I am a law student at William & Mary Law School, where my work sits at the intersection of law, economics, and quantitative methods. My undergraduate training in economics and mathematics at Brigham Young University gave me the empirical toolkit — econometrics, statistical modeling, causal inference — that now shapes how I approach legal questions.
My research interests center on antitrust law, securities regulation, and administrative law. I am drawn to questions where economic theory and legal doctrine converge: market structure and merger analysis, regulatory design under uncertainty, and the measurement of harm in complex commercial disputes.
I have published peer-reviewed work in economics and hold that same standard of precision in legal scholarship. I am pursuing clerkship opportunities, federal government positions at DOJ Antitrust and the SEC, and private practice where analytical rigor is the job.