24th Annual Public Interest Auction, 3/26

Presented by the Walter A. Lucas '88 

Public Interest Fellowship Program (PIFP)

file

Friday, March 26

6:00 p.m.
Virtual Event

 

Join the Walter A. Lucas Public Interest Fellowship Program (PIFP) for the 24th Annual Public Interest Auction! This year's event will take place virtually and include live programming featuring Villanova Law faculty and students. All auction proceeds directly fund fellowships awarded to Villanova Law students who dedicate their summers to public service legal work.

Please note, registration is required. A link to the virtual event will be sent to all registered participants. When registering, you may purchase $5 raffle tickets for the chance to win Apple AirPod Pros, a Yeti cooler or a $400 Airbnb gift card.

Additionally, the silent auction will open a week prior to the event on March 19. Make sure to visit the PIFP auction site to view some of the available auction items and to register for the auction platform so you can start bidding.

The Walter A. Lucas Public Interest Fellowship Program (PIFP) at Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law provides financial support to students who commit their summers to public service legal work. Many law students are dedicated to helping the less fortunate but are limited by financial constraints. Similarly, public interest legal organizations often cannot afford to hire much needed summer interns. Through fundraising, PIFP, an entirely student-run organization, provides summer fellowships to Villanova Law students, who in turn aid the larger community by working with various public interest organizations throughout the region, nation and world to deliver volunteer legal services to those in need.

Join the Walter A. Lucas Public Interest Fellowship Program (PIFP) for the 24th Annual Public Interest Auction! This year's event will take place virtually and include live programming featuring Villanova Law faculty and students. All auction proceeds directly fund fellowships awarded to Villanova Law students who dedicate their summers to public service legal work.

Please note, registration is required. A link to the virtual event will be sent to all registered participants. When registering, you may purchase $5 raffle tickets for the chance to win Apple AirPod Pros, a Yeti cooler or a $400 Airbnb gift card.

Additionally, the silent auction will open a week prior to the event on March 19. Make sure to visit the PIFP auction site to view some of the available auction items and to register for the auction platform so you can start bidding.

The Walter A. Lucas Public Interest Fellowship Program (PIFP) at Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law provides financial support to students who commit their summers to public service legal work. Many law students are dedicated to helping the less fortunate but are limited by financial constraints. Similarly, public interest legal organizations often cannot afford to hire much needed summer interns. Through fundraising, PIFP, an entirely student-run organization, provides summer fellowships to Villanova Law students, who in turn aid the larger community by working with various public interest organizations throughout the region, nation and world to deliver volunteer legal services to those in need.

 

PIFP Fellowship Recipients

 
ronald-avila

Ronald Avila ’21 

Los Angeles County Public Defenders Office

“My time with the Los Angeles County Public Defenders Office has shown me how passionate and dedicated a public defender is in representing their clients. This experience has made me hopeful for my own goals and ambitions as a public defender.”

mary-jacob

Mary Jacob '21 

Montgomery County Public Defender's Office

“I primarily participated in intensive trial training to improve my legal writing, argument, and examination skills. Throughout a simulated trial training, I participated in team trial strategy development. Within this training, I also gained experience with drafting preliminary motions, arguing preliminary hearings, interviewing clients and witnesses, and cross-examining witnesses.”

elisabeth-freer

Elizabeth Freer ’22 

United States Attorney's Office

Villanova Law School Faculty and Staff Fellow

“I primarily assisted attorneys by writing briefs and memoranda concerning complex issues of federal law including the Savings Clause of the Federal Tort Claims Act, enhancements under the Federal Criminal Sentencing Guidelines, and the use of the Controlled Substances Act and False Claims Act to prosecute doctors for unlawfully prescribing opiates. This internship was truly an invaluable experience that allowed me to work directly with federal prosecutors, learn more about government work, and hone my legal advocacy skills.”

antionna-fuller

Antionna Fuller ’22 

Pennsylvania Innocence Project & South Carolina Appleseed Justice

“This summer I had the pleasure of working at two incredible organizations. At the Pennsylvania Innocence Project, I wrote an investigative report for a client seeking to be exonerated for a third-degree murder charge. At South Carolina Appleseed Legal Justice Center, I was able to help the Hunger team administer a new federal program called Pandemic EBT (“P-EBT”). P-EBT is a one-time food assistance benefit, meant to reimburse families for food assistance lost during the months that schools would have been in session.”

gabi-lipschitz

Gabi Lipschitz ’22 

Montgomery County Public Defender's Office & Research Assistant

“This summer I learned about trial advocacy from the public defender side and was able to practice both my oral advocacy as well as my writing skills. As a research assistant, I was able to practice my critical research skills, focusing on fair housing and racial discrimination ordinances and other obstacles minorities have faced in the housing market.”

matt-marchini

Matt Marchini '22 

Villanova Federal Tax Clinic

“I had my own caseload where I interviewed clients, collected and complied documentation for cases, and did relevant legal research. I was able to meaningfully interact with clients, helping guide them through their tax issues and advising them on options for resolving their cases.”

meghan-rafter

Meghan Rafter '21 

Cape May County Prosecutor's Office

Penny Pether Fellow

“This summer I worked for the Cape May County Prosecutor’s Office in the Domestic Violence Section. I had the opportunity to observe/hear about many different matters regarding issues such as sexual assault, drug-induced death, and child endangerment. Court proceedings were somewhat limited due to COVID-19, but I was able to watch many detention hearings live via Zoom. I improved my legal research and writing skills by writing several briefs, motions, and memoranda over the course of the summer. My research assignments included the use of protective orders to suppress information on a victim’s phone to prevent undue harassment, reconsideration of detention orders under the federal bail system, the admission of a statement after an ambiguous assertion of the right to counsel, the admittance of a recent conviction, clerical errors in judgment of convictions.”

jerry-shaen

Jerry Shaen '22 

U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission

“The State, Local, & Tribal program works with Fair Employment Practices Agencies (FEPAs) or the state and local equivalents of the EEOC. My job performed substantial weight reviews of charges dismissed by the FEPA or when the FEPA found no probable cause. It was an opportunity to not only learn the legal analysis behind these claims but also to provide charging parties with relief. Overall, my job showed me the commitment to the law my agency has which felt necessary to experience in my first law school summer internship. Additionally, to work at the EEOC with the COVID-19 Pandemic and Supreme Court rulings that impacted our law was a unique experience in real time.”

Tasha-Stoltzfus-Nankerville

Tasha Stoltzfus Nankerville '22 

Lancaster County District Attorney's Office

Krasno, Krasno, & Onwudinjo Fellow

"I worked closely with a variety of Assistant District Attorneys specializing in the Juvenile Unit, the Special Victims Unit, and the Major Crimes Unit and completed discovery redaction on over twenty cases. The Lancaster DA’s office also has an expansive Victim/Witness Advocate Unit which allowed me to compassionately interact with many victims who have experienced trauma.”