Trade Law at ĆŪĢŅAPP School of Law is more than a course taught by one of the nationās leading experts. Itās more than the preeminent Trade Law Fall Update, the practitioner-focused conference held annually at the Law School. And itās more than the opportunity for funded externships at the U.S. Court of International Trade, Commerce Department, and The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative. For an increasing number of CWRU Law students every year, itās a launchpad to judicial clerkships, government employment and lucrative practice in this exciting field.
Just this summer, U.S. Customs and Border Protection hired four 2021 CWRU Law graduatesāKristina Aid-Toss (LAW ā21), Jazmine Edwards (LAW ā21), Amanda Makhoul (LAW ā21) and David Krawiec (LAW ā21)āas attorneys in the office of Regulations and Rulings. One of the office's directors is another CWRU Law grad, Robert Altneu (LAW ā91).
āThese numbers prove you donāt have to be in law school in D.C. to break into the field of trade law,ā said Co-Dean Michael Scharf, a noted expert in international law.
The office issues binding advance rulings and other legal decisions in connection with the importation of merchandise into the United States. Its rulings affect hundreds of billions of dollars of trade. āItās the perfect place to begin a career in trade law,ā said Scharf.
This pipeline is the result of joint efforts by the Law Schoolās Career Development Office, Case Western Reserve alumni like Luke Tillman (LAW ā12), who began his impressive trade career as an attorney at U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and Professor Juscelino Colares, who has served in the U.S. rosters of North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and U.S.-Mexico-Canada Free Trade Agreement trade panelists. Tillman went from Customs and Border Protection to positions as trial attorney at the U.S. Department of Justice's International Trade Field Office, Counsel to the International Trade Commission, and now has a customs and trade practice as an associate at the nationās premier international trade law firm, Steptoe & Johnson.
In addition to teaching Trade Law, and organizing the Trade Law Fall Update, Colares provides interview coaching to students who have demonstrated a serious interest in a career in trade law. To prepare, he assigns them the most recent U.S. Supreme Court and Federal Circuit opinions related to trade and administrative law that are likely to come up in interviews. āIt gives them an edge, a concrete indication that they understand the law and the needs of their employers,ā he says. āThe number of our graduates in Trade Law practice keeps increasing and, with it, employment prospects for future students,ā said Colares.