A graduate of a law school approved by the American Bar Association who (i) has not yet had an opportunity to take the first Illinois bar examination administered by the Illinois Board of Admissions to the Bar (IBAB) following the student's graduation from law school or the Multistate Professional Responsibility Examination (MPRE), (ii) has taken the examinations but not yet received notification of the results of either examination, or (iii) has taken and passed both examinations but has not yet been sworn as a member of the Illinois bar may, if the dean of that law school has no objection, be eligible to receive a temporary law license to perform the services described in paragraph (c) of this rule.
For purposes of this rule, a law school graduate is defined as any individual not yet licensed to practice law in any jurisdiction.
Ill. Sup. Ct. R. 711
Committee Comments
(June 18, 2013)
This rule was amended effective July 1, 2013, to clarify that students and law graduates may perform nonlitigation legal services under this rule. Nothing in this rule should be construed to require law students or law graduates to be certified under this rule for work, including but not limited to transactional, pretrial, and policy work, that properly may be performed by a law student or other nonlawyer under Rule 5.3 of the Illinois Rules of Professional Conduct. Committee
Comments
(July 1, 1985)
This rule was amended, effective August 1, 1985, to allow the Administrative Director of the Illinois Courts to allow certain graduates of approved law schools to perform services under this rule pending their first opportunity to sit for the bar examination and to allow the Administrative Director, upon good cause shown, to extend the termination date of a certificate beyond the period prescribed by the rule. "Good cause shown" would ordinarily be limited to evidence that the licensee was unable to sit for the first bar examination offered following his graduation because of illness, a death in his family, military obligation, etc.
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