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Live Webcast

Top Tips for Writing Effective Briefs


Total Credits: 1 CLE

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Categories:
Appellate Practice & Advocacy |  Litigation
Faculty:
David B Gass |  Ann B Ching

Dates


Description

Professor Ann Ching and Judge David Gass, co-authors of Contemporary Appellate Advocacy (Carolina Academic Press, 2025), will share their top tips for writing briefs for both trial and appellate practice. With decades of combined wisdom in lawyering, judging, and teaching legal writing, Professor Ching and Judge Gass will help you avoid potential pitfalls while writing the type of brief judges enjoy reading. This program will provide advice on a variety of topics, including:

  • writing concisely without losing meaning,
  • formatting briefs for today’s technology,
  • avoiding ethical traps when using generative AI, and
  • practical tips legal writers can start using right away.

Note: Lunch will be provided for in-person attendees.

Presenters:
Honorable David Gass, Arizona Court of Appeals, Div. One
Ann B. Ching, Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Arizona State University

Faculty

David B Gass Related Seminars and Products

Judge


CHIEF JUDGE DAVID BRUCE GASS grew up in central Pennsylvania but spent a year taking classes in Chihuahua,
Mexico. He served as a law clerk to the Honorable Ruth V. McGregor before joining the Phoenix law
firm of Lewis and Roca, LLP. He spent seven sessions working as Counsel at the Arizona House of
Representatives, before going to the Arizona Attorney General’s Office.
In 2009, Judge Gass was appointed to the Superior Court in Maricopa County. He served on all four
major assignments. He sat on the Arizona Bar Association’s Civil Jury Instruction Committee and
served as President of the Arizona Judges’ Association. He and Judge Pamela Svoboda established the
STRENGTH Court in Maricopa County. STRENGTH Court works with victims of sex trafficking who
are in the juvenile justice system.
In 2019, Judge Gass was appointed to the Arizona Court of Appeals, Division One. He began serving as
the Vice Chief Judge in June 2021. He is a member of the Arizona Supreme Court Commission on
Diversity, Equality, and Justice. He chaired the 2022 Child Support Guidelines Review Subcommittee.
Judge Gass was awarded the 2005 Arizona State University College of Law Alumni Association
recognition for outstanding service, the 2014 Michael D. Ryan Award for Judicial Excellence from the
State Bar of Arizona Public Lawyers Section, the 2018 Pete Dunn Above and Beyond Award as
outstanding ambassador of the Judges in Arizona, and the 2018 Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law
Judicial Officer of the Year. The State Bar of Arizona awarded him its 2020 Diversity and Inclusion
Leadership Award. In 2021, the Arizona Supreme Court’s Committee on Judicial Education and 6
Training awarded him the Excellence in Education Award.
Judge Gass is on the Arizona Town Hall Training Committee and has worked with Arizona Anytown
Youth Leadership.
Judge Gass is a member of the LGBTQ+ community. He focuses and speaks on diversity and inclusion
issues. He has been active in many related projects. Several are listed here. He developed a training
module to unpack and demystify the judicial application process to encourage diversity in Arizona’s
courts. He also developed an undergraduate internship program at the Arizona Court of Appeals,
Division One to give diverse undergraduate students experience working in the courts and to encourage
them to go to law school.
Most notable, Judge Gass felt strongly that Arizona should officially recognize the Fred Korematsu Day
of Civil Liberties and the Constitution so that we never forget the wrongs done to persons of Japanese
descent and their families. He spent five years making it a reality so we always remember our
constitution and our civil liberties are fragile and require our constant attention.
And he saves stray dogs on the side.


Ann B Ching Related Seminars and Products

Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law, Arizona State University


Ann B. Ching is a Clinical Professor of Law at Arizona State University’s Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law. Prior to this appointment, she served as Ethics Counsel for the State Bar of Arizona (2016-2019) and Assistant Professor of Law at Pepperdine University (2013-2015).
Professor Ching began her legal career in the U.S. Army Judge Advocate General’s Corps (2001-2012), where she achieved the rank of Major and was awarded the Bronze Star Medal for her combat service in Iraq.
Professor Ching serves on the Arizona Supreme Court Ethics Advisory Committee and the State Bar of Arizona Ethics Advisory Group. She frequently speaks and writes about ethics, legal writing, and appellate practice. Her book Contemporary Appellate Advocacy (Carolina Academic Press) was published in 2025.
As a Brazilian Jiu Jitsu coach, Professor Ching regularly teaches self-defense seminars to legal professionals and law students.
Professor Ching earned her B.A. from the University of Arizona, J.D. from the University of North Carolina, LL.M. from the Judge Advocate General’s School of the Army, and M.B.A. from Pepperdine University.





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