Justin Brooks

Justin Brooks (born 1965) is an American criminal defense attorney and professor of law at California Western School of Law in San Diego.[1]  He is well known for his work as director of the California Innocence Project, where he has exonerated several high profile clients including football player Brian Banks.[2]

Brooks is also well known for training criminal defense attorneys in the United States as director of the Institute for Criminal Defense Advocacy[3] and LL.M. in Trial Advocacy Specializing in Federal Criminal Law. He works extensively in Latin America training lawyers as co-director of ACCESO Capacitación[4] and creating innocence programs as co-director of Redinocente.[5]

Early life

Justin Brooks attended Temple University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania where he obtained a bachelor's in business law. He then attended he American University Washington College of Law where he obtained his J.D. Brooks then obtained a fellowship at Georgetown University Law Center where he earned an LL.M in Trial Advocacy.[1]

Career

Academic career

Brooks’ first full-time teaching job was at Georgetown University Law Center where he taught corrections law and was appointed as the Assistant Director of Georgetown’s Corrections Clinic after completing his fellowship. In that position he co-founded Georgetown’s Family Literacy Project with Professor Richard Roe — a program devoted to teaching inmates how to teach their children how to read and then providing family literacy activities where the children went to the prison and were taught by their parents.[1]

Brooks’ second full-time teaching job was at Thomas Cooley Law School where he taught Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Corrections Law, and Death Penalty Law. He directed a death penalty clinical program and directed the national moot court programs.[1]

Brooks currently teaches criminal law, criminal procedure, federal criminal law, trial advocacy, and comparative criminal procedure at California Western School of Law in San Diego, California. He is the founding director of the California Innocence Project, a law school clinic devoted to freeing the wrongfully incarcerated. He is also the executive director of The Institute for Criminal Defense Advocacy, a program devoted to criminal defense attorney training, co-director of ACCESO Capacitacion, a program devoted to oral skills training for Latin American lawyers, co founder and director of the law school’s LL.M. Trial Advocacy Specializing in Federal Criminal Law, and co-founder and co-director of Redinocente, an organization devoted to creating and supporting innocence programs throughout Latin America.[1]

Brooks has been a visiting professor at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand, Universidad Interamericana, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, New England School of Law’s Summer Law Program in Galway, Ireland, and South Texas College of Law’s Summer Law Programs in Malta and the Czech Republic. He has taught multiple times in California Western School of Law’s Chile Summer Program.[6]

Legal career

Brooks began his legal career doing court appointed criminal cases in Washington, D.C. where he practiced for three years. He then practiced in Michigan and Illinois for 6 years where he provided pro-bono representation to death row inmates. Since 1999 he has been representing clients in conjunction with his work as Director of California Innocence Project.[1] The project has exonerated several wrongfully convicted clients including Jason Kindle, John Stoll, Ken Marsh, Adam Riojas, Tim Atkins, Reggie Cole, Rafael Madrigal, and football player Brian Banks.[7]

Awards and recognitions

Academic publications

External links

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Justin P. Brooks". Meet the Faculty. California Western School of Law. Retrieved 21 Sep 2012.
  2. "California Innocence Project: Meet the Staff". California Innocence Project. CALIFORNIA INNOCENCE PROJECT. Retrieved 21 Sep 2010.
  3. "Institute for Criminal Defense Advocacy". California Western School of Law. Retrieved 21 Sep 2012.
  4. "Nuestro Cuerpo Docente". ACCESO Capacitación (in Spanish). ACCESO Capacitación. Retrieved 21 Sep 2012.
  5. "CWSL’s Work to Establish Latin American Innocence Project Highlighted by Local, International Media". California Western News. California Western School of Law. July 24, 2012. Retrieved 21 Sep 2012.
  6. "Chile Summer Program". Consortium for Innovative Legal Education. Retrieved 21 Sep 2012.
  7. "California Innocence Project Home". Retrieved 21 Sep 2010.
  8. "American Constitution Society for Law and Policy: San Diego Chapter Third Annual Reception".
  9. "Appellate Defenders Inc: PAUL E. BELL MEMORIAL AWARD".
  10. "California Western School of Law News".
  11. "California Lawyer Journal: 2010 California Lawyer Attorneys of the Year".
  12. "San Diego Magazine, 50 People to Watch in 2010".
  13. "California Western School of Law News".
  14. "California high school football star cleared of rape 10 years later". NBCNews.com. 25 May 2012. Retrieved 21 Sep 2012.
  15. "ABC News".
  16. "CNN Saturday Morning News".
  17. Brooks, Justin. Wrongful convictions : cases and materials. Lake Mary, Fla.: Vandeplas. ISBN 160042158X.
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