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Check us out on
Check us out on

Officers
President
Tanya L. Forsheit
President-Elect
Ruth D. Kahn
First Vice-President
Anne Tremblay
Second Vice-President
Jennifer S. Romano
Treasurer/Secretary
Kimberly Arnal
Communications
Stacy Horth-Neubert
Immediate Past President
Immediate Past President
Angela S. Haskins
Executive Offices
Executive Administrator
Kay Burt
Administrative Assistant
Lindsay Audette
Sections
ADR
Jan Frankel Schau
Business Law
Zoila Davis
Kelly Kriebs
Criminal Justice
Nina Marino
Family Law
Maria Hamar
Litigation
Robyn Crowther
Alison Plessman
Young Lawyers
Eileen Uy
Kelly Hanker
Committees
Amicus Briefs
Lisa Jaskol
Lara Krieger
Annual Giving Campaign
Susan Steinhauser
Appointive Office
Wendy Wen Yun Chang
Awards & Recognitions
Helen B. Kim
Jennifer Altfeld Landau
Business Development
Amy Brantly
Jan Jensen
Career Development & Life Balance
Jessica Kurzban
Career Mentoring
Jeanne “Gigi” Wanlass
Conference of California Bar Associations
Shaun Dabby Jacobs
Doctor Lawyer Dinner
Linda O. Hatcher
Courtney Powers
Domestic Violence Project
Adrienne R. Hahn
Elena Min
Financial Development
Tamar Kouyoumjian
Jennifer Leland
Allegra Perez
History Project
Eileen Decker
In-House Counsel
Stacy Bratcher
Lisa Harrington
Jail Project
Melanie Natasha Henry
Jill Piano
Law Student Mentoring
Benazeer “Benny” Roshan
Legislation
Meredith Karasch
Membership
Kimberly Encinas
Michelle Michaels
Pro-Choice and Reproductive Rights
Kiran Singh
Heather Stern
Public Interest Grant
Patricia Daza
Cathy Ostiller
Scholarships
Sarah de Diego
Carmela Pagay
Solo & Small Firm
R.J. Molligan
Becky Walker James
Website
Julie Goulet Stromberg
Members at Large
Hon. Judith C. Chirlin (Ret.)
Holly J. Fujie
Lorna De Bono
Liaisons
CWL
Noelle Natoli-Duffy
CWLC
Anne Tremblay
Bet Tzedek Legal Services
Michelle Williams Court
DWC
Katherine M. Forster
Food From the Bar
Kathleen McDowell
Harriett Buhai
Susan Alker
Judicial/Federal Court
Hon. Jacqueline H. Nguyen
Hon. Sandra Klein
Judicial/State Court
Hon. Beverly Reid O’Connell
MCBA
Luci-Ellen Chun
Power Lunch Program
Hon. Nicole C. Bershon
Keri E. Campbell
Student Liaisons
Amy E. Asher - Pepperdine
Arianne Espinueva - Southwestern
Elisa Herrmann - Loyola
Tara Nayak - UCLA
Cindy Organ - USC
Natasha Sabounjian - Southwestern
Lisa Zang - UCLA
promoting
the full
participation
of women
lawyers and
judges in the
legal profession
advocating
principles of
fairness and
equality
improving
the status of
women
in our society
-Excerpts from
the WLALA
Mission
Statement
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| VOLUME 17, NO. 6 |
FEBRUARY 2012 |
President’s Message
In Celebration of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, Ret.
by Tanya L. Forsheit
Last year, WLALA Board Member and luminary Judge Judith Chirlin, Ret., Executive Director of the Western Justice Center, asked me what I would think about her arranging for WLALA to co-sponsor an event on February 24, 2012, at Southwestern Law School with The Supreme Court Fellows Alumni Association (where she is the current President). Sure, I said, that would be great. Oh by the way, Judge Chirlin noted, the event will feature Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, Ret. What would I think about that?
On July 7, 1981, Sandra Day O’Connor became the first woman to be nominated to the Supreme Court. For me, and I suspect for other women lawyers of Generation X, O’Connor is iconic. She was appointed to the Court at a time when I was old enough to appreciate it as a historic moment and realize it was a big deal, but not old enough to understand anything about the nominations process or politics. Therefore, she was, and always will be for me, larger than life. She is to this day living proof of the notion that I can do and be anything in life.
