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Admissions
Click on the following to look into
the 2008 MPT and MBE booklets:
http://www.ncbex.org/tests.htm
July Exam Dates
Monday July 28, 2008 Registration Day for all applicants
Tuesday July 29, 2008 Nevada Essays and MPT
Wednesday July 30, 2008 Nevada MBE
Thursday July 31, 2008 Nevada Essays
Admission to Practice Law in the State of Nevada
Nevada has no reciprocity or admission by motion of any kind,
everyone must sit for the full 2 1/2 day bar examination. The bar examination is administered the last Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday of February in Las Vegas, and the last
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of July in Las Vegas and Reno
simultaneously. Overall pass rates vary, however generally range
between 62 - 65%. The rules of the Supreme Court of Nevada
regarding admission to practice law require that all applicants
must have the following qualifications:
(a) SCR 51(3) Have received a degree of bachelor of laws,
or an equivalent law degree, from a law school approved by the
committee on legal education and admissions to the bar of the
American Bar Association, and shall present evidence of the
same.
(b) SCR 51(4) Demonstrate that the applicant is of good
moral character and is willing and able to abide by the high
ethical standards required of attorneys and counselors at law.
(c) SCR 51(6) Not be subject to any mental or emotional
disorder which would render the applicant unfit to practice law.
(d) SCR 51(7) Not be an abuser of alcohol or prescription
drugs, or a user of illegal drugs.
(e) SCR 51(8) Demonstrate financial responsibility.
(f) SCR 51(9) Be in full compliance with any court order,
including without limitation, spousal or child support orders.
(g) Pass the annual written bar examination given in
July. The same examination is administered to all applicants,
including attorneys, irrespective of the number of years of
practice. Attorneys are not admitted on motion or by reciprocity
and there is no reciprocity as to Multistate Bar Examinations
previously taken in other jurisdictions.
(h) Prior to the admission to the practice of law,
and not earlier than three years preceding the year in which an applicant
passes the examination required by Rule 65, and no later than three years
after the year in which an applicant passes said examination, an applicant
shall take and pass the Multistate Professional Responsibility
Examination. There is no limit to the number of times an applicant may
take the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination during such
period, but if an applicant does not pass the Multistate Professional
Responsibility Examination during such period, an applicant must be
reexamined as required by Rule 65. The Multistate Professional
Responsibility Examination need not be taken in the State of Nevada..Applications to take the MPRE must be obtained from
the American College Testing at (319) 337-1287.
Policies and Procedures of the
Functional Equivalency Committee
1. Number of Members on the Committee. By order filed September
29, 1993, ADKT No. 171, the Supreme Court of Nevada created the
Committee on Functional Equivalency ("committee"). The Committee
was formally codified in Supreme Court Rule 49 in 1996. The
Committee is composed of seven members who are active members of
the State Bar of Nevada. Four of the members are appointed by
the Supreme Court of Nevada ("court"), and three members are
appointed by the Board of Governors. The Chair will be selected
by the Court from the appointed members.
2. Terms of Office. The terms of the members of the committee
shall be three years; provided however, that no attorney may
serve on the committee for more than a lifetime total of nine
years.
3. Responsibilities and Powers of the Committee. The committee
shall have all those powers and duties delegated under the
Nevada Supreme Court Rules to the board of governors and the
board of bar examiners relating to the conduct of investigations
and hearings, and the submission of reports and recommendations
to the board of bar examiners and the court respecting those
petitioners seeking certification in accordance with S.C.R.
51.5.
A. Chair. The chair will be selected by the Supreme Court from
the committee members and is responsible for ensuring that
petitions for certification of the qualifications set forth in
S.C.R. 51.5 are processed in accordance with the Supreme Court
Rules and the policies and procedures of the committee as set
forth herein.
B. Vice-Chair. The vice-chair is to be appointed by the
committee and shall take on the duties and responsibilities of
the chair in his/her absence.
4. Quorum. No less than four of the seven members of the
committee, meeting either in person or by telephone conference,
shall constitute a quorum for the purposes of a hearing.
Committee decisions and recommendations require a majority vote
of those in attendance.
5. Certification Procedure. Before submitting an application for
examination for a license to practice in Nevada, a prospective
applicant who has received a degree of bachelor of laws or an
equivalent law degree from a law school that has not been
approved by the Committee on Legal Education and Admissions to
the Bar of the American Bar Association as required by S.C.R.
51(3) must first obtain certification by the committee that the
prospective applicant has met the qualifications set forth in
S.C.R 51.5 ("certification"). Applications for admission
submitted without prior certification shall immediately be
rejected and the application fee shall not be refunded.
