FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 24, 2001

CONTACT
Allison Parker
206-733-5932
allisonp@wsba.org 


636 Pass Washington State Bar Examination

Seattle, Washington, October 24, 2001 — The Washington State Bar Association (WSBA) announces that 636 candidates passed the Bar Examination that was administered in August 2001. Of the 908 candidates who took the exam, 70 percent passed the test. Statistical information is on page 2, and the list of those who passed the exam begins on page 3. This information is also available on the WSBA Web site (www.wsba.org).

Given in two parts over a three-day period, the Bar Examination includes a substantive law exam and an exam on the Rules of Professional Conduct. Candidates must successfully pass both parts in order to qualify for admission to the State Bar. If a candidate passes one part of the examination and fails the other, the candidate may sit for the next examination without having to retake the portion previously passed.

On September 21, 1999, the Washington Supreme Court approved Admission to Practice Rule (APR) 18, which provides a procedure for the reciprocal admission of lawyers without requiring that those lawyers pass the Washington State Bar Examination. Lawyers from other states, U.S. territories or the District of Columbia are admitted to the WSBA on the same terms and conditions that a Washington lawyer could be admitted in the other state. This rule also enables Washington lawyers to seek admission in those states that provide for some form of reciprocal admission. Additional information about APR 18 can be found on the WSBA Web site (www.wsba.orglawyers/licensing/faq-reciprocity.htm).

Statistical information and the list of those who passed the examination is available on the WSBA web site at

The Washington State Bar Association is a private, nonprofit organization authorized by the Washington Supreme Court to license the state's 26,500 lawyers. The WSBA both regulates lawyers under the authority of the Court and serves its members as a professional association — all without public funding. As a regulatory agency, it administers the bar exam, provides record-keeping and licensing functions, and administers the lawyer discipline program. As a professional association, the WSBA provides continuing legal education for attorneys, in addition to numerous other educational and member service activities.





Last Modified: Thursday, July 10, 2003

Contact Information
Disclaimer and Copyright Notice | Privacy Policy