Bio
I am a third year law student at Liberty University School of Law, where I am on the law review and the moot court team. I graduated from the University of Virginia in 2005, where I earned a B.S. in Applied Mathematics with a minor in Economics.
My law school career has included an appointment as a managing editor of my school's law review, a championship and best brief award for my school's second-year / third-year moot court tournament, and repeated competition at the ABA National Appellate Advocacy Competition. I also served in the leadership of our Federalist Society chapter and founded the Intellectual Property and Technology Law Society at the school. Finally, the law review will publish a paper I have written on copyright law by the time I graduate.
Upon graduation, I will serve for two years as a law clerk to a judge on the Court of Appeals of Virginia.
I have previous worked as a technical adviser at an intellectual property law firm, where I prosecuted patents for several major Japanese companies. Before that, I was a programmer and business consultant at Sapient Corporation, where I worked on projects with the U.S. Marines and the FBI. I know several computer languages.
Although I am interested in many aspects of the law, I am most interested in appellate practice, civil litigation, intellectual property law, technology law, employment law, environmental law, and constitutional law.
I am a Christian, and I have been happily married to my beautiful wife Allison since 2006.