The voices of Lewis & Clark community members regularly appear in the national, regional, and local news media. Check out these noteworthy stories.

TIME

Matthew Bergman, an alumnus and Trustee of Lewis & Clark Law School, has become a go-to lawyer for families who say their children have been harmed by social media. As founder of founder of the Social Media Victims Law Center (SMVLC), his clients include the parents of kids who have died by suicide and drug overdoses, kids who have allegedly been groomed and sexually abused by predators they met online, and kids who have developed debilitating anorexia. Last week, the SMVLC filed seven cases against OpenAI.

2025/11/19

Seattle Times

In Washington’s Yakima River Basic, as in many watersheds across the west, people own the rights to more water than actually exists, leading to what Lewis & Clark Professor Karen Russell calls the ‘hydroillogical cycle.’ The resulting adjudication is a legal process prioritizing those with competing claims to water rights, to determine whose water will get cut – potentially leaving Tribes, communities, or fish and other species without sufficient water.

2025/11/16

The Oregonian

Can an NBA team fire a coach who’s been indicted on federal charges? As Lewis & Clark Professor Keith Cunningham-Parmeter notes, the Portland Trail Blazers don’t necessarily need to wait for a conviction or plea deal  to fire head coach Chauncey Ray Billups. ‘‘’Innocent until proven guilty’ is a criminal law standard and the prosecutors will have to satisfy that to convict him.” But the standard for what employers can judge workplace misconduct on is entirely different, with a lot of discretion in determining what is and isn’t just cause for a dismissal.

2025/11/12

InvestigateWest

The Oregon Health Authority has delayed an innovative program that would have provided health services to people being released from jail or prison – with potentially devastating consequences. “Almost every single person in Oregon’s prison system is going to get out at some point,” explains Lewis & Clark Professor Aliza Kaplan. “If they don’t have the services they need, the treatment they need, the housing they need, then they’re not going to be successful.” 

2025/07/23

Fresh Air/NPR

At age 60, Calvin Duncan earned his law degree from Lewis & Clark – after having spent decades in prison for a wrongful conviction. As Duncan explains, it was the effort to prove his innocence and assist his fellow prisoners that inspired his career as a lawyer.

2025/07/14

Columbia Journalism Review

Lewis & Clark is partnering with Oregon Public Broadcasting to create the Public Records and Government Transparency Project. L&C Law students will provide legal support for journalists and media organizations to access public records and to surmount obstacles to investigative reporting involving government agencies and elected officials.

2025/06/13

Jefferson Public Radio

A new law ensures that Oregonians on medicaid will have access to Art Therapy to support their mental health. L&C Professor Mary Andrus, who helped pass the law, explains why some people find Art Therapy more effective than other mental health treatments.

2025/06/10

National Jurist

It’s one thing to love animals and to advocate for animal rights.  But, as recent Lewis & Clark  student Cynthia von Schlichten explains, LLM training in animal law offers particular expertise, now accessible to students around the world.

2025/06/06