Welcome to my LinkedIn archive.
Categories: Dear 1L, Dear 2L, Legal Writing
By Year: 2026, 2025, 2024, 2023, 2022, 2021
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Search by word to find what I’ve written on the topic of your choosing!
Dear 1L, On Oct. 1, I set out to start putting together all my letters into some sort of “book.” (It’s scary to say that out loud.)
I also started a “book journal,” so I’d have someone to talk to.
It’s been a lonely road, so far.
Going round and round in my own head.
Listening to people who put me down.
I got a note from “Thus” and “Therefore” overnight.
The note said:
1: “We’re overworked.”
2: “We’re bored of being first in sentences.”
3: “We’d like to sit next to someone other than a comma for once.”
I told them I would see what I could do.
So here’s this to you, my dear legal writer:
Dear 1L, Better legal writers write:
better briefs.
better motions.
better petitions.
better letter briefs.
better client updates.
better law review articles.
better position statements.
better settlement agreements.
better responses to client RFPs.
better thought-leadership articles.
Dear Legal Writer, Don’t be like Demi Moore.
🔷 Remember the court scene in “A Few Good Men”?
Tom Cruise says, “I object,” and the court overrules.
But Demi isn’t satisfied.
She just has to get up & say: “I strenuously object.”
Dear 1L, 👉 Get your sample 1L Memo here—
Dear 1L,
As you know, law-school ethics codes prevent anyone from assisting with specific, 1L writing assignments before final drafts are submitted.
I see these memos after-the-fact, when I help students with job applications.
Dear 1L, I had IRAC. Most now teach CREAC.
There’s also CRAC, TRAC, and TREAC.
I could go on, but won’t.
And instead of explaining it to you in writing now, I’m working on finishing a fictional model “Memo” for you that illustrates the basic structure.
Dear 1L, Imagine the Reader of your Memo will be someone who just graduated law school—a 4L.
That’s someone just a few years above you.
{—Of course you must follow all your professor’s rules and style preferences, but otherwise, forget them as your Reader.}
Dear 1L, When you refer to your own case in your Memo, follow this tip.
Stay away from phrases like:
➖ “in this case”
➖ “in the present case”
➖ “in the instant case”
➖ “in the case at bar”
TBS, writing those phrases is not “wrong,” per se.
Dear 3L, 😥 In the past few months, I’ve seen several jobless 3Ls’ resumes that have broken my heart.
This is AFTER these resumes have been through multiple career-services-office reviews,
AFTER these resumes have been sent to hundreds of law firms and other prospective employers, and,
LONG AFTER the students have been through the formalized OCI process.
Dear 1L, After you complete research for your Memo, you may have WAY too many cases to try to manage.
Here’s how I got a handle on things + chose which cases to use in my memos and briefs as a lawyer.
I hope it will help you come up with a system that works best for you!
***
🔹 I gathered my cases and divided them into 2 piles.
Dear Legal Writer: A “company” is an “it,” not a “they.”
Do you question what I say?
Here’s a primer plus a question for my friends across the pond:
***
In the U.S., and in U.S. legal English:
Dear Legal Writer: Before you give that draft brief to a partner for review, check to see if you’ve used any of these WORDY ways to say “because”:
📍 In light of the fact that
📍 Due to the fact that
📍 As a result of
📍 For the reason that
📍 On account of the fact that
📍 On the grounds that
All these ways take a roundabout route to get to your point.
Dear 1L, When your first & only feedback in law school is a 35/100 on a Contracts midterm, it’s time for some serious soul-searching.
That was me in Oct. 1993, and I thought the world was going to end.
To be sure, like most all 1L midterms, it was merely a “practice” exam.
But to me, it was devastating.
Dear Legal Writer: If I told you to cut down your use of “expletives” in legal writing, you might retort, “I would never use expletives in legal writing.”
Alas, but you do.
Here’s what I mean:
🔹 Definition:
An “expletive” doesn’t just need to be a profane or obscene term.
Dear 1L, When you are doing legal research into case law, there will come a point when you wonder,
“Have I done enough?”
Follow these 7 Steps to make sure you don’t miss a key case.
🔹 1. Find, pull, and skim 3 relevant cases (found from secondary sources, sample briefs, searches under keywords & headnotes, etc.).