Joomla gallery extension by joomlashine.com
When you commit to the CBTR Process you help ensure that your test taking skills - including a confident, positive attitude - meet the bar preparation and performance standards necessary to pass the bar on your next attempt. We will work together to meet that challenge.
Tuesday
May 24, 2005
Vol. 118 No. 100
By Liz Valsamis
Daily Journal Staff Writer
Since accessing his Bar Exam results Friday evening, 35-year old paralegal and ex-Marine Michael Ehline has been in a state of euphoria that has bordered on shock.
Ehline is one of 1,180 of the 4,520 State Bar applicants to pass the notoriously difficult three-day test given in February.
But the odds against him were stacked even higher because Ehline hasn't completed law school and never graduated from college.
"It shows that, with perseverance, even if you're not the smartest guy or have had other setbacks, you can pass this thing," he said.
Although he plans to complete law school in December, Ehline said passing the bar without a college degree was a personal goal that he wanted to complete to prove it wasn't impossible.
"Going to school at night, working sometimes 60 hours a week and studying for the Bar Exam is a major butt kicker," he said.
After graduating Anaheim Hill's Canyon High School in 1986, Ehline enlisted in the Marine Corps. His dream of a military career was cut short when he suffered a knee injury during a training exercise the following year.
He tried a variety of professions after leaving the military. He worked construction and ran a limousine business. He also took a job as a paralegal.
Ehline didn't set his sights on becoming a lawyer until 1999, when he took a job as an apprentice law clerk with Brentwood sole practitioner Jeff Dominic Price, who handles habeas corpus petitions.
Price said he was "not surprised" that Ehline passed the Bar Exam.
"I am anxious to see how he uses this opportunity in practicing as an attorney," he said.
Price was the person who told Ehline about a program that would put him on a fast track to becoming an attorney.
Under a State Bar program, people can study law as an apprentice to a lawyer or a judge.
To participate in the four-year program, a person must first pass the First Year Law Students Exam. Usually called the "baby bar," the exam has an 18 percent pass rate.
Ehline passed the baby bar in 2000.
During his four years in the program, Ehline worked as a paralegal for several lawyers, including his current job with a Santa Monica personal injury firm, the Law Offices of Otto L. Haselhoff.
"I wasn't surprised that he passed," Haselhoff said. "But it shocking to think that anyone could pass without finishing law school or even going to college, for that matter.
"He's an extremely bright, dedicated, hard-working guy. His thirst for knowledge is something I've never seen in anybody else."
After passing the baby bar, Ehline enrolled at the University of West Los Angeles, where he is a fourth-year student.
He credits his success to retired Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney Paul Pfau, who runs a program called Cal Bar Tutorial Review.
Pfau was like a Marine Corps drill sergeant, who would call him day and night to make sure he was studying, Ehline said.
"It's all about dedication and staying motivated and believing in yourself and surrounding yourself with people who believe in you, " Ehline said.
Last summer, Ehline worked as an intern for 2nd District Court of Appeals Justice J. Gary Hastings, who plans to swear him in to the bar on Thursday.
"He's a very tenacious individual." Hastings said. "He's really been working toward this for a good period of time, and I know he had the desire to get passed."
Even though he's passed the bar, Ehline plans to graduate from law school in December.
He plans to write a book about passing the bar without a completing college or law school and will open a law practice handling real estate and personal-injury matters, he said.
"Why climb Mt. Everest?" he said of his experience. "Because it's there and that's what I did."
To learn more about Los Angeles Trial Attorney, Michael P. Ehline click here.
Statewide Test Results
First Time Takers
about 57.2% Fail
Repeat Takers
about 77.1% Fail
All Takers
about 70.9% Fail
about 80.7% Fail
Still not sure you need help? View the full report.
Avoid a nightmare of bar exam failures. Call 1-800-783-6168 today!
First Year Law Students
California Bar Exam
Note : This is our
40th Anniversary Year
Also, there are accompanying discount opportunities because of this.
Cal Bar’s “Pay It Forward” discount policy enables you to discount the cost of your individualized program if you have charitable experience in your background.
If you have no charitable experience, you may still qualify for a $1,000 discount from your totally personalized program – which includes old-fashioned one-on-one, materials, classes. Just ask.
Earn credit towards a FREE Course when you refer qualified candidates that enroll in the California Bar Tutorial & Review program - A common sense approach for raising your law school grades & passing the Bar Exam with an All-In-One-Common-Sense-Cost.
As always, Cal Bar's policy is to "pay it forward". Learn How
More Success For Ali
Cal Bar is pleased to announce that Ali Hinsche continued her remarkable run of success in having just passed the Florida bar exam.
This was her 4th (count 'em: 1, 2, 3, 4) successful bar - on her 1st attempt-following California, New York and Illinois.
While Ali worked with Cal Bar for each state, she also owes her success to persistence, hard work, and in learning how to adapt and apply the Cal Bar test-taking systems to the requirements of each bar exam.
Having trouble locating something on our website? Take a look at our Site Map or use the link at the top of every page to Contact Us. We would be glad to assist you.
I am writing to thank you for all the help you gave me while I was preparing for this past February's bar examination. I know I couldn't have done it without you.
E. Ericson
Specializing in English as a Second Language (ESL) and applicants with learning needs requiring special bar exam accommodations.