To apply for certification, a prospective applicant who has met
the standards set forth in S.C.R. 51.5 must submit to the
director of admissions an original and two (2) copies of a
verified petition for certification under S.C.R. 51.5, together
with a $750 filing fee, and proof of service of the petition on
the chair of the functional equivalency committee. The chair may
be served at the office of the State Bar of Nevada. The petition
must be filed no later than September 1 of the year prior to the
year in which the petitioner seeks to sit for the bar
examination, and shall contain a statement of facts accompanied
by copies of all relevant documents, a statement of each ground
upon which relief is alleged to be warranted, and legal points
and authorities, setting forth the legal basis for each ground
for the relief requested.
In this petition, the burden of proof shall be upon the
petitioner, without imposing an excessive burden on the
committee, to demonstrate that he or she meets the
qualifications set forth in subsection 1(a), 1(b), or 1(c) of
S.C.R. 51.5.
Listed below are the minimum qualifications that will be
considered by the committee in its investigation. Petitioners
shall provide the committee with evidence addressing the
following applicable items:
1. Quality of Law School (profit vs. non-profit, correspondence
vs. attendance, etc.)
2. Curriculum (courses taken, content, common law subjects,
length of classes for individual sessions, semester or other
term, participation required, moot court, etc.)
3. Faculty (number of full-time faculty members, faculty/student
ratio, professional credentials, availability of faculty to
students after class, etc.)
4. Admission Standards (requirement of LSAT or equivalent,
average GPA, BA/BS required or AA acceptable, number of
students, etc.)
5. Resources and Research Facilities (library facility, number
of volumes in library, types of volumes in library, study
facilities, etc.)
6. Physical Plant (size, classroom size, moot court facilities,
offices for faculty, separation of law school from general
university, etc.)
7. Existing Accreditation, Prior Accreditation History or
Attempt (prior ABA accreditation or provisional accreditation,
attempt at ABA accreditation, accreditation of foreign law
school by agency analogous to ABA, etc.)
8. Evidence of experience in the full-time practice of law in
any state of the United States of America, a territory of the
United States of America, the District of Columbia, or a foreign
country for at least ten of the preceding twelve years. Such
evidence should include, but not be limited to: a sworn
affidavit detailing the nature and extent of the petitioner's
legal work experience during the time the petitioner claims to
have engaged in the full-time practice of law; legal memoranda
prepared by the petitioner; copies of published cases resulting
from the petitioner's pleadings and/or pleadings and papers
filed by the petitioner in his/her capacity as an attorney and
counselor at law as a sole practitioner or for a law firm, legal
services office, legal clinic or the like, or as an attorney for
an individual, a corporation, partnership, trust; and/or letters
of reference from the bench and bar in the jurisdiction in which
the petitioner has been engaged in the practice of law.
The above listing is not meant to be exhaustive. Rather, it is
illustrative of the minimum qualifications that the committee
will consider in determining whether the petitioner has met the
qualifications set forth in S.C.R. 51.5.
6. Fees and Expenses. Verified petitions for certification shall
be accompanied by a $750 filing fee which shall be paid to the
State Bar of Nevada. The filing fee shall cover those costs
which in the opinion of the committee are reasonably necessary
to conduct investigations and to hold hearings. Costs under this
rule shall include, without limitation, the cost of court
reporters, consultants, experts, telephone and telecopy, as well
as transportation, meals and lodging incurred by the members of
the committee in the furtherance of its investigation. In the
event the filing fee exceeds the actual costs incurred in the
investigation, the committee shall refund the excess to the
petitioner within thirty (30) days of the committee's final
disposition.
In the event the initial filing fee shall prove to be inadequate
to cover the actual costs of the investigation, a written
estimate of costs shall be served on the petitioner. Within ten
(10) days of service of the written estimate of costs, the
petitioner shall pay the additional estimated amount to the
state bar. Failure to pay the filing fee or any estimated costs
under this rule shall result in denial of the petition as
abandoned.
7. Hearings. In accordance with S.C.R. 57, the committee may, in
conducting its investigations, take and hear relevant evidence,
administer oaths and affirmations, and compel by subpoena the
attendance of witnesses and the production of books, papers and
documents, subject to the Supreme Court Rules.
Upon payment of the filing fee and estimated expenses, the
committee shall review such evidence and conduct such hearings
as it deems necessary to investigate the grounds asserted by the
petitioner and to make a determination whether the petitioner
has met the qualifications set forth in S.C.R. 51.5. The
petitioner shall be entitled to notice as set forth in section
8, and to be present, together with counsel, if desired, to
present evidence to substantiate the claim. The petitioner shall
also be entitled to all rights and privileges as are set forth
in the Supreme Court Rules relating to the conduct of
investigations and hearings. In any proceeding before the
committee, the petitioner shall bear the burden of proof to
demonstrate that the petitioner meets the qualifications as set
forth in S.C.R. 51.5.
