Areas of Expertise
- Criminal Case Strategy
- Criminal Justice System
- Criminal Procedure
- Ethical Issues Involving Defense or Prosecution
- Eyewitness Identification
- Fourth Amendment
- Indigent Defense
- Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
- Jury Selection
- NCAA Committee on Infractions
- Prosecutorial Misconduct
- Role of the Criminal Defense Lawyer
- South African Criminal Justice System
- Trial Tactics
About Rodney Uphoff
Rodney J. Uphoff is first Elwood L. Thomas Missouri Endowed Professor of Law at MU, where he also served as the associate dean of academic affairs for three years. In 2006, Uphoff was selected to be the director of the University of Missouri South Africa Educational Program, representing the four University of Missouri System campuses. He also directs the School of Law’s study abroad program in Cape Town, South Africa.
Before joining the MU faculty in 2001, Uphoff taught at the University of Oklahoma College of Law, where he served as a professor and director of clinical legal education and ran a criminal defense clinic for 10 years. From 1984 to 1988, he directed a criminal clinic at the University of Wisconsin Law School. Before becoming a law professor, Uphoff was a public defender, including service as the chief staff attorney of the Milwaukee Office of the Wisconsin State Public Defender. He also worked for Gimbel, Reilly, Guerin & Brown in Milwaukee, concentrating in personal injury and products liability litigation.
Uphoff has written numerous articles on criminal defense practice, the delivery of indigent defense services and ethical issues facing those involved in the criminal justice system. In 1995, he edited a book for the American Bar Association, Ethical Problems Facing the Criminal Defense Lawyer.
In 1995, Uphoff was appointed by Gov. Frank Keating to the Oklahoma Indigent System Board, which oversees the operation of Oklahoma’s public defender program in all counties except for Tulsa and Oklahoma County. In 1998, Uphoff served as a legal specialist in Romania as part of the American Bar Association’s Central and East European Law Initiative (CEELI) Program. In 2009, he was appointed the Big 12 representative to the NCAA Infractions Committee. Uphoff frequently speaks at conferences across the country on criminal trial advocacy and has participated five times as a faculty member at Harvard University’s Trial Advocacy Workshop.
Uphoff was one of four attorneys appointed to represent Terry Nichols in Oklahoma state court. Nichols was convicted of 160 murders based on the bombing of the Murrah Building in Oklahoma City in April 1995, but did not receive the death penalty.
Uphoff teaches trial practice, professional responsibility, criminal procedure and criminal litigation skills.
Latest News Featuring Rodney Uphoff
- Professor Uphoff Honored by The University of the Western Cape
- Students participate in South Africa summer course via Zoom
- Professor Uphoff honored with 2020 Midwest Innocence Project’s Justice For The Innocent Award
- New grant gives boost to MU School of Law Innocence Clinic
- Professor Uphoff teaches at Harvard workshop
Latest Publications from Rodney Uphoff
- Sentencing Reform: Fixing Root Problems
- “What Do I Do With the Porn On My Computer?”: How A Lawyer Should Counsel Clients About Physical Evidence
- Systemic Barriers to Effective Assistance of Counsel in Plea Bargaining
- The Physical Evidence Dilemma: Does ABA Standard 4-4.6 Offer Appropriate Guidance?
- Handling Physical Evidence: Guidance found in ABA Standard 4-4.6