Litigation Daily | Conversation
By Ross Todd | March 7, 2024
Grigsby, who worked on civil rights issues as Deputy White House Counsel in the Biden Administration, returned to the firm earlier this year as a senior member of its institutional culture and social responsibility practice and co-chair of government litigation.
By Ross Todd | June 29, 2023
New Mexico Supreme Court Chief Justice Shannon Bacon, Colorado Associate Justice Monica Márquez and Hawaii Associate Justice Sabrina McKenna spoke about their paths to the bench yesterday as part of a Pride Month presentation by the National Judicial College.
By Ross Todd | February 7, 2023
The American College of Trial Lawyers plans to host its second annual diversity trial advocacy program in May at Kirkland & Ellis in Chicago.
Litigation Daily | Best Practices
By Ross Todd | October 20, 2022
Sara Williams of Alexander Shunnarah Trial Attorneys says she became a better trial attorney after getting over the idea she needed to be Atticus Finch.
By Ross Todd | October 6, 2022
Senior U.S. District Judge Susan Oki Mollway, who wrote a book about the first 15 Asian women Article III judges, says it struck her that the women didn't consider themselves candidates without prompting.
By Ross Todd | May 18, 2022
"Being a first Asian American anything is great," said Judge Holly Fujie of Los Angeles County Superior Court. "But making sure that you're not the last Asian American something is even more important."
By Ross Todd | October 26, 2021
"Are you going to maintain that fiction as a judge that people who are detained and questioned were actually free to leave?" the chief justice asked rhetorically to an audience of new and aspiring judges Monday.
By Ross Todd | September 21, 2021
Matthew Martino, the first member of his family to graduate college, regularly tells first-generation recruits about his background during interviews: "You can see them relax a bit. Then the interview becomes a lot more organic."
By Ross Todd | August 10, 2021
"I really love what seems to be a movement now where the older guard is really having to move out of the way, whether voluntarily or not, to allow younger, more diverse attorneys to come through, and it's begun to enrich the legal field," said Harper Segui of Milberg Coleman Bryson Phillips Grossman.
By Ross Todd | August 5, 2021
After emigrating to the U.S. from the Soviet Union in the 1980s, Quinn's Victoria Maroulis went from community college to Stanford University to Yale Law School. Now she's supporting first-generation professionals following in her footsteps.
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