Andrew Ferguson Professor WCL Faculty
- Degrees
- LL.M., Georgetown Law Center 2004
J.D., University of Pennsylvania School of Law 2000
B.A., Williams College 1994 - Bio
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Andrew Guthrie Ferguson is a Professor of Law at 鶹ý Washington College of Law. Professor Ferguson teaches Evidence, Criminal Procedure, and a seminar examining police surveillance technology, privacy, and civil rights.
Professor Ferguson teaches Criminal Law, Evidence, Criminal Procedure, and a seminar examining police surveillance technology, privacy, and civil rights. He is a national expert on predictive policing, facial recognition, big data surveillance, the “Internet of Things,” juries, and the Fourth Amendment. His articles have appeared in the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, the Georgetown Law Journal, the California Law Review, the Duke Law Journal, the Cornell Law Review, the UCLA Law Review, the Minnesota Law Review, the Northwestern Law Review, the Vanderbilt Law Review, the Iowa Law Review, and the Notre Dame Law Review among others.
Professor Ferguson is the 11th most cited scholar in criminal law/procedure according to the Leiter Law School Reports Rankings (2016-2020). He is a member of the 鶹ý Law Institute (ALI) and was an Advisor to the ALI Principles of the Law, Policing Project.
Professor Ferguson’s book examines how surveillance technology and predictive analytics shapes modern policing. His first book is the first book written for jurors on jury duty. He also stars in the “” in D.C. Superior Court seen by more than 30,000 citizens annually. He has written a book for incoming 1L students called .His legal commentary has been featured in numerous media outlets, including The New York Times, The Economist, the Washington Post, CNN, NPR, Time, USA Today, the ABA Journal, The Atlantic, and other national and international newspapers, magazines, and media sites.
Prior to 鶹ý Washington College of Law, Professor Ferguson was a Professor of Law at the UDC David. A. Clarke School of Law. Prior to law teaching, Professor Ferguson worked as a supervising attorney at the Public Defender Service for the District of Columbia. As a public defender for seven years, he represented adults and juveniles in serious felony cases ranging from homicide to misdemeanor offenses. In addition to participating as lead counsel in numerous jury and bench trials, he argued cases before the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. Before joining the Public Defender Service, Professor Ferguson was awarded the E. Barrett Prettyman Fellowship at the Georgetown Law Center’s Criminal Justice Clinic. For two years as a Prettyman Fellow, he taught and supervised third-year clinical students involved in the criminal justice clinic. Immediately after graduating from law school, he clerked for the Honorable Chief Judge Carolyn Dineen King of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.
- Areas of Specialization
- Criminal Law and Procedure
- Evidence
- Privacy Law
- For the Media
- To request an interview for a news story, call AU Communications at 202-885-5950 or submit a request.