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Professor
MGhetti@sulc.edu
(225) 771-4900 ext. 210
Subjects taught: Criminal
Procedure; Evidence; Legal Ethics; Trial
Advocacy;
Domestic Violence
Professor Ghetti has focused her career in
academia in four main areas: Criminal
Practice, Legal Ethics, Domestic Violence
and freedom of religion issues. Her goals
are to spread information and affect change.
Towards those goals, in addition to teaching
and writing, she serves on numerous policy
making committees and task forces, is a
frequent speaker at local, national and
international conferences, is frequently
interviewed by the media, and has written
and testified on behalf of or against
numerous pieces of legislation.
In the areas of Criminal Practice &
Evidence, Professor Ghetti served on the
Louisiana Indigent Defense Assistance Board
for 6 years resigning to take her place on
the Louisiana Legislative Task Force to
Study Indigent Defense, on which she
currently serves. She has served on the
Youth Advocacy Task Force and chaired a
Juvenile Justice Symposium, both advocating
change in the state's juvenile delinquency
laws and procedures. She also serves on
numerous committees formed by the Governor's
office, Supreme Court, and various bar
associations and is a long-time member of
the Louisiana Law Institute Committees on
Criminal Law and Evidence having helped
draft parts of the Louisiana Code of
Evidence. Professor Ghetti has taught
constitutional criminal procedure to law
enforcement related agencies in Poland,
Turkey, and the former country of
Czechoslovakia. She has co-authored and
edits the Louisiana Benchbook on Capital
Trials, used by district court judges
throughout the state, as well as written
other articles on Fourth Amendment, habeas
corpus and evidence issues. She is currently
working on a series of articles on indigent
defense. Professor Ghetti is the current
co-advisor to the Moot Court Board and the
SULC Trial Lawyer Association.
In the area of Legal Ethics, Professor
Ghetti was recently named a fellow with the
National Institute For Teaching Ethics and
Professionalism and is a fellow of the
Louisiana Bar Foundation, having served as
its Scholar in Residence from 1997 to 1999.
She is an active member of the Association
of Professional Responsibility Lawyers and
is the former president of the Dean Henry
George McMahon American Inns of Court in
which she is currently a master chair.
Professor Ghetti is the Chair of the
Advisory Committee to the Louisiana Supreme
Court's Committee on Bar Admissions and
serves on the Testing Committee, which is
studying a rewrite of the state bar exam.
She also serves on the state bar's Committee
on Professionalism and Quality of Life and
chaired a subcommittee of the Supreme
Court's Conclave on Legal Education having
edited the published report of the Conclave.
She has just finished an article on the use
of runners and permanent disbarment which is
awaiting publication.
As a survivor of domestic violence,
Professor Ghetti is always available to
speak on both legal and personal issues
surrounding this serious societal issue. She
has spoken to judicial, legal and law
enforcement organizations as well as to
local civic and religious groups and has
appeared on television and radio. Her
experiences with domestic violence can be
read about in the book No Daddy, Don't
written by Irene Pence.
Professor Ghetti is an avid advocate for
freedom to practice one's religion. She is
an active ally of the Alliance Defense Fund
and a former board member of the Rutherford
Foundation. She helped write, produced and
appeared in a local cable special on the
Equal Access Act. She is also the co-advisor
to the Christians at Law organization at
SULC.
Professor Ghetti graduated second in her
class from Louisiana State University Law
School in 1983, although she matriculated
her senior year at Southern Methodist
University in Dallas, Texas, and has been
named to the LSU Law School Hall of Fame.
She practiced tax and bankruptcy litigation
with Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer and Feld in
Dallas for 4 ½ years before returning to
Louisiana to enter into a commercial
litigation practice. She joined the SULC
faculty in 1991. Professor Ghetti is an
active member of the Republican National
Lawyers Association and is the advisor to
College Republicans on the SUBR campus.
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