When I first started my own law firm, I taped a few items to my desk, within my direct line of sight: printouts and artwork featuring several inspirational quotes, my favorite Dilbert cartoon about the fiction of work-life balance, and a page I tore out of the July 2008 issue of the ABA Journal regarding O’Connor’s 1981 nomination, including a photo of her sitting with President Reagan. It reminds me that anything is possible.
The text below the photo on that ABA Journal tear-out states that, “[d]espite ranking third in the Stanford Law class of 1952, the only law firm offer Sandra Day O’Connor received was for a position as legal secretary.” Instead, she took a job as deputy county attorney in San Mateo, California. After marrying, starting a family AND a private law practice, O’Connor became an assistant state attorney general in Arizona and was later appointed to the Arizona Senate where she became the first woman to serve as majority leader of a state legislature, before she became a judge. She served on the Supreme Court from 1981 until her retirement in 2006.
I was lucky enough to work on Supreme Court matters at my old law firm and O’Connor authored the opinion in which we prevailed in a historic Fourteenth Amendment pro bono matter that ultimately led to major changes in California’s prisons, Johnson v. California.
So, you see, I am much more than just OK with WLALA co-sponsoring this amazing event. I am over the moon. Please join us at Southwestern Law School on February 24, 2012, for The Women at the United Supreme Court: A Special Panel Discussion Featuring Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, Supreme Court of the United States, Ret., followed by Keynote Luncheon Speaker Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, Supreme Court of California.
February, a short month, is overflowing with other amazing events that definitely deserve mention and that you should not miss. You can find more information about all of the following events by checking out our Master Calendar.
On February 2, 2012, WLALA is proud to co-sponsor LACBA’s Senior Lawyers Section Trailblazers of the Bar program honoring Presiding Justice Joan Dempsey Klein, Y. C. Hong (Posthumously), and Nowland C. Hong, at the California Club.
On February 6, WLALA Criminal Justice Section Chair Nina Marino will moderate a fantastic program at the offices of Sidley Austin LLP, Women in the Federal Criminal Justice System Who Get it Done! The panel will showcase six dynamic women, including Kate Corrigan, Criminal Justice Act Panel Attorney; Judith Glascoe, United States Pretrial Services Officer; Eunice Habig, United States Probation Officer; Terry Nafisi, Central District Clerk of the Court; Callie Steele, Federal Public Defender; and Jennifer Waier, Assistant United States Attorney.
For something a little more casual, we also have a great downtown mentoring circle planned this month, February 8, at California Pizza Kitchen on Hope Street. Please join WLALA member Julie Gerchik for a relaxed evening with your peers and mentors – you can contact Julie for more information.
On February 10, WLALA is pleased to co-sponsor the Center for Asian Americans United for Self Empowerment (CAUSE) annual Power Lunch, also at the California Club. On February 15, WLALA joins the ABA Section of Litigation Trial Practice Committee to present its LA Regional Workshop, “Closing Arguments that Rock! How to Move Judges and Juries,” at the JW Marriott.
On February 23, the LACBA-WLALA Joint Task Force on the Retention and Promotion of Women, in partnership with the National Association of Women Lawyers (NAWL), presents its annual Summit program: “SUCCESS: What is it ... REALLY ... and how to get it, YOUR WAY,” at the Omni Hotel. This year’s program features Karen Kahn, the Founding Principal of Threshold Advisors, an organization devoted to helping lawyers develop their full potential through coaching and leadership development. The purpose of this workshop is to encourage attendees who have now attained the level of partner or other benchmark for which they have been working so hard for at least 10 years to get off autopilot and think beyond the standard definitions of success. For those who are interested, you can also stay the afternoon for the rest of NAWL’s annual meeting at the Omni. Many thanks to Joint Task Force co-chairs, WLALA President-Elect Ruth Kahn and WLALA Harriett Buhai Liaison Susan Alker, and Joint Task Force members, WLALA Past Presidents and current Awards & Nominations Committee co-chairs Helen Kim and Jennifer Landau and WLALA Communications Officer Stacy Horth-Neubert, for their tremendous work on this year’s program.