8. Notice. In accordance with S.C.R. 59, whenever a petitioner
is required to appear before the committee the petitioner shall
be entitled to five (5) days' notice thereof if served
personally, and ten (10) days' notice if served by mail at the
petitioner's last-known address.
9. Recommendation to the Board of Bar Examiners. On or before
March 1 of the year in which the petitioner seeks to sit for the
bar examination, the committee shall make a determination
whether the petitioner meets the qualifications as set forth in
S.C.R. 51.5. If the committee has noted questions relating to
the petitioner's ability to meet the moral character and fitness
requirements of S.C.R. 51(4), (5), (6), (7), (8), or (9), the
committee may recommend to the Board of Bar Examiners that the
petitioner be referred to the committee on moral character and
fitness for further investigation and/or hearings prior to
review by the committee.
A. Favorable Recommendation. If the committee recommends that
certification be granted in accordance with S.C.R. 51.5, the
committee shall reduce such recommendation to writing and shall
transmit to the board of bar examiners, together with proof of
service by mail on the petitioner, its certification that the
petitioner has met the qualifications set forth in S.C.R.
51.5(1)(a), (b), or (c). Service shall be complete upon mailing.
The report shall be filed with the board of bar examiners within
thirty (30) days of the conclusion of any hearing, unless
otherwise ordered by the board of bar examiners, and no later
than March 1 of the year in which the petitioner seeks to sit
for the bar examination. Upon receipt of such certification, the
board of bar examiners shall permit the petitioner to apply for
admission, unless the board determines that further
investigation is necessary. The petitioner may, in the board's
discretion, be permitted to sit for the bar examination if the
petitioner meets all other applicable requirements.
B. Adverse Recommendation. If the committee recommends that
certification be denied based upon its determination that the
petitioner has not met the qualifications set forth in S.C.R.
51.5, the committee shall file a report with the Board of Bar
Examiners, together with proof of service by mail on the
petitioner, describing the basis for the committee's adverse
recommendation. Service shall be complete upon mailing. The
report shall be filed with the board of bar examiners within
thirty (30) days of the conclusion of any hearing, unless
otherwise ordered by the Board of Bar Examiners, and no later
than March 1 of the year in which the petitioner seeks to sit
for the bar examination. Absent a timely verified petition for
review filed in accordance with section 10 below and S.C.R.
51.5(7), the Board of Bar Examiners shall approve the adverse
recommendation of the committee, unless the Board of Bar
Examiners determines that further investigation is necessary.
10. Procedure for Review by the Supreme Court. If the committee
recommends to the Board of Bar Examiners that a petitioner be
denied certification, the petitioner may, within fifteen (15)
days from the date of service of such report, file an original
and two (2) copies of a verified petition for relief with the
Supreme Court, which shall be accompanied by a non-refundable
$200 filing fee and proof of service of a copy upon the director
of admissions of the State Bar, the chair of the Board of Bar
Examiners, and the chair of the Functional Equivalency
Committee. Such petition shall contain any relevant
documentation necessary for the court's understanding of the
matter, a statement of facts supported by adequate citation to
any record, and legal points and authorities setting forth the
legal basis for each ground upon which the committee's
recommendation is alleged to be erroneous.
Within fifteen (15) days of service of any verified petition,
the Board of Bar Examiners shall file the committee's report
with the court. Additionally, within fifteen (15) days of
service of any verified petition, the Board of Bar Examiners
and/or the committee, or their representative may file a
supplement to the committee's report addressing any issues
raised in the petition.
If the court is of the opinion that the committee's
recommendation should not be disturbed, it may deny the
petition. Otherwise, the court may enter an order fixing the
time within which an answer may be filed by the committee, if
the committee has not already filed an answer. Should the court
determine that the petitioner is entitled to relief, it may
direct the Board of Bar Examiners to permit the petitioner to
file an application for admission and to process the application
in accordance with Supreme Court Rules 49 to 75.
702-382-2200
| Admissions |
Ext #
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Position |
| Patrice Eichman |
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Director |
| Felice Fromherz |
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Assistant Director |
| Dean Fernandez |
|
Admissions Investigator |
| Michael Hack |
|
Admissions Asst. |
| Cindy Talbert |
|
Admissions Asst. |

State Bar of Nevada
600 E. Charleston Blvd
Las Vegas, NV 89104
702-382-2200
marcm@nvbar.org
Copyright © 2006 State Bar of Nevada
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