Rhode Center Student Fellows Jessica Wang and Brian Xu Awarded the 2025 Susman Godfrey Prize

Rhode Center Civil Justice Student Fellows Jessica Wang and Brian Xu have been awarded the 2025 Susman Godfrey Prize, which the law firm awards annually to students of color who have demonstrated excellence and overall achievement. They are two of only 25 winners from law schools across the country and will each receive a prize of $4,000 and ongoing mentorship from Susman Godfrey’s partners and associates.

“I am so honored to be a part of this amazing cohort,” Jessica said. “I’m grateful to the Rhode Center for giving me opportunities to work on the causes that brought me to law school, and to Professor David Freeman Engstrom in particular for nominating me for the Susman Godfrey Prize. I look forward to making the most of the Susman Godfrey community’s mentorship, and paying it forward to future cohorts.”

Reflecting on his selection, Brian shared that “the Rhode Center has been such an integral part of my law school experience, and I am especially grateful to Professor David Freeman Engstrom for nominating me for the Susman Godfrey Prize. I am excited to meet the other members of my cohort, and I am looking forward to connecting with the rest of the Susman Godfrey community later this summer.”

As Student Fellows, Jessica and Brian have played integral roles in the Rhode Center’s work. Jessica has been a key player in a cutting-edge Center project to expand the assistance that court staff provide to self-represented litigants in navigating potentially life-altering cases. She is also an editor on the Stanford Law Review, a member of Stanford’s Religious Liberty Clinic, and has been active in the Housing Pro Bono Project. She holds a B.A. in Economics and Rhetoric from UC Berkeley, where she researched access to civil justice.

Brian has been deeply involved in the Center’s collaboration with the Los Angeles Superior Court, particularly in identifying ways to help pro se litigants navigate the court system. Outside of the Center, Brian is an editor on the Stanford Law Review, a Harry Bremond Fellow at the Stanford Center for Racial Justice, and a co-director of the Workers’ Rights Pro Bono Project. He earned a B.S. in Foreign Service from Georgetown University and is pursuing a concurrent Master of Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School.

Camp Lejeune and Veterans’ Fight for Government Accountability

By Owen Foulkes, Rhode Center Civil Justice Fellow
On April 28, the Rhode Center co-hosted a lunch talk with Elizabeth Cabraser and Annie Wanless of Lieff, Cabraser, Heimann & Bernstein, LLP, co-lead counsel in the sprawling litigation over harms from toxic water at Camp Lejeune. Their message was clear: This case is about more than the law. It’s about institutional responsibility and whether the justice system can deliver for those it has long ignored.

From 1953 to 1987, the drinking water at Camp Lejeune—a major Marine Corps base in North Carolina—was laced with highly toxic chemicals. The contamination affected not just service members, but their families and civilian workers. Although the government discovered the contamination in 1982, it failed to notify those exposed until years later, after North Carolina’s statute of repose had expired. For many, the truth came too late.

In response, Congress passed the bipartisan Camp Lejeune Justice Act (CLJA) in 2022. The law created a new federal cause of action allowing anyone exposed to contaminated water at the base for 30 days or more to bring suit against the federal government after first filing an administrative claim with the Navy. Critically, it lowered the standard of proof: Plaintiffs need only show that their condition was at least as likely as not caused by the contamination. Though the window to file claims closed in August 2024, more than 400,000 were submitted. Roughly 3,000 lawsuits are now pending in the Eastern District of North Carolina, where the court has grouped diseases into tracks and selected bellwether plaintiffs, in a process modeled loosely on multi-district litigation.

As Elizabeth Cabraser put it, the CLJA is “a quilt”—a statute stitched together from elements of federal tort law, administrative procedure, and environmental regulation. But while the law was designed to remove barriers, litigation challenges remain. Expert discovery is underway, with both sides preparing for Daubert hearings to determine which expert testimony will be admitted. In a twist, the government is now challenging studies conducted by its own agency, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR), that linked water contamination to many serious illnesses. Another battle looms over the right to a jury trial. Although the CLJA says nothing in it “shall impair” that right, courts so far have ruled that plaintiffs are not entitled to jury trials. A petition for certiorari is now pending before the Supreme Court to reverse those rulings.

Behind the thousands of claims are aging veterans and family members, many of whom lack the resources, health, and time for a prolonged process. Litigating against the federal government brings distinct hurdles: Unlike corporate defendants, the government isn’t influenced by market pressures or standard reputational risk. This slows settlement negotiations and reduces transparency. Although Congress envisioned swift relief, few individual settlement offers have been made. A global framework is supposed to be ready by year’s end—but for many claimants, time is running out.

