
UNITED
STATES of America, Plaintiff,
v.
AMERICAN
BAR ASSOCIATION, Defendant.
Civil
Action No. 95-1211 (CRR).
United
States District Court,
District
of Columbia.
June 25,
1996.
ORDER
CHARLES
R. RICHEY, District Judge.
On June
20, 1996, the Court entered a Final Judgment in the above- captioned
case. The Final Judgment entered by the Court was the original version.
The parties subsequently modified the proposed Final Judgment to reflect
a number of changes in the defendant's accreditation process; these
changes were reflected in the parties' pleadings and constituted part of
the basis for the Court's determination that the relief to be afforded
under the new accreditation process brought the proposed Final Judgment
within the reaches of the public interest. While the modified proposed
Final Judgment was apparently filed in the Clerk's Office (the parties
have tendered a date- stamped copy thereof), it was not placed in the
file jacket. And no copy was provided to chambers. Thus, at the time it
entered the Final Judgment, the Court was unaware that a modified
version had been filed. At the Court's request, counsel for the
Department of Justice has since provided a copy of the modified proposed
Final Judgment to chambers. Accordingly, it is, by the Court, this 25th
day of June 1996
ORDERED
that the Final Judgment entered in this case on June 20, 1996 shall be,
and hereby is, VACATED; and it is
FURTHER
ORDERED that the Final Judgment attached hereto shall be, and hereby is,
entered in its stead.
FINAL
JUDGMENT
Plaintiff,
United States of America, filed its Complaint on June 27, 1995.
Plaintiff and defendant American Bar Association ("ABA"), by
their attorneys, have consented to the entry of this Final Judgment
without trial or adjudication of any issue of fact or law. This Final
Judgment shall not be evidence or admission by any party with respect to
any issue of fact or law. Therefore, before any testimony is taken, and
without trial or adjudication of any issue of fact or law, and upon
consent of the parties, it is hereby ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED:
I.
JURISDICTION
This
Court has jurisdiction of the subject matter of this action and of the
parties consenting to this Final Judgment. The Complaint states a claim
upon which relief may be granted against the ABA under Section 1 of the
Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1.
II.
DEFINITIONS
As used
in this Final Judgment:
(A)
"ABA" means the American Bar Association and all of its
components.
(B)
"Accreditation Committee" means the Accreditation Committee of
the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar of the ABA.
(C)
"Board" means the ABA Board of Governors.
(D)
"Council" means the Council of the Section of Legal Education
and Admissions to the Bar of the ABA.
(E)
"Faculty" means all persons who teach classes (except adjunct
professors), including administrators who teach, emeritus or senior
faculty, visiting professors, joint-appointed faculty, clinical
instructors, and instructors holding short-term appointments.
(F)
"Section" means the ABA's Section of Legal Education and
Admissions to the Bar.
(G)
"Standards," "Interpretations" and "Rules"
mean the Standards for Approval of Law Schools and Interpretations and
Rules of Procedure for Approval of Law Schools and Policies of the
Council of the Section and its Accreditation Committee.
III.
APPLICABILITY
This
Final Judgment shall apply to the ABA and its governors, officers,
employees, and full-time consultants involved in law school
accreditation.
IV.
PROHIBITED
CONDUCT
The ABA
is enjoined and restrained from:
(A)
adopting or enforcing any Standard, Interpretation or Rule, or taking
any action that has the purpose or effect of imposing requirements as to
the base salary, stipends, fringe benefits, or other compensation paid
law school deans, associate deans, assistant deans, faculty, library
directors, librarians, or other law school employees, or in any way
conditioning the accreditation of any law school on the compensation
paid law school deans, associate deans, assistant deans, faculty,
library directors, librarians, or other law school employees;
(B)
collecting from or disseminating to any law school data concerning
compensation paid or to be paid to deans, administrators, faculty,
librarians, or other employees;
(C) using
law school compensation data in connection with the accreditation or
review of any law school; and
(D)
adopting or enforcing any Standard, Interpretation or Rule, or taking
any action that has the purpose or effect of prohibiting a law school
from:
(1)
enrolling a member of the bar or graduate of a state-accredited law
school in an LL.M. program or other post-J.D. program;
(2)
offering transfer credits for any course successfully completed at a
state-accredited law school, except that the ABA may require that
two-thirds of the credits required for graduation must be successfully
completed at an ABA- approved law school; or (3) being an institution
organized as a for-profit entity.
V.
