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Emily Pataki: Her Law School Classmates Weigh In

Emily Pataki People for Pataki Above the Law.jpgAs we discussed yesterday, Emily Pataki -- daughter of lame duck New York governor George Pataki, a graduate of Columbia Law School, and now an associate a supervised legal intern at White & Case -- did not pass the New York bar. This fact became widely known after Emily sent around an office-wide email about the matter.

We're taking a reader poll to obtain your thoughts on whether or not this was a wise move. We'll close that poll soon; if you'd like to vote, click here. Several of you also discussed the issue in the comments (where opinions were all over the map).

Also, some of Emily Pataki's law school classmates responded to our request for firsthand information about her. We've collected these responses, which you can read after the jump.

One commenter wrote:

I knew her law school... Very sweet girl, really bright and worked pretty hard. I imagine her failing was just a fluke... Sometimes unfortunate things happen to the best of us. Though a mass e-mail to the whole firm may have been a bit much, I think she probably knew this would make the legal / political gossip rounds, so she might as well try to own it. Kudos to her for the attempt.

Another favorable comment, sent to us by email:

I knew Emily from law school where I was involved in a pro bono project with her. She's quite smart, very friendl,y and genuinely a pleasure to be around (especially compared to many other lawyers that I know). She probably failed the bar because, as you well know, the bar does not test legal acumen, intelligence or aptitude for anything other than memorization...

A fair point. We know a number of smart and successful lawyers who didn't pass the bar the first time around.

Here's a less favorable appraisal of Emily, also received by email:

Emily was in my class at Columbia but I never got to know her. Not surprisingly, she exuded an air of superiority.

This would've been much less of a story, I suspect, if she hadn't sent around that e-mail. And seriously, if you're sending around a hopefully-rehabilitative e-mail like that, why in the hell would you not check for elementary grammar? If people think you're dumb, the way to convince them otherwise is most definitely not to send around an e-mail with comma splices in it.

And good lord, the thing to do when you fail is NOT to tell everyone that you did your best. She should be cultivating an air of ambiguity around how hard she worked (which, incidentally, wasn't very hard from what I heard), giving people the impression (without saying it of course) that she slacked off. If she did her best, no one has any reason to believe she'll pass the next time.

Finally, an email with an interesting question:
Here's what I don't get: if she actually is 23 and graduated from Yale undergrad in 2001 (as her bio states), that would mean she graduated college at the age of 18. Something is up with that, and I'm surprised no one has noticed this yet!

Hmm... Has Emily's bio, on the People for Pataki webpage, not been updated to reflect her current age? Or did Emily skip a number of grades in school?

Update: DUH. Thanks for the comment; we didn't notice that. We're having one of those days. So if she was 23 in 2002, she must be around 26 now.

Emily Pataki bio [People for Pataki]

Earlier: Yes, We Have Heard About Emily Pataki
Political Kids and the Bar Exam: What Gives?


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Comments

it says "copyright 2002" on the bio page. of course they didn't update it.

there are some of us who are lawyers at 23!

Yeah, and there are some of us (me not included) who are lawyers at 53. A little shout out to the old folks sitting around me in my remedies class right now. Cheers to the high school grads of 1972, woop woop!

And most lawyers over 23 still have the EQ of a 23-year-old, so don't you fret, kid. And I think the point is that the numbers don't add up, not that a 23-year-old couldn't be a lawyer.

The "somewhat less favorable appraisal" sounds like a douchebag.

The person who sent it in admits to not knowing Ms. Pataki, but feels the need to send in an appraisal anyway. Lots of people I don't know "exude airs" from my perspective, but I suspect that this is often just confidence + the fact that I don't know them.

If the lawyers at White & Case think that not passing the bar = dumb, then they don't deserve any of the praise that Ms. Pataki had in her e-mail. Not passing the bar shows only that the person underestimated the amount/type of preparation necessary.

As someone who graduated from Yale in 2001, I can tell you that she wasn't abnormally young. I'd agree with Anonymous above--look at the (c) 2002...

Isn't underestimating the amount/type of preparation necessary kind of dumb? That said, it appears that she's handling it very well. Better than I would have at any rate.

My 1L section has an 18-year-old and a 19-year-old.

"My 1L section has an 18-year-old and a 19-year-old."

Poor kids.

She graduated from college in 2001 at the "normal" age of 21 or 22. This I know because I went to Duke with a good friend of hers, a one Elton Brand. They were the same age.

she should be 26 (ish). my friend went to middle/high school with her and is of about the same age.