Kim Kardashian Receives Law Degree After Six Years in Program

NBC News
Kim Kardashian graduates law program after 6 years

Kim Kardashian celebrated the accomplishment alongside several of her children, sisters Khloe Kardashian and Kourtney Kardashian Barker, and various friends at the luncheon, complete with placemats of her flashcards.

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Winnipeg Free Press
Kim Kardashian dons a graduation cap and marches closer to becoming a lawyer

California allows people to study under a lawyer or judge as an alternative to law school.

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Winnipeg Free Press
The Sun
Kim Kardashian 'still has a long road' to become a lawyer after 'graduation'

She explained that the Keeping Up With the Kardashians star opting to take a nontraditional route in law school likely robbed her of some vital experiences that the majority of law students face to prepare them for the practice of law.

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Kim Kardashian graduates law school, following in footsteps of lawyer dad Robert Kardashian
Kim Kardashian graduates law school, following in footsteps of lawyer dad Robert Kardashian. Her late father was a defense attorney for the defensed in former NFL player O.J. Simpson's murder trial. The "All's Fair" actress took to her Instagram stories on May 21 to celebrate graduating.
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Kim Kardashian finally graduates law school after six year journey
The reality TV star, 44, celebrated the achievement with a backyard ceremony. In California, individuals can become lawyers by completing a four-year Law Office Study Program (LOSP), also known as 'reading the law' She still needs to pass the Bar Exam to practice law in the state.
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Kim Kardashian Celebrates Law School Graduation After Six Grueling Years
Kim Kardashian completed the California Law Office Study Program. The program allows students to train under a licensed lawyer instead of attending law school. Kardashian logged more than 5,100 hours of legal study while juggling four kids, multiple businesses and a hit Hulu series. The intimate ceremony was held in her backyard.
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Kim Kardashian Just Finished Her Law Program After Six Years, And Here's What Everyone Is Saying Online
Kim began studying to become a lawyer in 2019. She enrolled in a four-year apprenticeship program, but it took an additional two years to complete "due to COVID and work" Kim "finally" graduated from the program on Wednesday. She shared an Instagram video of herself in a graduation cap.
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Kim Kardashian Finally Graduated From Her Law Program
Kim Kardashian announced on Instagram that she had graduated law school. She began a four-year apprenticeship with a San Francisco law firm in 2018. The program was supposed to last four years, but it took Kim six due to work and other responsibilities. She can now take the bar in California and a few other states.
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Kim Kardashian Graduates from Law Program After 6 Years: 'Finally!'
Kim Kardashian graduated from her four-year Law Office Study Program on May 21. The ceremony comes three months after PEOPLE confirmed she took her Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam. The program took Kim six years, instead of four years, to complete due to COVID and work, PEOPLE has learned.
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Kim Kardashian Completes 4-Year Law School Apprenticeship
Kardashian, 44, passed the multistate professional responsibility exam. She will be allowed to practice law in California once she passes the bar exam. The Skims founder has been open about her goal to become a lawyer. She first revealed the news in an April 2019 interview with Vogue.
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Kim Kardashian celebrates as she finally graduates from law degree after 6 years
Kardashian is now eligible to take the bar exam for the first time in her life. She has been studying law since she was 18 years old. She will now have to wait until she is 25 to take her first test. The bar exam will take place in January 2015.
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Kim Kardashian Graduates From Law Program, Wears Cap in Backyard Ceremony
Kim Kardashian graduates from law school. She was the only student in her class. Her mentors praise her for fighting for clemency for incarcerated individuals. They call it "one of the most inspiring legal journeys we've ever seen" The ceremony was held in a backyard.
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Is Kim Kardashian a Lawyer Now? What We Know
Kim Kardashian celebrated "finally" finishing her Law Office Study Program. The 44-year-old began pursuing a nontraditional legal path in 2019. She has worked on criminal justice reform and clemency cases. Kardashian is a mother to four children and owns multiple businesses, including Skims.
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Kim Kardashian 'finally' completes legal studies | BANG Showbiz English
The 44-year-old reality star has been working on the four-year Law Office Study Program since 2019. It took six years due to her work and the COVID-19 pandemic. Kim wrote on her Instagram Story: "I finally graduated law school after six years!!!"
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'Fierce desire for justice': Kim Kardashian celebrates earning law degree after six years at surprise graduation ceremony
The Skims founder shared the news on her Instagram story on Wednesday. At a private ceremony with family and friends, she said: "All of you guys have been on this journey with me" Her mentor praised the influencer's drive and determination: “Six years ago, Kim Kardashian walked into this program with nothing but a fierce desire to fight for justice"
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Trump transcripts removed from White House website - Washington Examiner

