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We have a meeting tonight at 8:30 to discuss the future of Student Hurricane Network. Some of the current leaders will be graduating while others will try and assume the normal responsibilities of a typical law student in hopes of graduating on time.

To keep this thing going some of us will have to take the ball(s) and run with it, take the the bull by the horns if you will. There's a lot of potential for this thing to be the progressive movement of our generation if the energy is harnessed now.

An aside: I really hope all that data is going to be useful for Capital Defense Dundee. On average 50 students are inputting about 125 cases per day. That may not seem like much but making sense of the Louisiana criminal justice system is an exercise comparable to reasoning with an unmedicated schizo. Team Triage is doin' solid work and I'm proud to be a part of it. In my unbiased opinion Brooklyn students in particular are probably some of the most dedicated and fast-learning group of Triage members I know. There's another group of students coming in next week to pick up where we left off. We've engineered quite an efficient system they'll be able to use. Between these two weeks, at least a thousand prisoners will be inputted and I'm sure a good number of them will be eligible for release once their cases are analyzed. If only they could be guaranteed rehabilitative programs upon their release...


Forty-three Brooklyn Law School students will spend their spring break volunteering in and around the Gulf Coast as part of the Student Hurricane Network. These are their stories.

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