Katelyn Ringrose is the Christopher Wolf Diversity Law Fellow. Ringrose is a graduate of the University of Notre Dame Law School. She published law review articles on facial recognition and body-worn cameras, government surveillance, and data collection in schools, among other topics. While in law school, Ringrose founded Impowerus, an online company connecting juvenile immigrants to pro bono legal aid that was chosen as one of the top eight student tech startups in the U.S. by Inc. Magazine. She interned for the U.S. Department of Justice, the Washington State Attorney General’s Office, the Public Defender’s Office of the Juvenile Justice Center in South Bend, IN, the Hawaii State Supreme Court, and the DOJ's Computer Crimes and Intellectual Property Division. In the tech policy space, Katelyn works at the intersections of criminal justice, consumer protection, and technology. Prior to attending law school, she was a teacher in Tacoma, WA.