Past LBJ Fellows
Katherine Stefano (2007)
Devin Sullivan was an LBJ fellow in 2007 while an undergraduate at the Ross School of Business. Mr. Sullivan is currently attending Harvard Law School. This summer, Mr. Sullivan will be working at the Federal Trade Commission in the Bureau of Competition. Mr. Sullivan is an associate editor of the Harvard Journal on Legislation and the Harvard Environmental Law Review. During the fall of 2007, he worked with Harvard Law School for Barack Obama’s campaign and canvassed in New Hampshire. Mr. Sullivan is looking for a publisher for his first novel, Falling Out of Love, and has begun work on his second.
Christine Demana (2006)
Matthew Gillery (2006)
James Dickson worked as an LBJ during the summer of 2006 while an undergraduate at the University of Michigan. Mr. Dickson graduated from the University of Michigan in 2007. Mr. Dickson is currently a Collegiate Network Fellow at The American Spectator in Washington, D.C. Some of his syndicated pieces have appeared in The Washington Times, The Boston Globe, and The Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Daniel Adams was an LBJ fellow in 2005 while an undergraduate student at the University of Michigan. Mr. Adams is expecting to graduate from Emory Law School, where he is a managing editor of the Emory International Law Review, in May 2008. Mr. Adams also writes for the student newspaper, The Emory Wheel, as a weekly columnist. Mr. Adams spent his second summer of law school at the Detroit law firm of Honigman, Miller, Schwartz and Cohn and will, upon the completion of the bar, assume a full-time position there as an associate.
Candice Korkis was an LBJ fellow in the summer of 2005 while an undergraduate at the University of Michigan. Ms. Korkis went on to study at the University of Michigan Law School and she will be graduating in December 2008. While in law school, Ms. Korkis has spent her summers at Skadden, Arps (2007) and Sidley Austin (2008) in Chicago. Ms. Korkis has been involved with the Michigan Journal of Race and Law, the Women Law Students Association, the Business Law Association, and she has volunteered for the Law School’s Admissions Office.
Chris Ripple (2004)
Katherine Ladewski was an LBJ Fellow and legal assistant in the summer of 2003, while an undergraduate at Stanford University. Ms. Ladewski is currently a first year law student at the University of Michigan. Prior to attending law school, Ms. Ladewski graduated from Stanford University with a B.A. in economics and a minor in political science. Upon graduation, Ms. Ladewski accepted a Fulbright scholarship to study education policy in Chile. She returned to the United States in 2006 and began work as a research assistant in international economics at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. While back in Ann Arbor, Ms. Ladewski has volunteered with the Dispute Resolution Center, an Ann Arbor-based non-profit, and she currently volunteers with the Immigrant Outreach Initiative of Michigan Law's Food Stamp Advocacy Project.
Past Summer Associates
Isabelle Antongiorgi was an associate in 2006 during her summer months as a law student at the University of Michigan. Ms. Antongiorgi graduated from the University of Michigan law school in 2007. After her graduation she moved to Austin, Texas where she was hired as a contract attorney at a boutique commercial litigation firm called Taylor, Dunham & Burgess, L.L.P. Ms. Antongiorgi also works as a research fellow at the University of Texas for the Division of Diversity and Community Engagement.
Charlotte Gillingham worked with Nacht Law first as an LBJ fellow as an undergraduate, and later as a summer associate while attending University of Michigan Law School. Ms. Gillingham is now an associate at Crowell & Moring LLP in the firm’s Washington, DC office, where she practices in the Government Contracts group. Prior to joining Crowell & Moring in 2003, Ms. Gillingham served as a law clerk for the Honorable Jeffrey L. Amestoy, Chief Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court. Her recent work includes litigating federal and state civil false claims qui tam actions, bid protests, fraud investigations, and compliance counseling. Ms. Gillingham is committed to her pro bono work in child custody matters and asylum cases as well.
Molly Moeser worked with Nacht Law as a summer associate in 2005 while attending University of Michigan Law School. Moeser is now an associate at O'Melveny & Myers, LLP in the firm’s Los Angeles office, where she practices in the Adversarial group. Prior to attending the University of Michigan Law School, Ms. Moeser worked as staff member in Senator Carl Levin's Washington, D.C. office.
Ms. Millicent A. Hoffman was an associate in 2005 during one of her summers attending the University of Michigan law school. Ms. Hoffman graduated from the University of Michigan Law School in 2007, where she served as a student attorney with the clinical law program. She advanced to become a quarterfinalist in the school’s Henry M. Campbell Moot Court Competition. Ms. Hoffman received an A.B. from Bryn Mawr College in 2001. Ms. Hoffman is currently an associate in Jenner & Block’s Chicago office. She is a member of the Firm’s Litigation Department.
Mr. Ramji Kaul assisted the firm throughout 2003, putting most of his energy into a high profile voting rights case against the city of Hamtramck. Mr. Kaul is currently an associate for Sonnenschein Nath & Rosenthal LLP – Chicago, where he practices in the field of complex commercial litigation, concentrating in the defense of class actions and functioning as national coordinating counsel for clients on a variety of issues.