For the law students in the audience, Cabraser and Wanless offered a lesson in the real-world challenges of complex litigation. Camp Lejeune raises complex questions about how our legal system handles historical harm, scientific uncertainty, and government accountability. Whether or not the CLJA fulfills its promise, the litigation is already shaping how the next generation of advocates will think about civil justice.

A2J Briefing: News from the Field

Technology 

  • The U.K.’s Solicitors Regulation Authority has authorized the first law firm providing legal services through AI. [5/6/25]
  • The New York Times reports on generative AI hallucinations as a feature not a bug–and one that’s here to stay. [5/5/25]
  • The U.S. Judicial Conference’s Advisory Committee on Evidence Rules voted 8-1 to seek public comment on a draft rule intended to ensure that evidence produced by generative AI meets the same reliability standards as evidence from human expert witnesses. [5/2/25]

Regulatory Innovation 

  • Pro Bono Institute writes about Arizona’s community justice workers and legal advocates in Arizona. [5/13/25]
  • Frontline Justice has developed a platform for community justice workers. [5/12/25] 
  • The Financial Times (paywall) reports on the anti-ABS legislation making its way through the California Legislature. [5/11/25]
  • Robert Rath, Chief Innovation Officer of the Indiana Office of Judicial Administration, details the regulatory innovation options under consideration in Indiana. [5/5/25]
  • A recording is available of the first webinar in a three-part series on UPL, hosted by IAALS, the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System, and Duke Center on Law & Tech. [5/5/25]

Courts, Rules & Access to Justice

  • A poll conducted by the North Carolina Chamber of Commerce found, among other things, that respondents overwhelmingly (91%) support reminders for court dates, The Carolina Journal reports. [5/13/25]
  • Mark Palmer of 2Civility explores Illinois’s legal desert crisis. [5/9/25]
  • A new eviction sealing law went into effect in Massachusetts, NBC Boston reports. [5/5/25]
  • Researchers from George Washington University, Yale, Princeton, and others released a comprehensive study of right to counsel laws, Law360 reports. [4/28/25]   

The Profession 

  • Reuters reports that the California Bar is considering whether to expand a COVID-era provisional licensure program to aspiring lawyers who withdrew from or failed the troubled February exam. [5/12/25]
  • An article in CNN explores the political viability of pro bono. [5/7/25]
  • The ABA Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar is recommending that the suspension of the diversity standard should be extended, ABA Journal reports. [5/5/25] 
  • May 5-9 was ABA Well-Being in Law week, and the Commission on Lawyer Assistance Programs offered various resources for legal professionals. 
  • The Texas Supreme Court is accepting comments through July 1 on whether to do away with the requirement that lawyers in the state graduate from an ABA accredited law school. 
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A2J Briefing: News from the Field

Technology 

  • The New York Times reports (among other outlets) on the State Bar of California’s use of AI to develop bar exam questions and other testing breakdowns in the most recent test administration. [4/30/25]
  • LawNext reports that D.C. adopted an ethical duty of technology competence for lawyers just days after the New Jersey Supreme Court declined to do so. [4/24/25] 

Regulatory Innovation 

  • Michael Houlberg of the Institute for the Advancement of the American Legal System writes in Law360 about Allied Legal Professional programs in the states. [4/23/25] 

Courts, Rules & Access to Justice 

  • The Massachusetts Trial Court launched a guided interview for Petitions to Seal Eviction Records, developed in partnership with Suffolk University Law School. [5/5/25]
  • Lester Bird, at The Pew Charitable Trusts, published a piece that includes several recommendations for policymakers interested in reforming debt collection lawsuits for people without lawyers. [5/1/25]
  • Margaret Hagan at the Stanford Legal Design Lab and co-authors released an article exploring avenues through which the federal government might work to improve renters’ stability. [4/24/25]
  • The Superior Court of San Bernardino County partnered with the county Public Defender’s Office to create the Mobile Defense Program–dispatching RVs to isolated areas to facilitate litigant appearance in remote hearings. [4/23/25] 

The Profession

  • Connecticut is exploring a plan to allow attorneys to earn CLE credits by providing pro bono legal services, Law360 reports. [5/5/25]
  • The ABA Journal reports on the drop in overall pass rates as reported by many states for the February exam. [5/1/25]
  • The April 2025 edition of the ABA Law Practice Division’s Law Practice Today is dedicated to attorney well-being. [4/25]  
  • In a move away from the billable hour, the Illinois Supreme Court adopted a rule (effective July 1, 2025) clarifying that fee petitions can be based on any fee agreement, with limited exceptions, that is reasonable under the circumstances. [4/1/25]
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