6h ago — The change stands in contrast to the office of Vice President JD Vance, which is still sending out transcripts for now.

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Big Tech

Google faces new DOJ antitrust probe over partnership with AI startup: report

6h ago — Google reportedly faces a fresh Justice Department probe over whether it violated antitrust law through its partnership with artificial intelligence chatbot firm Character.AI.

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Med School Caught Rejecting White And Asian Applicants With Better Scores Than Minorities It Accepts

6h ago — Nearly two years after the Supreme Court overturned affirmative action, an Illinois medical school admits black and Hispanic students with lower average MCAT scores and GPAs than the average scores of white and Asian students it rejects, according to data shared with The Daily Wire.An analysis of the academic scores of students admitted into Southern Illinois School of Medicine from 2019-2024 reveals that blacks and Hispanics are admitted to the school with much lower scores than whites and Asians, figures obtained by Do No Harm show. These apparently different academic standards continue despite the Supreme Court’s June 2023 decision to strike down affirmative action, leading to concern that the university is watering down the importance of academics in admissions.This revelation comes as school leadership promises to “resist” and “fight back” against executive actions from the Trump administration cracking down on diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives. A spokeswoman for the school told The Daily Wire that it was “committed to following the law and complying with the decisions of the Supreme Court.”Comparing average GPAs and MCAT scores, Do No Harm found that whites and Asians generally need to score significantly higher than blacks and Hispanics to be admitted into the school. The MCAT is the standardized test that all prospective doctors must take to be admitted into medical school.“In 2024, the average MCAT score of accepted Asians and whites (combined) was more than 4 points higher than that of accepted blacks and Hispanics (combined) — equivalent to a gap of about 14 percentile points. On GPA, accepted Asians and whites on average had 0.36 higher scores than accepted Blacks and Hispanics,” Do No Harm wrote in a summary of its analysis of the data. According to data from 2024, the average GPA score of students accepted into the Southern Illinois School of Medicine, broken down by race, was: Hispanic (3.45), black (3.50), white (3.85), and Asian (3.89). For the MCAT (best score being 528), the average scores were as follows: Hispanic (503.5 – 58th percentile), black (505.7 – 65th percentile), white (509 – 75th percentile), and Asian (512.8 – 85th percentile).“When comparing to the average scores of all accepted applicants, whites/Asians scored slightly above average while blacks/Hispanics scored significantly below average,” Do No Harm noted in its report.The 2024 data also reveal that whites and Asians who were rejected had average higher MCAT scores and GPAs than blacks and Hispanics who were accepted. The average MCAT score for whites/Asians rejected was 505.7, compared to the 505.2 of blacks/Hispanics accepted. For GPA, the average for white/Asians rejected was 3.66 compared to the 3.50 of blacks/Hispanics accepted.The data also show that 21 Asians with perfect GPAs were rejected in 2024.“Of the 24 black or Hispanic applicants admitted in 2024, 17 had MCAT scores lower than the average white or Asian rejected applicant; 13 had GPAs lower than the average white or Asian rejected applicant,” Do No Harm noted. “In 2024, no Asian admitted student had an MCAT score below 503. Meanwhile, half of black admitted students (9 of 18) had an MCAT score below 503.”These trends hold for every year from 2020 to 2024, with average rejection scores for whites/Asians being higher than average accepted scores for blacks/Hispanics, as Do No Harm noted that 2024 was “not an outlier.”