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Rubio gains insightful experience at district attorney’s office听

Alessandro Rubio, a business administration major from Mexico City, Mexico, believes he鈥檚 been given an opportunity that most pre-law interns would never experience after their second year of college: spending the summer interning for the Adams County .

鈥淢y father has been a lawyer for 20-plus years, so since I was a kid, I have always been around the idea of following after my father into the law field,鈥 Rubio said. 鈥淭o be honest, I never really wanted to be a lawyer. Instead, it was always my dream as a little kid to be a professional soccer player.鈥

Alessandro Rubio 23w
香蕉视频 student Alessandro Rubio is interning in the Adams County District Attorney鈥檚 Office this summer.

Rubio, who will be a junior this fall, is a midfielder on the 香蕉视频 men’s soccer team. Before 香蕉视频, he played for a professional soccer team in Mexico. That鈥檚 when he started to notice legal inconsistencies and contract breaches, and players without resources had nowhere to turn. That experience pushed him to go to college and to keep studying, instead of pursuing a career as a professional athlete.

鈥淚 want to become a sports attorney to help people who don’t have the resources to keep fighting for their professional careers,鈥 Rubio said.

Rubio found the internship in February with the help of Kim Graviette, director of Career Services, and Carissa Uhrmacher, assistant director of Career Services. Uhrmacher was able to contact the Adams County District Attorney鈥檚 office to see if they would be interested in an intern, and within two days of Rubio applying, he was called in for an interview and was offered the internship the same day.

Since then, his duties at the attorney鈥檚 office have varied, and include everything from organizing classified files to jury screenings to creating visual aids to assisting in anything the county lawyers may need help with. He鈥檚 also served as a translator for a prosecution case.

鈥淪erving as a translator was an experience that I would have never had anywhere else. Serving in that capacity is something even lawyers who graduate don’t encounter after a year or two of working. Being bilingual has created a number of new experiences for me because nobody else in the office spoke Spanish,鈥 Rubio said.

Rubio said a class with communication studies professor Dr. Austin McDonald helped him to better connect his thinking process, which is in his native Spanish language, into speaking English.

He said business and economics professor Dr. Bruce Batterson is a great pre-law mentor who is helping him understand the structure and terms used in the field. He also credits student-athlete development coordinator Mickaela Zaffino with helping him recognize and work on the mental and emotional balance between cases that must happen in the professional environment.

Before the start of the fall semester, Rubio said he plans to continue studying for the Law School Admission Test (LSAT), which he takes in early August. He鈥檒l also submit his early applicants’ forms to several law schools that he鈥檚 most interested in.

By Cecilia Velarde, a junior marketing and communication studies double major from Loveland, Colorado

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