The Surprising Impact of Pro Bono Opportunities
Nate Reid, a 3L at 麻豆色情片 Law, discovered the power of pro bono work through Alternative Spring Break, gaining a new perspective on wrongful convictions, access to justice, and the role lawyers can play in changing lives.

Nate Reid L鈥26 is not an emotional person.
And yet, Reid found himself deeply impacted by the real-life stories of the justice system and wrongfully-incarcerated people during a short-term volunteer project at the Innocence Project鈥檚 New York headquarters.
鈥淚 keep joking, I think in the past five years, I鈥檝e cried three times, and it was when my college soccer career ended, when the Eagles lost in the Super Bowl, and when the Phillies lost in the World Series,鈥 Reid says. 鈥淎nd I cried probably 15 times in that week there, which is really kind of something.鈥
Reid was participating in a weeklong assignment through 麻豆色情片 School of Law鈥檚 (ASB) program. ASB pairs law students with pro bono legal service projects across the United States, with subject matter including immigration, criminal law, environmental law, and more.
When Reid applied for ASB, the Innocence Project 鈥渃alled my name.鈥 ASB helped him complete the 50 pro bono hours 麻豆色情片 Law requires for graduation, but his interest went well beyond checking a box.
Eye-opening perspective
During the week with the Innocence Project, Reid鈥檚 main assignment was tracking down the case files and evidence records for a matter the organization was evaluating, that had been tried decades ago. After numerous phone calls, he located the documents through a court clerk in Louisiana. There was just one wrinkle: The bill for the court to copy and ship the documents was thousands of dollars. According to Reid, the organization chose to fly someone to Louisiana to copy the records instead. The experience drove home the difficulty people often encounter in accessing the judicial system.

But the biggest impact of the week was learning about wrongfully convicted individuals. For example, one of the people Reid met during the week pled guilty to a crime he didn鈥檛 commit on the advice of his public defender. He was eventually freed on the basis of DNA evidence that had been lost and was later relocated.
鈥淭hey showed us videos of people walking out of prison and hugging their family, and that brought tears to my eyes,鈥 Reid says.
Reid also was struck by the scope of the challenges to wrongfully incarcerated people. 鈥淭he Innocence Project receives thousands of requests every single year for representation, 鈥 and even if 10% of these are true, 鈥 there鈥檚 potentially tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, of people wrongfully locked up in our prisons, which is really sad, and shows the need that we have for attorneys to give people a chance.鈥
Exploring new experiences
Reid is interested in a career in civil litigation after law school. He also would like to continue doing pro bono work. This summer, he will be working at Motley Rice on mass tort litigation.
Reid encourages students with similar career interests to make the most of public interest opportunities like ASB even if they don鈥檛 plan to practice public interest law.
鈥淒on鈥檛 close off one road before you really have a chance to experience everything. That鈥檚 one thing I鈥檓 really focusing on at law school, is trying to get a feel for everything, every kind of law, corporate, criminal, injury,鈥 Reid says. 鈥淢y biggest piece of advice would be to give everything a chance. [Before] coming to law school, I would have told you I would never a day in my life work public sector, and that鈥檚 something that is not at all the case for me anymore.鈥
2026 Graduate Blog