PERMITTED CONDUCT
Nothing
herein shall be construed to prohibit the ABA from: (1) adopting or
applying such other reasonable Standards, Interpretations or Rules,
consistent with all other provisions of this Final Judgment, as are
necessary to attract and retain a competent faculty; (2) investigating
or reporting on whether a law school is in compliance with such
Standards, Interpretations or Rules, or the cause of non-compliance; or
(3) requiring that a law school take remedial action to comply with such
Standards, Interpretations or Rules as a condition of obtaining or
maintaining ABA approval. Nor shall anything herein be construed to
prohibit the ABA, upon receipt of a complaint concerning discrimination,
from collecting and considering compensation information that is
relevant to the allegations of discrimination in order to determine
whether the school that is the subject of the complaint complies with
Standards 211-213 or Interpretations thereunder that prohibit
discrimination. Compensation information collected or considered in
connection with such an inquiry will not include information concerning
the levels of compensation paid by schools other than the school that is
the subject of the complaint.
VI.
ADDITIONAL RELIEF
The ABA
shall:
(A)
require that all Interpretations and Rules be subjected to the same
public comment and review process and approval procedures that apply to
proposed Standards;
(B)
permit appeals from Accreditation Committee Action Letters to the
Council;
(C)
revise the Council's membership as follows:
(1) for a
period of five years, all elections shall be reported to the Board;
(2)
members shall serve staggered three-year terms, with a two-term limit;
however, officers may serve as officers for an additional term beyond
the six- year limit; and
(3) no
more than 50% of the members shall be law school deans or faculty;
(D)
revise the Accreditation Committee's membership as follows:
(1) for a
period of five years, all appointments shall be reported to the Board;
(2) all
members shall serve staggered two-year terms, with a three-term limit;
and
(3) no
more than 50% of the members shall be law school deans or faculty;
(E)
revise the Standards Review Committee's membership as follows:
(1) for a
period of five years, all appointments shall be reported to the Board;
(2)
members shall serve one three-year term; and
(3) no
more than 50% of the members shall be law school deans or faculty;
(F)
require that no more than 40% of the members of the Nominating Committee
for officers of the Section shall be law school deans or faculty;
(G)
require that each site evaluation team include, to the extent reasonably
feasible, at least:
(1) one
university administrator who is not a law school dean or faculty member;
and
(2) one
practicing lawyer, judge or public member;
(H)
require the Accreditation Committee after each meeting to send a written
report to the Council, that may be done on a confidential basis if
necessary, identifying all actions taken by it, including a list
identifying all law schools on report or under review, and for each law
school, identifying the areas of actual or apparent non-compliance and
the length of time the law school has been on report or under review;
(I)
require the Council to send an annual report to the Board, that may be
done on a confidential basis if necessary, on its accreditation
activities during the preceding year, including a list identifying all
law schools on report or under review, and for each law school,
identifying the areas of actual or apparent non-compliance and the
length of time the law school has been on report or under review;
(J)
require Council approval and Board receipt of annual and site inspection
questionnaires before they are sent to law schools;
(K)
publish annually in The ABA Journal and the Section's Review of Legal
Education in the United States:
(1) all
proposed Standards, Interpretations, Rules, and Policies, and the name(s)
of the sponsors of each; and
(2) the
date, place, and names of the evaluators for each law school and foreign
program inspected; and
(L) hire,
by October 31, 1995, an outside independent consultant who is an expert
on education and accreditation and who is not a legal educator, to
assist in validating all Standards and Interpretations, as required by
the Department of Education, and develop a plan for validation by
December 31, 1995.
VII.
SPECIAL COMMISSION
The ABA
shall:
(A)
establish a Special Commission to Review the Substance and Process of
the ABA's Accreditation of American Law Schools to determine whether the
Standards, Interpretations, and Rules, and their enforcement governing
the following subjects should be revised:
(1)
faculty teaching-hours;
(2)
leaves of absence, compensated or otherwise, for faculty and other
staff;
(3) the
calculation of the faculty component of student-faculty ratios;
(4)
physical facilities;
(5) the
allocation of resources to a law school by the law school or its parent
university; and
(6) the
treatment of bar preparation courses;
(B)
require that the Special Commission complete its review no later than
February 29, 1996. The Special Commission shall file its report with the
Board. Upon completing its review, the Board shall file its report with
the Court and the United States setting out its analysis and any
proposed revisions; and
(C) allow
the United States 90 days in which to review the Special Commission's
report and determine whether to challenge any of the proposals. The
United States may challenge any such proposal and, if the ABA chooses to
defend it, the challenge will be decided by this Court applying a Rule
of Reason antitrust analysis.
VIII.
