Key points:
- A woman suffered cardiac arrest during the NY Bar Exam on July 30 at Hofstra University.
- Witnesses allege the exam was not paused and no announcements were made.
- The incident raises questions about NYSBOLE emergency response protocols.
Legal professionals across the country are scrutinizing the New York State Board of Law Examiners (NYSBOLE) following an incident during the July 30 Bar Exam in which a candidate suffered cardiac arrest — and proctors allegedly allowed the exam to proceed without interruption.
The episode took place at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y., one of the multiple venues used for the administration of the state bar exam. According to People, the woman collapsed shortly before the scheduled lunch break. A university spokesperson confirmed that Hofstra’s Public Safety officers responded with CPR and defibrillation, after which paramedics transported the woman to a local hospital.
The individual, identified as a Fordham Law School graduate, was not a Hofstra student. In a statement to People, Fordham Law Dean Joseph Landau confirmed the graduate’s identity and noted the school's ongoing communication with her family.
But the most concerning aspect for many observers is not the medical emergency itself — it’s how the situation was allegedly handled by exam proctors and the NYSBOLE.
In a now-viral Reddit post, a test taker described a chaotic and disturbing scene: the woman collapsed to the floor and was audibly in distress, yet the exam continued. "For what felt like a long time, no one reacted until a few people began calling for help and making a scene," the post read. "The exam never stopped. Everyone just … kept going. Or at least tried to."
According to Newsday, other candidates echoed similar concerns, questioning the human cost of a rigid testing system. One test taker told the paper, “That’s a real person who could be dying right in front of us, and we're still being expected to continue to finish our questions for this exam.”
No official comment has been issued by the NYSBOLE, the National Conference of Bar Examiners (NCBE), or the Nassau County Police Department. As of publication, it remains unclear what protocols — if any — were in place to address such emergencies during the exam, and whether current procedures allow for flexibility under life-threatening circumstances.
The NYSBOLE’s silence has intensified scrutiny from the legal community. For many, the incident has surfaced longstanding concerns about the structure and humanity of bar examination processes. With increasing focus on test equity, wellness, and mental health in the legal profession, the event may become a flashpoint for discussions about the exam’s format and administration policies.
As bar exam season continues nationwide, legal organizations and educators are calling for a review of contingency protocols — not just in New York, but in jurisdictions across the U.S.








