GDROB2 answered Monday October 31 2005, 11:06 pm: You could be a journalist and a specialist for trials, inquests, crime. This will take you four years of college as well as hard work freelancing, and building a portfolio. The market for journalism is extremely bad right now. It likely will be after graduation too. Been there, done that.
Have you considered being a lwa clerk for a lawyer? You still need the degree but you would be running around doing research for cases. That is an important role to do with law. [ GDROB2's advice column | Ask GDROB2 A Question ]
Sherry answered Monday October 31 2005, 8:56 pm: Detective, Cop, Security, etc. Look under " major in Criminal Justice Administration" on google and you'll find tons of jobs listed. I love criminal justice and hope to be a detective when I'm older=) Good luck! [ Sherry's advice column | Ask Sherry A Question ]
karenR answered Monday October 31 2005, 8:54 pm: Journalist...specializing in government
politician....yuk
teacher....if law or government
probation officer
police officer
Legal secretary
court stenographer
Law clerk (usually take law students though I think)
Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content. Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.