U-M Law team wins UCLA LGBT moot court competition

By Jenny Whalen
U-M Law

The University of Michigan Law School team of Daniel Halainen and Wyatt Fore has won this year's UCLA School of Law Williams Institute Moot Court competition, the only national competition dedicated exclusively to the areas of sexual orientation and gender identity law.

Arguing a fictional case centered on allegations of sexual orientation and religious discrimination, Halainen and Fore faced Northwestern Law in the moot court's final round on April 17.

"Daniel and I are very excited to be the winners of the 2015 UCLA Williams Institute Moot Court," Fore said. "It is the nation's pre-eminent competition dedicated to cutting-edge legal issues on sexual orientation and gender identity and participating in it was one of the most exciting projects I've done in law school. It was truly humbling to meet so many leaders in the LGBT legal movement."

Fore, who has also contributed as a student to DeBoer v. Snyder-Michigan's marriage equality case at the U.S. Supreme Court-said he hopes to continue his pro bono work on LGBT issues when he joins O'Melveny & Myers in Washington, D.C., upon graduation.

Halainen, who will start a clerkship after graduation, described the victory as "a little surreal." Like Fore, he too hopes to continue pro bono work on LGBT issues in the future.

"This year the moot court focused on the scope of federal antidiscrimination laws, looking at whether Title VII protects workers from discrimination based on sexual orientation," he said. "We argued on behalf of the plaintiff, a nurse who was arguably terminated because of her sex, religion, and sexual orientation. So we had to navigate between pushing the court to adopt an expansive view of Title VII that captured sexual-orientation discrimination and obtaining a favorable outcome for our client under a more traditional theory of discrimination."

The fictional case was decided by U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Henry Franklin Floyd, Fourth Circuit; U.S. District Court Judge Shira A. Scheindlin, Southern District of New York; and U.S. Court of Appeals Judge Kim McLane Wardlaw, Ninth Circuit.

Published: Tue, May 19, 2015