Miller Native Neil Fulton Named University of South Dakota Law School Dean

The University of South Dakota has named Miller, South Dakota, native Neil Fulton, current federal public defender, South Dakota Bar Examiner and former chief of staff to then-Gov. Michael Rounds, Dean of the University of South Dakota School of Law. He will begin full-time this June.

Fulton attended Yale University and graduated with a B.A. in Political Science in 1994. Following college, he attended the University of Minnesota School of Law. He graduated summa cum laude, first in his class, in 1997 and received the Devitt Award for excellence in trial advocacy courses and the Kaplan Award for overall academic excellence at graduation. He spent two summers working with the May, Adam, Gerdes & Thompson law firm in Pierre during law school, trying his first jury trial in Fort Pierre between his second and third years.

Fulton then went on to serve as a law clerk for Judge Diana Murphy of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals after graduating from law school. After his clerkship, he returned to May, Adam, Gerdes & Thompson where he served as general counsel to the South Dakota Public Assurance Alliance and the South Dakota Public Entity Pool for Liability, the South Dakota Bankers Association and the Office of the Governor. During this time, Fulton lobbied the South Dakota legislature for a variety of public and private clients.

In 2007, Fulton became Gov. Rounds’ chief of staff. In that capacity, he oversaw the day-to-day operations of state government, managed legislative and budgetary proposals for the Office of the Governor, drafted legislation on many issues and worked with public and private organizations across the state.

In 2010, Fulton was chosen by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals as federal public defender for North Dakota and South Dakota. In this role, he oversaw a staff of 45 lawyers, investigators and support staff in five offices across both states. He has served on the Defender Sentencing Guideline Committee, the Performance Measurement Working Group and was co-chair of the Defender Legislative Committee. He has testified before the United States Sentencing Commission about tribal sentencing issues, violent offenses and child pornography; and has served on the Sentencing Commission’s ad hoc and standing Tribal Issues Advisory Group. Fulton’s appellate advocacy experience includes arguing almost 40 cases before the Eighth Circuit and more than 10 before the South Dakota Supreme Court.

“Neil brings an exceptional set of skills and experience to USD and we are incredibly excited to have him join us as our next leader of the law school,” said USD President Sheila K. Gestring. “Since the moment he stepped on campus for his interview, there has been tremendous energy throughout the law school. The passion from our students has been outstanding and is an excellent indicator of how promising our future looks for the USD School of Law.”

Fulton was one of three finalists who interviewed on campus in February. The national search was led by a committee chaired by Dr. Mary Nettleman, dean of the USD Sanford School of Medicine.

(USD)