COMPLIANCE PROGRAM
The ABA
is ordered to maintain an antitrust compliance program which shall
include designating, within 30 days of the entry of this Final Judgment,
an Antitrust Compliance Officer with responsibility for accomplishing
the antitrust compliance program and with the purpose of achieving
compliance with this Final Judgment. The Antitrust Compliance Officer
shall, on a continuing basis, supervise the review of the current and
proposed activities of the ABA's law school accrediting activities to
ensure that they comply with this Final Judgment. The Antitrust
Compliance Officer shall be responsible for accomplishing the following
activities:
(A)
reviewing the ABA's Standards, Interpretations, Rules, and practices,
and identifying and recommending the elimination of any provisions or
activities that violate or are inconsistent with Sections IV or VI above
to the Board or to the ABA's House of Delegates within 90 days of entry
of this Final Judgment;
(B)
distributing a copy of this Final Judgment within 30 days of entry to:
(1)
all members of the Board and officers of the ABA, the Section and
the Law Student Division;
(2)
all members of the Council, Accreditation Committee and Standards
Review Committee;
(3)
all university presidents with ABA-approved law schools, the deans
of all ABA-approved law schools, the Chief Justices or Judges of the
highest Courts of the States and other admitting jurisdictions, and
to make a best effort to notify the deans of all state-accredited
law schools; and
(4)
all persons serving on site inspection teams during the term of this
Final Judgment;
(C)
causing this Final Judgment to be published in the next issue of The ABA
Journal and the Student Lawyer following the entry of the Final
Judgment;
(D)
providing the United States, during the term of the Final Judgment, a
copy of all proposed changes to the Standards, Interpretations and Rules
before they are acted on by the House of Delegates, and a copy of all
Standards, Interpretations and Rules adopted by the House;
(E)
briefing annually the Section's officers, all members of the Council,
Committee and Standards Review Committee, the Consultant and the
Consultant's staff, and all participants at site inspectors' workshops
on the meaning and requirements of this Final Judgment;
(F)
obtaining from all Section officers, all members of the Council,
Accreditation Committee and Standards Review Committee, and the
Consultant and the Consultant's staff an annual written certification
that they: (1) have read, understand, and agree to abide by the terms of
this Final Judgment; and (2) are not aware of any violation of this
Final Judgment that they have not reported to the Antitrust Compliance
Officer; and
(G)
obtaining from the Executive Director of the ABA, the Consultant and the
Consultant's staff, an annual written certification that they have been
advised and understand that their failure to comply with the Final
Judgment may result in conviction for contempt of court.
IX.
CERTIFICATION
(A)
Within 90 days after the entry of this Final Judgment, the ABA shall
certify to the United States whether it has designated an Antitrust
Compliance Officer and has distributed the Final Judgment in accordance
with Section VIII above.
(B) For
10 years after the entry of this Final Judgment, on or before its
anniversary date, the Antitrust Compliance Officer shall certify
annually to the Court and the United States whether the ABA has complied
with the provisions of Section VIII.
(C) At
any time, if the Antitrust Compliance Officer learns of any past,
current or anticipated violation of Sections IV or VI of this Final
Judgment, the ABA shall, within 45 days after such knowledge is
obtained, take action, or where appropriate initiate action, to
terminate or modify the activity so as to comply with this Final
Judgment.
X.
PLAINTIFF
ACCESS
(A) To
determine or secure compliance with this Final Judgment, duly authorized
representatives of the United States shall, upon written request of the
Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Antitrust Division, and on
reasonable notice to the ABA, be permitted:
(1)
access during the ABA's office hours to inspect and copy all records
and documents in its possession or control relating to any matters
contained in this Final Judgment; and
(2)
to interview the ABA's officers, employees, or agents, who may have
counsel present, regarding such matters. The interviews shall be
subject to the ABA's reasonable convenience and without restraint or
interference by the ABA.
(B) Upon
the written request of the Assistant Attorney General in charge of the
Antitrust Division, the ABA shall submit such written reports, under
oath if requested, relating to any of the matters contained in this
Final Judgment as may be requested.
(C) No
information or documents obtained by the means provided in this Section
X shall be divulged by the United States to any person other than a
duly-authorized representative of the executive branch of the United
States, except in the course of legal proceedings to which the United
States is a party, or for the purpose of securing compliance with this
Final Judgment, or as otherwise required by law.
XI.
FURTHER
ELEMENTS OF DECREE
(A) This
Final Judgment shall expire 10 years from the date of entry.
(B)
Jurisdiction is retained by this Court for the purpose of enabling
either of the parties to this Final Judgment to apply to this Court at
any time for further orders and directions as may be necessary or
appropriate to carry out or construe this Final Judgment, to modify or
terminate any of its provisions, to enforce compliance, and to punish
violations of its provisions.
(C) Entry of this Final
Judgment is in the public interest.
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