The good folks at Constitutional Daily analyzed data from Law School Transparency and compiled a list of law schools with underemployment scores higher than their employment scores. (Visit Constitutional Daily for further details.)
Basically, these schools have more underemployed graduates than employed ones, according to LST's numbers.
That sounds pretty bad to me.
Here are the 14 schools ranked by the difference between their underemployment and employment scores (h/t TaxProf Blog):


