How Law Schools are Scamming Students and Taxpayers, with Help from Uncle Sam

By Published on October 26, 2015

In 2013, the median LSAT score of students admitted to Florida Coastal School of Law was in the bottom quarter of all test­takers nationwide. According to the test’s administrators, students with scores this low are unlikely to ever pass the bar exam. Despite this bleak outlook, Florida Coastal charges nearly $45,000 a year in tuition, which, with living expenses, can lead to crushing amounts of debt for its students. Ninety ­three percent of the school’s 2014 graduating class of 484 had debts and the average was almost $163,000 — a higher average than all but three law schools in the country. In short, most of Florida Coastal’s students are leaving law school with a degree they can’t use, bought with a debt they can’t repay. If this sounds like a scam, that’s because it is. Florida Coastal, in Jacksonville, is one of six for­profit law schools in the country that have been vacuuming up hordes of young people, charging them outrageously high tuition and, after many of the students fail to become lawyers, sticking taxpayers with the tab for their loan defaults.

Read the article “How Law Schools are Scamming Students and Taxpayers, with Help from Uncle Sam” on nytimes.com.

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