Bellarmine News
Bellarmine’s Kelze’ Riley earns recognition for her potential in field of law
June 6, 2019

Kelze' Riley appears to be poised for a bright future as a lawyer, and she's doing
all the right things to make that happen. Riley, a junior political science and communication
double major from Columbus, Ohio, plans to graduate in December 2020 and enter law
school the following year. She participates in Bellarmine’s pre-law program, designed
for students who are interested in a law career. She credits Bellarmine’s coursework,
as well as the faculty, with giving her the core skills she'll need for a career in
law. In particular, she says she has honed her critical thinking and public speaking
skills and her professors have given her the confidence and motivation to pursue a
career in law. “Lee Remington’s work in the Alberta Jones case truly has impacted
my desire to become a lawyer and I met with her about the program and she motivated
me further,” Riley said. Jones, the first African American to pass the Kentucky Bar
Exam, was murdered in 1965. Her case remains unresolved, but Remington led a successful campaign to re-open the investigation. Remington, associate professor of political science
and director of Bellarmine's pre-law program, speaks highly of Riley. “Kelze’ is a
student who impressed me from the get-go,” she said. “She has a quiet confidence and
leadership about her. She is always prepared, always on point, and always insightful.” Remington
said Riley is someone who should make a tremendous impact on the field of law. “I
wish we had thousands more just like her willing to go into the practice of law,”
Remington said. Riley's potential was recognized when she was accepted into the 2019
Pre-Law Undergraduate Scholars Program at Duke Law School. The four-week residential
program aims to introduce talented rising college sophomores and juniors to the study
of law and to the legal profession. It targets students from colleges and universities
in the Southeast region of the United States, with a focus on underrepresented minority
students. “I have always aspired to go to Duke’s law school and saw the program online
while looking for something law-related to do this summer,” said Riley. “I knew I
should apply for certain when I was on Bellarmine’s Alternative Spring Break in Selma,
Alabama, and met the Rev. William Barber, a Duke graduate, who further encouraged
me, along with a host of other Bellarmine faculty, staff and students.” She said she
was one of 26 successful applicants from a field of roughly 500. Riley said she is
looking forward to the program’s law courses and meeting other students who are interested
in pursuing law. “I hope to have clarity about my future and gain a network of other
college students of color who are pursuing the same career,” said Riley. Article by Daniel Spitza, intern in Bellarmine's Office of Enrollment, Marketing and
Communication