In 2014, an investigative article titled ‘The Law School Scam’ was published in ‘The Atlantic’. The story brought under the radar Florida Coastal located in Jacksonville, Florida in the United States while talking about the disturbing trends in the for-profit world of legal education. Citing the example of the said college, the article mentioned that law schools admit underqualified students who then take millions of dollars in loans annually to fund their course. Since many students will never be able to repay much of the loans due to a dismal job market, it’s the taxpayers that will be stuck with the tab as law schools themselves continue to reap enormous profits.
Replace Florida Coastal with Foggy Bottom and you have the premise for Grisham’s ‘The Rooster Bar’. In the novel, Mark Frazier, Todd Lucero and Zola Maal are third-year law students in D.C., enrolled in a bottom-of-the-line, for-profit legal institution, who realize they have been duped. Their school is one of a chain owned by a shady New York hedge-fund operator who also owns a bank that provides student loans.
Each of the three students is drowning in debt as they had all borrowed heavily to attend a law school where graduates rarely pass the bar exam. To slip out of the grasp of the law school scam, and escape their debt while exposing the school and bank and making some money in the process, they skip their last semester at Foggy Bottom and, with new identities, pose as lawyers and get to work.
Grisham’s tale is thoroughly engaging and does its bit to expose the workings of for-profit law schools, banks that exploit students, and even addresses unfair US immigration policies. You don’t have to be a fan of John Grisham or have read any of his other works to enjoy The Rooster Bar.