Carlos Schidlow
Carlos Schidlow
2019-2020 Managing Editor, 2018-19 Staff Editor, 2017-18 Contributor
Carlos is a third-year law student at the University of Denver, Sturm College of Law. He was born and raised in Mexico City, Mexico. He emigrated to the United States to attend The University of Texas at Austin where he received his Bachelor of Arts in International Relations & Global Studies.
Carlos has gained a breadth of corporate legal experience during his time in law school. During Fall 2018, he was a law clerk at Vicente Sederberg LLC, further, Carlos gained understanding of the complexities of in-house counsel, as a legal extern at GCH, Inc. during Spring and Summer 2019. Carlos continued his in-house corporate experience during the Fall 2019 semester at Vertafore, where he gained a practical understanding of privacy law in the insurance software industry. Carlos is spending his last semester of law school as a law clerk at Greenspoon Marder LLP.
Carlos is pursuing a Corporate and Commercial Law certificate along with his Juris Doctor Degree. His main legal interests include corporate law, contract drafting, mergers & acquisitions, and gaining a higher understanding of highly regulated industries.
Carlos’ side passion is environmental and public lands law, for which he has gained valuable practical experiences as a law clerk at The Wilderness Society, during the Summer 2018 and a legal intern at the National Wildlife Federation during the Summer 2019.
Outside of Law School, Carlos enjoys staying active, while being outdoors taking part in activities such as hiking and skiing, or staying in doors keeping up with football and international soccer.
In City of Hialeah Employees' Retirement System v. FEI, No. 3-16-cv-1792-SI, 2018 BL 25615 (D. Or. Jan. 25, 2018), the United States District Court for the District of Oregon granted a motion to dismiss the City of Hialeah Employees’ Retirement System’s (“Plaintiff”) Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”), filed against FEI Company ("FEI"), Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc. ("Thermo"), and named Individual Defendants, Thomas Kelly, Donald Kania, Homa Bahrami, Arie Huijser, Jan Lobbezoo, Jami Dover Nachstsheim, James Richardson, and Richard Wills (collectively, "Defendants"), finding Plaintiff failed to adequately plead that Defendants’ violated Section14(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”) and that Individual Defendants violated Section 20(a) of the Exchange Act.