Lawyers fresh out of law school can begin working for the DOJ so long as they are a U.S. citizen and have passed the bar exam
Staffing shortages at the Department of Justice, which have plagued the organization for the last year, have led officials to drop minimum experience requirements for job openings to attract talent fresh out of law school.
The DOJ told U.S. attorney offices earlier this month that a one-year experience requirement for new hires would be suspended “due to an exigent hiring need for attorneys across the Department”, according to a memo seen by Bloomberg Law.
In job postings for assistant U.S. attorneys in Alaska, Montana, New Hampshire and Oklahoma, applicants are only required to possess a law degree, have passed the state bar exam and be a U.S. citizen.



But DEI is bad, right?
No you see, DEI is when women and brown people.
It’s actually part of this: https://youtu.be/434iXhWZg0M
They have difficulties finding prosecutors to do illegal shit. Please use the link in the video to leave comment on the government site. The more comments are there the harder it will be for them. The window for comments is closing
really soonon April 6th.Can’t be disbarred if you’re not a member of the bar.
They still require it (so they can still hide behind some legitimacy) but now inexperienced lawyers fresh out of school can be easily pressured especially when they are told that they won’t get disbarred.