Nick Bravin
Personal information | |
---|---|
Birth name | Eric Oliver Bravin |
Born | New York, New York, United States |
May 28, 1971
Sport | |
Sport | Fencing |
Coached by | Zoran Tulum[1] |
Eric Oliver "Nick" Bravin (born May 28, 1971) is an American fencer and lawyer. He competed in the foil events at the 1992 and 1996 Summer Olympics.[2][3] He was featured in the cover story of the May 1996 issue of Vanity Fair magazine.[1]
Bravin continued on to a legal career, graduating from Columbia Law School in 1998. As of February 2013, he is an Acting Assistant Professor of Lawyering at New York University School of Law. He has practiced in every level of federal and state court, as well as in mediations, arbitrations, and internal investigations. His work has focused on criminal matters, including representation of the individual initially named as "a person of interest" in the anthrax mailings of 2001. Bravin is of counsel to the Ellsworth Law Firm where he works primarily on criminal and appellate cases. Bravin has also taught Separation of Powers Law at U.C. Berkeley's School of Law and Constitutional Law at the University of California's Washington Program. He writes on legal and non-legal issues, and his work has appeared in Foreign Policy magazine, Slate, and the Huffington Post.[4]
References
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- Use mdy dates from May 2015
- No local image but image on Wikidata
- 1971 births
- Living people
- American lawyers
- American male fencers
- Fencers at the 1992 Summer Olympics
- Fencers at the 1996 Summer Olympics
- Law clerks of the Supreme Court of the United States
- Olympic fencers of the United States
- Sportspeople from New York City
- Columbia Law School alumni
- American fencing biography stubs