Maggie Kinkopf never considered a legal career until her senior year in college, while listening to the third season of Serial, a podcast that critically examined Cuyahoga Countyβs criminal justice system.
βI remember thinking, βThis is a way I could contribute to making a real positive change,β β said Kinkopf, who, just four months into her education at Case Western Reserveβs School of Law, found herself on Zoom talking with Serial host Sarah Koenig in a faculty-led discussion ΒιΆΉΣ³» the podcast. βThis is why I decided to go to law school, so it was really exciting,β said Kinkopf, now a second-year student.
Kinkopfβs experience reflects the law schoolβs aim to engage first-year students in experiential education and connect them with the schoolβs Milton and Charlotte Kramer Law Clinic.
While itβs the clinicβs third-year students who are assigned cases on issues from human trafficking to immigration to criminal justice, first-year students handle initial client paperworkβand watch and learn from their more experienced peers.
That way they βget engaged in the work of fulfilling the needs of people in the community,β said Laura McNally-Levine, associate dean for experiential education, a professor and the clinicβs director.
She said it seemed timely and important to pull together the podcast-related programming for students, given all the work nationally and on campus around social justice, and the fact that Serial had focused on the Cuyahoga County court.
Kinkopf and fellow first-year students listened to Serial's third season; participated in discussions with faculty and outside lawyers from both the defense and prosecution sides; and had the opportunity to work in the schoolβs Second Chance Reentry Clinic for individuals facing legal barriers as a result of their criminal records.
Now Kinkopf, inspired by the podcast, plans to practice criminal law.
Serial's Koenig said in an email that the law schoolβs decision to integrate the podcast into studentsβ education was βone of the best outcomes I could imagine from the reporting we did in the courthouse. And to hear that students are engaging with the stories and questioning the justice system theyβre ΒιΆΉΣ³» to enter, all the better.β
β COLIN MCEWEN
(Photo: Roger Mastroianni)
The article originally appeared in the Fall/Winter 2021 issue of Think magazine.