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David
D. Walter
Associate Professor and Director, Legal Skills and Values
305-348-8339 (phone)
walterd@fiu.edu
Curriculum Vitae
B.A.,
Eastern Kentucky University
M.A.,
University of Iowa
J.D.,
University of Iowa College of Law
David Walter, an experienced and highly regarded law teacher, directs
the Legal Skills & Values Program and teaches LSV I, LSV II,
and LSV III, as well as Appellate Procedure I and II. Professor
Walter also directs and advises the FIU Board of Advocates, a student
moot court organization whose members compete in regional and national
appellate advocacy, trial advocacy, client counseling, and negotiations
competitions. In the Board’s first two years of competition,
teams coached by Professor Walter finished as finalists or semi-finalists
in five of six appellate advocacy competitions, including the 2004
and 2005 Wechsler National First Amendment Moot Court Competition
in Washington, D.C.; the 2004 and 2005 Florida Bar Association Orseck
Moot Court Competition; and the 2004 National Moot Court Competition
(Regional Round), sponsored by the Association of the Bar of New
York City. In addition, FIU teams also won the Best Brief Trophy
at the 2004 Orseck Competition and placed second on the briefs at
the 2004 Wechsler Competition and 2004 Nationals Competition (Regional)
and third on the brief at the 2005 Wechsler Competition, thus winning
recognition for top-ranked briefs in four of six appellate advocacy
competitions.
From 1990 to 2002, Professor Walter taught in the nationally recognized
legal writing and oral advocacy programs at Seattle University and
Mercer University. At Mercer, he also taught Alternative Dispute
Resolution and served as a moot court advisor and coach, leading
numerous moot court teams to national competition honors. Before
he began law teaching, Professor Walter practiced as a commercial
litigator at a Seattle law firm. Professor Walter graduated from
law school with honors, and he was a member of the Iowa Law Review.
He has published several articles and given many presentations on
legal writing and oral advocacy topics, and from 1998-2003, he also
served on the Board of Editors for the Journal of the Legal Writing
Institute. Professor Walter’s current scholarly interests
focus on appellate practice and procedure topics (such as the fundamental
or plain error rule and standard of review) and on persuasive writing
and oral advocacy topics (in particular, the use of empirical research
findings from the fields of psychology, communications, and argumentation
to craft persuasive legal arguments).
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