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Brandon Nemec Selected 2011 Recipient of Kissane Award
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Brandon Nemec, the 2011 recipient of the Kissane Award, lives by
the mantra, “If you want something done, take it to the busiest person you
know.”
While completing his JD at The John Marshall Law School in
Chicago, Nemec’s day, beyond class, consisted of clerking at the Cook County
State’s Attorney’s Office and bartending nights part-time, before going home to
study. As someone who was busy yet well-rounded during law school, Nemec hopes
one day to be the busiest person able to get things done for people.
Having worked on political campaigns and in law firms alike,
Nemec has devoted his career to public service, and for this ambition he was
presented with the Elmer C. Kissane Public Service Award.
The award is given by the Kissane family to a graduate of The
John Marshall Law School who had a distinguished law school career and has
committed to a career with the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office. Elmer C.
Kissane, graduated from John Marshall in 1950 and worked for the Cook County
State’s Attorney’s Office for 43 years, eventually serving as head of the
Appeals Division and then chief of the Criminal Division.
Paul Kissane, Elmer’s son, presented the award to Nemec at the
law school’s commencement ceremonies May 22. Nemec will receive the $5,000
award when he has completed a one-year term with the Cook County State’s
Attorney’s Office.
Nemec interned at Golian & McCaffrey in Columbus, Ohio; was
a legal intern in the office of Ohio Governor Ted Strickland; a law clerk for
James L. Schwartz & Associates in Chicago; and has volunteered on several
political campaigns.
Though Nemec is taking on every experience with law he can, he
hopes to one day, like Kissane, be a prosecutor for the state’s attorney’s
office.
“From the brief knowledge I have about [Kissane’s] life and
dedication to the practice of law, I believe it is the path I too want to
follow,” he said.
Nemec began at the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office in
summer 2009 as an extern in the Torts Division of the Civil Action Bureau, and
since then has been a law clerk in the Felony Trial Division. His first
assignment was at the Cook County Criminal Courthouse, preparing a third chair
and a special prosecutor for a trial against a serial rapist.
“After an arduous trial
filled with gruesome testimony and exhibits, I will never forget the
fulfillment I felt when the judge relayed the jury’s guilty verdict on all
counts, eventually resulting in a 100-year sentence for the defendant,” Nemec
said.
Nemec believes the goal for
every law student is to make an impact on others’ lives, and he realized
working in Cook County’s criminal courts would allow him to accomplish that
ambition.
“Whether you’re a public
official or working in the public sector you have opportunity to help people on
a much greater scale,” Nemec said.
While in law school Nemec was
a lead articles editor for The John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property
Law (RIPL), reviewing academic and student submissions. He authored “No More
Rockin’ in the Free World: Removing the Radio Broadcast Royalty Exemption,”
published by RIPL in 2010. Nemec was part of the Lincoln chapter executive
board of the Phi Delta Phi Law Fraternity International; served on the student
chapter executive board for the American Constitution Society; and was a
research assistant for John Marshall Visiting Professor Juli Campagna.
Nemec, son of Dorothea Howe and the late Bruce Nemec,
grew up in Columbus, Ohio, and attended St. Charles Catholic School. He
received a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Ohio University in 2008.

Brandon Nemec ( left) winner of
the Elmer C. Kissane Public Service Award, is congratulated by Paul Kissane
(center) and Dean John Corkery (right) at The John Marshall Law School commencement
May 22, 2011, in Chicago. The award, presented by Paul Kissane, is given by the
family of Elmer C. Kissane, a 1950 a graduate of John Marshall who had a
distinguished law school career as a Cook County prosecutor. The $5,000 award
is given to a student who has committed to a career with the Cook County
State’s Attorney’s Office.

Kathleen Hagerty, (left) recipient of the Lucy Sprague Public Service Scholarship, is congratulated by Alexander Sprague (center) and Dean John Corkery (right) at The John Marshall Law School commencement May 22, 2011, in Chicago. The award, presented by Alexander Sprague, is given by the family of Lucy Sprague, who was a second-year law student at John Marshall when she was murdered in her apartment in December 1996. The $25,000 award will assist Hagerty in paying off her law school loans.
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