About Emma Way
Emma Way is a writer and editor living in Charlotte, North Carolina. By day, she is a director of editorial product at Axios, serving as the connector between 30 local reporting teams across the country. The Delaware-native and Washington College graduate has been writing for Super Lawyers since 2018.
Articles written by Emma Way
Dive Bar
Tony Scheer loved working in the boat and scuba biz; that’s why he stopped doing itWhen Tony Scheer talks about his childhood in Syracuse, New York, he recalls summers on the water. “Even though I grew up nowhere near the ocean, I was a water guy,” he says. Scheer loved to sail and water ski, and he was obsessed with underwater explorer and conservationist Jacques Cousteau. His parents were both waterfront directors at a summer camp. “We were a water family.” Scheer, 62, a partner at Rawls, Scheer, Clary & Mingo, always wanted to be a diver and marine biologist. …
Rewriting the Narrative
Five Missouri and Kansas women attorneys recount their life in the lawChoosing law school in the ’70s was not a popular option for women. But for these five, lawyering felt like the only choice. While future Sedgwick County District Attorney Nola Foulston had her heart set on law school before she was old enough to drive, the idea didn’t occur to St. Louis’ Ferne Wolf until college. Kansas City’s Jennifer Bacon was heading toward a Ph.D. in psychology before she changed course. St. Louis’ Sally Barker turned to the law thanks to a passion for debate, …
The 300
Richard Serbin’s 32-year fight to uncover the truth of clergy sexual-abuseAltoona used to celebrate train whistles like they were paydays. As the locomotive industry boomed, the central Pennsylvania community grew too, jumping from about 3,000 in 1854—when the first train chugged around Altoona’s famous horseshoe curve—to more than 80,000 in 1940. But as deindustrialization crept in during the second half of the 20th century, the once-thriving downtown stumbled, and Altoona sank into the shadows of the Allegheny mountains. Even in a small town nestled in the …
A Little Bit Louder Now
Charlotte attorney Lori Keeton makes some noise for women entrepreneursWith a bedazzled pink laptop on her desk and a diamond ring nearly the size of a garlic bulb on her left hand, Lori Keeton thinks back to opening her solo shop—it wasn’t as glitzy as she had hoped. “In the very beginning, I’m meeting with all these vendors, and they’re asking how long I want our contract to be,” she says. “And I’m like, ‘Lord knows! It could be six months.’” It’s been two years and counting, and the bling she wears was a gift to herself, a reminder of …
The Reconstruction of David Rudolf
The verdict in the Michael Peterson case shook his very foundation. Now, thanks to Netflix, he’s on a new mission: fixing the criminal justice systemMichael Peterson was on top of the world in 2001. He was a successful novelist and columnist, in love with his wife, had five children (two of his own, two he adopted, and one stepchild), and lived in a beautiful house in Durham. Peterson and his wife, Kathleen, liked to drink wine and talk deep into the night. On the night of December 9, that all went away. On a 911 recording, Peterson’s voice wavers frantically. Fifteen steps. Or is it 20? “She fell down the stairs,” he says between …
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