Terry Bullock is the recently retired judge of the Third Judicial District of Kansas, Shawnee County. He became a judge in 1976 and often serves as an appellate judge for the Kansas Court of Appeals and the Kansas Supreme Court. He currently does medications and arbitrations for the bench and bar, and he is an adjunct professor at Washburn Law School and a distinguished visiting professor of law at the University of Kansas. He holds a J.D. degree from the University of Kansas.
Beth Cateforis graduated from the University of Kansas School of Law in 1994. She worked at the Appellate Defender Office from 1994 to 1999. She has been a supervising attorney in the Paul E. Wilson Defender Project since 1999.
Laura Clark Fey, with Shook, Hardy & Bacon LL.P., is a trial attorney with 15 years of experience, who has successfully defended a variety of complex matters, including attorney general actions, multi-district litigation, class actions, and consolidated and individual cases in state and federal courts throughout the country. She is a former Honor’s Program attorney with the Department of Justice. She has extensive experience representing clients in food, pet food, alcohol, and tobacco litigation.
Robert L. Glicksman is the Robert W. Wagstaff Professor of Law at the University of Kansas. He writes and teaches primarily about environmental and administrative law. He is a co-author ofEnvironmental Protection: Law and Policy (Aspen Pub. 5th ed. 2007);Public Natural Resources Law (Thomson/West 2d ed. 2007);Modern Public Land Law (Thomson/West 3rd ed. 2006); andRisk Regulation at Risk: Restoring a Pragmatic Approach (Stanford Univ. Press 2003). Professor Glicksman’s recent scholarship focuses on climate change issues, including the link between climate change and hurricane intensity, the impact of climate change on public lands, federal preemption of state climate change regulation, and the KDHE’s decision to deny air permits for coal-fired utilities based on their impact on climate change.
Michael Hoeflich is the Kane Professor of Law at the University of Kansas School of Law and a former dean at the University of Kansas and at Syracuse University College of Law. He holds degrees from Haverford College, Cambridge University, and Yale Law School. An internationally recognized authority on legal history, Roman law, and the history of the legal profession, he is author or editor of seven books and more than 70 articles. He is a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, a member of the American Antiquarian Society, and the Kansas correspondent of the Selden Society. He was awarded an honorary degree (LL.D.) by Baker University in 2003. He teaches professional responsibility, copyright, art law, and legal history.
Deborah H. Juhnke is director of Electronic Discovery Services at Husch Blackwell Sanders LL.P. She assists clients in developing e-discovery plans, litigation readiness planning, and data and practice mapping. Prior to joining the firm, Ms. Juhnke was vice president of Computer Forensics, Inc. in Seattle, Washington, as a senior consultant and examiner on computer forensics, e-discovery, and litigation readiness projects. A frequent speaker and author on computer-based discovery and related litigation topics, Ms. Juhnke is a member of ARMA and HTCIA (the High-Tech Crime Investigative Association).
Richard E. Levy is the J. B. Smith Distinguished Professor of Constitutional Law at the University of Kansas. He joined the law faculty in 1985, having received his law degree from the University of Chicago Law School and having served as a clerk for Judge Richard Posner, U.S. Court of Appeals, 7th Circuit. In teaching and research, he has focused on constitutional law, administrative law, and legislation. For the past two years, he has been a member of the Kansas Judicial Council’s Administrative Procedure Advisory Committee, which has considered these issues. He presented testimony before the Interim Judiciary Committee on these issues and helped to prepare a supplemental report to the interim committee, as well as assisting in the preparation of testimony on HB 2618 during the legislative session.
Keith G. Meyer is the E. S. and Tom W. Hampton Professor of Law at the University of Kansas, where he has been teaching since 1969. He presently teaches agricultural law and secured transactions. He received his J.D. from the University of Iowa and was a law clerk for Carl McGowan, U.S. Ct. Appeals for the District of Columbia. He has written numerous articles and made frequent presentations all over the country on the subjects of agricultural credit and the Uniform Commercial Code.
John C. Peck has taught in the University of Kansas School of Law since 1978. He has a degree in civil engineering from Kansas State University and a J.D. from the University of Kansas School of Law. In four years of practice with Everett, Seaton & Peck in Manhattan, he did real estate and contract work. He teaches contracts, land transactions, water law, and family law, and he serves as of counsel for the law firm of Foulston Siefkin LL.P.
Bill Sampson, with Shook, Hardy & Bacon LL.P., has tried more than 80 jury cases in federal, state, and military courts and tribunals and has been active nationally and internationally in the defense of civil litigation. He has taught more than 100 programs on trial practice, litigation strategy, and legal writing. The former national President of the DRL, he is listed inThe Best Lawyers in America; Chambers America’s Leading Lawyers for Business; Expert Guides: Guide to the World’s Leading Product Liability Lawyers; Who’s Who Legal—The International Who’s Who of Business Lawyers; andBenchmark: America’s Leading Litigation Firms and Attorneys. He is recognized as a "super lawyer" in both Kansas and Missouri for business litigation.
Betsy Brand Six graduated in 1992 from Stanford Law School, where she was a member of the Stanford Law Review. She joined the Kansas City law firm of Spencer Fane Britt & Browne after graduation and has worked with lawyers at that firm to improve their legal writing skills. Six joined the faculty of the University of Kansas School of Law in January 2004, where she is an instructor in the Lawyering Program.
Peter Sloan is a partner in the law firm Husch Blackwell Sanders LL.P. He received his J.D. in 1985 from the University of Kansas School of Law, Order of the Coif, where he was a member of the Kansas Law Review. He focuses his client practice on a single issue—how companies can best manage their records and electronic data. He is a frequent speaker on records retention, preservation, and e-discovery topics. He is a member of ARMA International, AIIM, and the Sedona Conference Working Group on Electronic Document Retention.
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