Andrew Rossner, associate dean for professional and skills education,
brings 30 years of practice experience engaged in complex criminal and
civil litigation; state and federal government service involving high-level policy and leadership positions as acting director and deputy director of the N.J. Division of Criminal Justice; and 25 years teaching trial advocacy to his Evidence, Advanced Evidence, Antitrust and Skills
courses. He is faculty adviser to the Moot Court Board and coaches
the National Mock Trial Team.
Dean Rossner holds a J.D. and M.A. from a joint program in law and
philosophy at the University of Michigan, where he was named to the
Order of the Coif. He clerked for Judge Nathaniel R. Jones, U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, then joined the U.S. Department of
Justice Antitrust Division where he prosecuted criminal antitrust and
Department of Defense contract fraud cases as well as handled merger and
other civil and administrative antitrust matters. In 1986, he served as
an Assistant U.S. Attorney in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the
District of New Jersey, where he prosecuted white-collar crime cases,
including government contract fraud, government program fraud, and tax and
securities fraud. In 1991, he joined the New Jersey Attorney General's
Office as chief of the Antitrust and Securities Fraud Unit in the
Division of Criminal Justice. Within the Division of Criminal Justice,
he subsequently served as chief of the Official Corruption and Antitrust
Bureau, chief of the Financial Crimes and Antitrust Bureau, deputy
director and then acting director of the division.
Dean Rossner has been active in the National Association of Attorneys
General (NAAG) Antitrust Task Force, serving for almost 10 years as
vice chair for litigation training and before that as a vice chair for
investigations. NAAG recognized his achievements by awarding him the
NAAG Marvin Award for outstanding leadership, experience, and achievement
in advancing the work of state attorneys general and also the first
NAAG Training Institute Teacher of the Year Award.
With more than 27 years of teaching litigation advocacy, in 2001, he
was founding director of the New Jersey Attorney General's Advocacy
Institute, which has become a national model for training public sector
attorneys. He has developed curricula and course and teaching materials
on trial advocacy skills, deposition skills, examination of experts
skills, and evidentiary issues at trial, as well as various substantive
legal issues relating to the work of government attorneys. Since 1988, Dean Rossner has served as a faculty member and lecturer for the National
Institute of Trial Advocacy (NITA), teaching at NITA's regional,
national, and in-house programs. He has also authored course and
teaching materials for numerous NITA-style programs, and collaborated
with professional and other organizations to develop and conduct
specialized courses for attorneys.
Dean Rossner has previously taught at Temple Law School, Seton Hall
Law School, and Rutgers School of Criminal Justice as well as at Rutgers
Law School. He serves on the New Jersey Supreme Court Committee on the
Rules of Evidence and is secretary/treasurer of the C. Willard Heckel Inn of Court.