There, he attended a simulated court hearing — the teacher used the PPT he created.
The PPT wasn't important; what intrigued him at the time was how it was normal for law students to have mock trials, but why did lawyers also hold them?
He was a poor country boy, with no way to understand law firms. His superficial and uninformed impression was that lawyers were all elites; did they really need mock trials to go to court?
After the mock trial, the teacher explained to him — in cases with 'high monetary stakes' or 'significant complex disputes', law firms often conducted mock trials in advance.
They explored case handling from multiple angles, shared courtroom techniques and response strategies, anticipated the case's direction, and prepared for all contingencies, responsible to the case and the clients.
These words from the teacher, Li Changzhou still remembers to this day.
Now, he is no longer a law student, walking on the glorious and divine path.
