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regmorgueregmorgue Core Member
edited November 26 in Law School Admissions 5 karma

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Comments

  • attorneyteeattorneytee Live Member
    edited November 26 23 karma

    I mean if you got off with just a warning in this hypothetical case then it is debatable if you must mention it. I am not a lawyer nor some admissions expert. But it's good to get a background check to see if it's even on your record? Unless you got a felony or something on your record, you should be fine. You said you were let go with a warning. That means you were not tried as a juvenile or an adult, thus it is not on your record and you will not be needing one. Social media issue is minor. Unless you have posted something heavily opinionated or immature, it should not matter. Think over anything that makes you appear immature, arrogant, ignorant, or not honest. Additionally, it is always good to look over if this incident ever caused any ups and downs in your life. Did you ever had to disclose this incident to a doctor, counsellor, a referee, boss, supervisor? Let say you did that and you have listed that person as your referee. Assuming the worst case scenario that admissions will call, are you prepare to elaborate on this? I hope this information was helpful. Let me know if it was and do not hesitate to reach out again.

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