Melvin Otey, J.D., M.Div.
(Full Professor)

Faulkner University, Jones School of Law

criminal law, criminal procedure, racketeering, religion and society, religion and spirituality at the workplace

About Me

Melvin L. Otey began his legal career in the U.S. Department of Justice Attorney General’s Honors Program as a Trial Attorney in the Organized Crime & Racketeering Section. Thereafter, he went into private practice and represented targets and witnesses at all stages of the investigative and adjudicative processes in a wide range of criminal matters including, inter alia, white collar crimes, violent crimes, and narcotics offenses. He later returned to the Justice Department in the Organized Crime & Gang Section, taught courses for federal prosecutors at the National Advocacy Center, and advised prosecutors nationally on all aspects of complex organized crime, racketeering, and white collar prosecutions. Otey joined the Faulkner Law faculty in 2014. Among other courses, he teaches Criminal Law, Constitutional Criminal Procedure, Advanced Criminal Procedure, Federal Crimes, and a Current Topics in Criminal Law seminar.

Publications

Recent Conversations