“Blacks and Hispanics were admitted with lower MCAT and GPA scores than whites and Asians in each of the past five years at the school,” Do No Harm reported. “A five-year average of SIUSOM’s accepted applicants shows that there was a difference of 0.34 GPA points between the two racial groups.”The same could be found when comparing MCAT scores.Credit: Do No Harm.Paulette Dove, the senior counsel for Health Affairs for the Southern Illinois University system, said earlier this year that the affirmative action decision had a big impact on the school. “And then I just wanted to share one of the cases that had the biggest impact on SIU since I’ve been here, from a legal perspective, is the Students for Fair Admissions case that came out in 2023 and that was about looking at race and diversity and other issues in admissions and how that went about,” she said in a video shared with The Daily Wire, turning a faculty discussion on Trump’s executive actions.“And I want you to know that those lawsuits were started in 2014 and we saw an outcome from the U.S. Supreme Court in 2023,” she added. “So, there is time to work through all of these issues that are coming up now, even though they feel urgent, and we will do our best to stay on top of those urgent things, but my best suggestion to you is to really stay the course for the time being.”Ian Kingsbury, the director of research for Do No Harm, told The Daily Wire that he is skeptical that the university has complied with the Supreme Court’s decision in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard, saying that the school would be “pretty hard pressed to convince” someone that the admission data doesn’t reveal racial discrimination. On its website, the school lists a number of factors it considers in admission. These include extracurricular activities, employment and volunteer experience, and area of residence, “with preference given to central and southern Illinois residents and those from rural, inner-city, or disadvantaged backgrounds.”Kingsbury said that the school would have had to significantly deemphasize academics to get to its current situation.“I understand that academic qualifications alone aren’t the only thing that should determine your admission to medical school. But in any sane and reasonable world, they should be extremely important,” he said. “Essentially, they would have to establish that the non-academic criteria that they are using, that it just so happens that their black and Hispanic applicants are that much better than their white and Asian applicants along those criteria.” Southern Illinois School of Medicine has received millions of federal dollars, including a $3.2 million grant in 2023, to improve its facilities. The school also currently has multiple grants from the National Institutes of Health, including hundreds of thousands of dollars to study drug addictions.In January, President Donald Trump issued an executive order that directed his administration to ensure that any educational facility receiving federal dollars was complying with the Students for Fair Admission decision. Earlier this month, the Department of Health and Human Services sent a letter to medical schools warning them of “unlawful” admission practices that look at race in admissions.“It appears that many medical schools may have yet to come into compliance with the Supreme Court’s decision in SFFA,” the department wrote. “Medical schools found to be out of compliance with federal civil rights law may, consistent with applicable law, be subject to investigation and measures to secure compliance which may, if unsuccessful, affect continued eligibility for federal funding.”Kingsbury said that there was a cultural problem across much of taxpayer-funded academia where they thought they were above oversight.“This is a cultural problem in higher ed broadly, where they don’t feel that they’re responsive or accountable to any democratic authority,” he said. “It really is a problem across the academy. They think they should be running themselves without any concern for what the president of the United States says or what the Supreme Court of the United States says.”

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FTC opens probe into Media Matters over Musk's X boycott claims: report

6h ago — "These threats won't work; we remain steadfast to our mission," Media Matters President Angelo Carusone said.

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Immigration Analyst Warns CCP May Be Exploiting Canadian Gateway for U.S. Border Breaches – [your]NEWS

10h ago — Expert says Chinese operatives could be using Vancouver’s diaspora networks and smuggling routes to enter the U.S. from the north.

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