1. You have to have an undergrad degree for most law schools - one or two used to have a 6 year program that would get you an undergrad and a law degree and save you a year.
2. It's close to DC if you consider a couple of hundred miles close. That's a long commute even by Texas standards.
3. It doesn't rank decently among law schools. (USNews and World Report a common ranking source, shows it as unranked since they just ranked the top 147.
http://grad-schools.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-law-schools/law-rankings/page+6
hahaha!!!... i meant once he finishes law school, if he is interested in joining the FBI, he is already in that area of the country... while my nephew went to Liberty University and studied law, he got involved in politics and would go to D.C. to work on projects and such since he was close by... i cannot think of any reason someone would live in D.C. and commute 200 miles to go to law school... anyway, sorry for adding my two cents to your request... i see i was not helpful...