Thursday, November 7, 2002
WRITER: Kristine Fortunato, 706/542-5172
CONTACT: Kellie Casey, 706/542-2739, krcasey@uga.edu
GEORGIA DEFEATS FLORIDA IN ANNUAL HULSEY-KIMBRELL MOOT COURT COMPETITION
ATHENS, Ga. – Although it may have lost on the football field, the University of Georgia won in the courtroom, beating the University of Florida in the 22nd annual Hulsey-Kimbrell Moot Court Competition, held in Jacksonville on Friday, Nov. 1, 2002.
Georgia’s School of Law team argued for the fictional state of Davis
in its defense of a Megan’s Law (sex offender registry) statute requiring
all sex offenders to register with the state for at least 12 years after
release from prison. Florida’s Levin College of Law team argued for
the plaintiff, who sued Davis claiming the statute was unconstitutional
because it was retroactively applied to him and because it did not afford
him a hearing. This fictitious case was based on two cases currently
be heard on appeal by the U.S. Supreme Court.
The winning Georgia team was comprised of third-year students Tonya
F. Stokes and R. Matthew Reeves. The team was coached by third-year
student Ben E. Pope.
School of Law Dean David E. Shipley said Georgia’s victory is just
another example of the winning tradition the moot court program has established
at the law school. “Our team’s hard work paid off. The students
were well prepared for this moot court competition and preformed excellently
before a very active bench of six experienced judges from Georgia and Florida.”
The University of Georgia leads the annual Hulsey-Kimbrell Moot Court
Competition 16-4-2.
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