By Sheila Pursglove
Legal News
Jacob Stropes started his academic trajectory with a business degree from the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business, receiving an education from global leaders in everything from marketing to capital markets.
Now a 3L at Wayne Law, as a 2020 Wayne Law Levin Center Fellow, Stropes clerked remotely last summer, in D.C., on the Investigations team for Ranking Member (now Chairman) Gary Peters’ Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee (HSGAC).
“I worked with some of the most highly qualified and talented investigative attorneys in Zachary Schram and Soumya Dayananda, amongst others, and learned first-hand how an investigation that had implications ranging from the 2020 election to national security matters in Eastern Europe should be handled,” he says.
In Zoom calls with Sen. Peters and (former) Sen. Carl Levin, Stropes found both were very down to earth and supportive of the work being done for the Committee and in the furtherance of oversight in general.
“Oversight was something I really enjoyed because, in theory—and typically in practice—it’s supposed to be objective, fact-based, and collaborative across the aisle,” he says. “Former Senator Levin was very talented and influential in ensuring that oversight occurred in that way and Senator Peters has done a great job in helping to further that goal.”
Stropes’s longstanding interest has, and continues to be a position in corporate law, primarily M&A or PE work and he enjoyed working in a summer associate program at Honigman
“However, I’ve also developed an interest in antitrust law through my course work and in investigations—such as government, internal—through my work in the U.S. Senate,” he says.
“Luckily, Honigman’s summer associate program is going to allow me to explore many different practice areas. I’m hoping to also have an international component to my practice as the world continues to become more and more interconnected.”
Stropes developed tight-knit friendships with some fellow 1L students when classes were in person, and specifically, with his Wayne Jessup family during 2L year.
“Our Jessup Chancellor did a phenomenal job of encouraging us to socialize as much as possible in the virtual environment and that group of people has become exceptionally important to me,” he says.
“And all of the faculty at Wayne—but specifically, the international law faculty I’ve had the opportunity to work with through Jessup—are incredible and have made my time at Wayne very enjoyable.”
The new Chancellor of the Jessup International Law Moot Court Team, Stropes notes Jessup has been the most enjoyable experience of his law school journey.
“The team we had this year grew to be extremely close and the members will continue to be incredibly important to me, even after the competition with them has ended,” he says. “The problem—fact pattern—dropped in September and we worked non-stop until mid-April. It felt amazing to achieve the level of success we did nationally with the 2nd Place Memorial Award and our raw point total as well. We also had an incredible run in the Global Rounds where we finished in the Top 48 in the entire world, our respondent team finished number 15 overall, and we collected an assortment of individual oralist awards all around. We committed an entire school year of work and time to the competition so to see all that hard work pay off for my teammates and me was a wonderful feeling.”
As the newly selected Executive Articles Editor on the Wayne Law Review, Stropes enjoys being surrounded by other highly motivated students working to produce a tangible item.
“A lot of the work we do in law school culminates in a test you take and then it disappears,” he says. “The opportunity to help create something that will last and that you can physically hold in your hands is something I’m very much looking forward to.”
During his U-M undergrad years, Stropes worked for Professor Anne Choike supporting her project of creating a compilation of prominent corporate legal opinions rewritten from a feminist legal perspective, as well as commentaries on those rewritten opinions. He was involved in the setup of the project, helping to identify authors, editors, and advisors for the book. Now that Professor Choike is at Wayne, Stropes is continuing that same research with her.
“My role is primarily research and editing, and it’s been a great experience working on such an important issue that sparks conversations that, hopefully, will lead to meaningful change,” he says.
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