|
鈥淚t鈥檚 an honor that鈥檚 well deserved. Nick Dhimitri has the skills right now of a gifted trial attorney. He is particularly good at conducting both direct and cross examinations of witnesses. This is the most difficult challenge for mock trial attorneys because it requires careful preparation beforehand and flexibility as the trial proceeds.鈥
That was the glowing assessment earned by Mr. Dhimitri, a junior political science major from Ithaca, from Dr. James Hurtgen, advisor to SUNY Fredonia鈥檚 mock trial team, following their participation in the Finger Lakes Region Qualifying Tournament at Syracuse University on Feb. 16 and 17.
Mr. Dhimitri, captain of SUNY Fredonia鈥檚 nine-member team, shared with two other students the highest ranking given by judges at this year鈥檚 competition, scoring 19 points out of a possible 20.
The event, routinely dominated by Ivy League schools, is sponsored each year by the Mock Trial Association to provide students with opportunities to argue civil or criminal cases before judges. As attorneys, students participate in all phase of a trial, presenting opening and closing statements and conducting cross examinations, among other duties. They serve on both sides, prosecution and defense, and also testify as witnesses.
鈥淎pproximately 80 students competed as attorneys, so his accomplishment is quite impressive 鈥 and fully deserved,鈥 said Dr. James Hurtgen. 鈥淐onsidering the schools that sent teams to the tournament 鈥 Yale, Dartmouth, Cornell, Rochester, Syracuse, Amherst College, Colgate, Binghamton, among others -- this level of achievement is remarkable.鈥
Dr. Hurtgen, SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor and a faculty member here since 1971, said Mr. Dhimitri conducted himself with a high degree of confidence during proceedings. 鈥淗e really commands a courtroom, has an excellent command of the floor.鈥 That score, Dr. Hurtgen noted, would position the SUNY Fredonia junior as an accomplished mock trial attorney in a pool of law school students.
This was Mr. Dhimitri鈥檚 second year at the regional event; he tied for second place a year ago. That prior experience served him well. 鈥淚t allowed me to prepare differently. I knew about the different types of students who would be competing,鈥 he said.
Dr. Hurtgen, who founded SUNY Fredonia鈥檚 mock team in 1999 and has been its only advisor, ranks Mr. Dhimitri 鈥渢he best鈥 among many students who have competed in past years. 鈥淎nd we鈥檝e had some good attorneys.鈥
SUNY Fredonia had the misfortune to square off against eventual tournament champion Cornell. In subsequent rounds, the team earned split decisions against Dartmouth and SUNY Binghamton, and was narrowly defeated by Hamilton.
鈥淭hey were much more prepared than us and had competed in several 鈥榳arm-up鈥 tournaments beforehand,鈥 Dr. Hurtgen noted of the worthy Cornell contingent. 鈥淲e did well in our first trial, but were outmatched.鈥 The second match was close, and Dr. Hurtgen believed his team did well enough to win outright. Losses to Binghamton, Hamilton and Dartmouth were by fewer than 4 points.
Each school participated in four trials, with two judges assigned to each case, so different scores are earned in the same trial. Against Hamilton, one judge thought a SUNY Fredonia鈥檚 cross examination was far too aggressive, which cost them points, but other found it entirely appropriate.
鈥淲ith a bit more effort, a bit more attention to the small things, I think we could have reversed those scores,鈥 Dr. Hurtgen said. 鈥淲e will work on this next year.鈥 He said the students were pleased in general with their performance, but were nonetheless disappointed that they came so close in some of their cases.
鈥淚 think it will give them encouragement to press harder next year. It鈥檚 a very competitive environment.鈥
Along with Mr. Dhimitri, SUNY Fredonia鈥檚 team is comprised of Douglas Jordan, Jessica Weinberger, Megan Mitchell, Belinda Taylor, Keli Cochran, Ashley James, Ben Sachs and Andrea Barriffe.
To prepare for the competition, the team meets every week during the fall semester, and then twice a week in the spring term. Students also work independently to prepare arguments, read evidence and formulate strategies. Mock trials are also staged with teams from schools in the region.
Mr. Dhimitri believes SUNY Fredonia can perform exceptionally well in future competitions. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited because this year鈥檚 team was pretty young, with lots of freshmen and sophomores 鈥 When you have a lot of team members returning next year it gives you an even better place to start,鈥 he said.
鈥淚 anticipate Fredonia being able to compete with all the Ivy League schools in our region and the upper echelon schools. We鈥檙e every bit as talented as they are. I fully anticipate that we will be very successful next year,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 wait to return.鈥
Mr. Dhimitri praised Dr. Hurtgen and his guiding role with the team. 鈥淗e鈥檚 great. He has the right level of involvement. He comes to all our meetings, lets students direct how they want to approach the case. He鈥檚 excellent at giving advice and helping students prepare for the procedural aspects of a mock trial, the rules of evidence, those kinds of things, and in formulating arguments and building the case. He gives students a lot of latitude to take the case in the direction they feel is best.鈥