Preet Bharara speaks at Seton Hall Law School commencement

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NEWARK, NJ — Seton Hall University School of Law held its annual commencement exercises on Friday, May 27, for the Class of 2016, awarding the juris doctor degree to 159 graduates, and the master of science in jurisprudence degree to 31. The event took place at the Prudential Center in Newark.

Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, was presented with an honorary degree and then delivered the commencement address to the Class of 2016, welcoming the graduates to the profession of law and exhorting them to use the law as an “instrument to break down barriers and build bridges.”

“Test the truth of your own beliefs,” Bharara said. “I think sometimes that people increasingly live in their own echo chambers, seldom taking the time to test and strengthen the rightness of their beliefs through the rigors of debate and open dialog. In this time of antagonism and polarized views, the court of law offers a worthwhile ideal. The search for truth and justice in the courtroom offers an inspiring model. The quest for the truth depends on evidence and facts. It relies on evidence and cross examination. It relies on the right of both sides to present arguments and it lets both sides do so without fear of being shouted down or shut down.”

Kathleen M. Boozang, dean and professor of law, also spoke to the graduates:

“You are leaving behind the metrics that have measured your success for the entirety of your academic career. You will never again be subject to a curve. There’s no more blind grading,” Boozang said. “Within a few years, even your resume is going to look different — the academic part of your resume — the grades, your rank in class, whether you were on a journal, will drop further and further down on the page. You are starting afresh, and what matters most going forward is who you are, and what you do.

“My final words to you as your dean are: Be engaged. You are either in the arena on the field, playing your heart out, or a spectator. Seton Hall lawyers are not spectators. Make sure you are always in the game.”