Mitchell Hamline School of Law Proctors LSAT in Prison

Hoping to become the first, the Mitchell Hamline School of Law Dean proctored the Law School Admission Test (LSAT) for two inmates incarcerated in Minnesota last week. The Mitchell Hamline School of law, which houses a Sex Offense Policy and Resource Center (https://mitchellhamline.edu/sex-offense-litigation-policy/) wants to help people return from incarceration with a stronger chance of success by having an education to look forward to!

Good luck to the two individuals who took the exam!


Discover more from Florida Action Committee (FAC)

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

3 thoughts on “Mitchell Hamline School of Law Proctors LSAT in Prison

  • April 26, 2021

    Hope it works out better in MN than Flor-a-duh because the best you could become is a over educated para legal because flor-a-duh wouldn’t let you sit for the Bar Exam as a part of the morals clause seems they only allow future criminals or criminals that haven’t been caught yet

    Reply
  • April 23, 2021

    Sounds like there going to give them a pre law school exam and if they do really good they will let them continue There education. Then when they get out they may choose to continue the practice. Then the jail will say see there doing real well now since we helped them get an education. When S.O. already have the lowest recidivism rate of any criminals anyway. Just a tricky was to take credit for a none existent problem.

    Reply
  • April 23, 2021

    Hope it wasn’t at Moose Lake. Would be pretty pointless, as the two taking the test would probably never get released.

    Reply

Comment Policy

  • PLEASE READ: Comments not adhering to this policy will be removed.
  • Be patient. All comments are moderated before they are published. This takes time.
  • Stay on topic. Comments and links should be relevant to this post.
  • *NEW* CLICK HERE if you have an off-topic comment or link.
  • Be respectful. Do not attack, abuse, or threaten. This includes cussing/yelling (ALL CAPS).
  • Cite. If requested, cite any bold or novel claims of fact or statistics, or your comment may be moderated.
  • *NEW* Be brief. If you have a comment of over 2,000 characters, please e-mail it to us for consideration as a member submission.
  • Reminder: Opinions and statements in comments are neither endorsed nor verified by FAC.
  • Moderation does not equal censorship. See this post for more information

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *