award, for excellence in academic achievement, honorable conduct and contributions to the class: Max Wilhelm Oehm

Graduate Tax Program Academic Achievement Award, for the highest cumulative average in the class of 2012: Sara Goldman Curley

Ernest M. Haddad Award, to the graduating Graduate Tax Program student who best exhibits overall ability, taking into consideration academic achievement, character and potential to serve the public interest: Chukwuka Ochieze

A. John Serino Outstanding Graduate Banking and Financial Law Student Prize, for overall performance, in terms of academic achievement and dedication to the highest standards of scholarship and service: Devin Aaron Ehrig

Dennis S. Aronowitz Award for Academic Excellence in Banking and Financial Law, for the highest cumulative average in the class of 2012: Aleksandr Khachaturyan

Faculty Award for Academic Accomplishment, for the most scholarly progress in the third year: Matthew R. Kugizaki

William L. and Lillian Berger Achievement Prizes, for exemplary scholastic achievement: Lisa Mikhail and Jacob D. Pugh

Faculty Award for Community Service, for exceptional dedication to the ideals of community service: Alexis Lauren Chernow and Elizabeth A. Rossi

Peter Bennett Prize, to the graduating third-year JD law student receiving the highest grade point average for that year: Christine Elizabeth Dieter

Spencer R. Koch Memorial Award, for outstanding contributions to achieving the goals of the Esdaile Alumni Center through alumni outreach: Kyle Evans Gay

Honorable Albert P. Pettoruto Memorial Award, for excellence in the field of Probate or Family Law: Avalon C. Johnson

Melville M. Bigelow Scholarship Award, to a member of the graduating class who shows the greatest promise as scholar and teacher in law: Julia G. Mirabella and Joshua M. Wolk

Warren S. Gilford Humanity and Law Prize, to a student who shows humanitarian interest in law, primarily by taking a job in the public sector after graduation: Amanda Michelle Ekey and Nicholas A. Levenhagen

Alumni Academic Achievement Award, for the highest cumulative average in the three-year program of law study: Blair R. Komar

Sylvia Beinecke Robinson Award, for a significant contribution to the life of the School of Law: Benedict E. Idemundia and Theresa A. Perkins

Dr. John Ordronaux Prize, awarded to a member of the graduating class for the most exemplary academic performance and leadership: Christine Elizabeth Dieter

Michael Melton Award for Excellence in Teaching is named for a longtime faculty member who taught in the tax area and was director of the Graduate Tax Program, who died in 1999 at 53: Associate Professor Robert Volk

David Saul Smith Award for Scholarship, created by Robert P. Smith (’65) when he made a generous gift in honor of his father – also an alum – to assist the faculty in their scholarship: Professor Gerald Leonard

John Stephen Baerst Award for Excellence in Teaching, named for the director of the Morin Center for Banking and Financial Law (1996-2005) who died in 2006: Lecturer in Law Francis Morrissey