And the month will end on a high note, with two amazing installation dinners of two other members of the Multicultural Bar Alliance - the Asian Pacific American Bar Association installation dinner on February 24, and the Lesbian & Gay Lawyers Association dinner, on February 25.
I look forward to seeing many of you at one or more of these great programs!
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Highlighting the 97%
Litigators Winning Cases Without Going to War
The First in a Series of Interviews
This Month: Robyn Crowther of Caldwell, Leslie & Proctor
by Jan Frankel Schau
After 20 years of practicing litigation and ten years as a mediator, I have reached the conclusion that most clients come to their lawyers not to “win a case” but to resolve some conflict they are experiencing, or to right some wrong that has occurred, in the most efficient way possible. As my late friend and mentor, Richard Millen, was fond of saying, “People don’t come to their lawyers with legal problems, they come to their lawyers with human problems. Lawyers make them into legal problems by fitting them into a particular cause of action or set of legal defenses.”
The most recent statistics available indicate that 97% of cases that are filed in Superior Court never get to trial. How do they get resolved? This column will explore the unique and intuitive ways in which a dozen prominent women litigators have made that happen. The reader may judge for him/herself whether the gender of the handling attorney in any way contributed to the outcome, but my hypothesis is that with so many prominent women in litigation in 2012, there is a different, perhaps more pragmatic, and some may say even “gracious” way of waging war today.
Here you will find some of the most fascinating “war stories” uniquely told by select women who have demonstrated both bravery and sensitivity in addressing their clients' needs and desires.
MEET ROBYN CROWTHER, Shareholder, Caldwell, Leslie and Proctor
Jan: Robyn, how long have you been practicing litigation in Los Angeles?
Robyn: Since 1997. I practiced with Gibson, Dunn for a year and then took my position at Caldwell, Leslie. I was made a shareholder just after I delivered my first (of 3) daughters.
Jan: What was the most notable case in which you were able to avoid a trial and still get a great result for your client?
Robyn: I represented Obey Clothing in litigation with the Associated Press. It was a part of the larger dispute between Shepard Fairey and the Associated Press about copyright infringement during the Obama campaign. AP sued Shepard Fairey, the graphic artist and my client, Obey Clothing, for copyright infringement, claiming that the artist used a photo of Obama owned by AP, earning multi-million dollars on the image.
Jan: What was the strategy you took to get the matter settled?
Robyn: A little background. The Associated Press sued Shepard Fairey initially and only brought in Obey Clothing, the exclusive licensee of Shepard Fairey, about eight months after they brought the initial action. From the outset, our clients took our advice and aggressively litigated the case pre-trial in order to set it up for a summary judgment motion. We had a joint defense agreement with the artist, and were planning to join in a motion for summary judgment, which was due on January 6, 2010. On January 2, 2010, we were notified that Shepard Fairey had reached a settlement agreement with the Plaintiff. We had to work round the clock in a team of 3 or 4 lawyers to get our motion filed in time. The motion was heard in New York and the district court judge denied both parties' motions on copyright infringement, but granted the AP’s summary judgment motion on the issue of fair use. It was after that ruling that I reached out to opposing counsel and called her to suggest it might be a good time to discuss settlement rather than challenge that ruling on appeal.
Jan: How did you or your client come up with the idea?
Robyn: I really understood the dynamics between my client and its insurer by then, so I came up with the concept, but it took many, many calls and emails before we arrived at a settlement.
Jan: Why was it so effective?
Robyn: I leveraged the opposing party’s win on the Fair Practices Act as a way to suggest that the settlement would benefit them because it would avoid the potential of an appeal and reversal, which may have had much further impact on the Company than this verdict if it didn’t go their way.
Jan: What was the turning point that allowed the case to settle and avoid a trial?
Robyn: Although we were talking with opposing counsel every day in preparation for the pre-trial conferences, (we had even moved to New York for the trial by then), ultimately both parties seemed to recognize that the potential losses from going to trial were too great. For the AP, that was really a function of the possible appeal and reversal.
Jan: Did you or your clients have any regrets?
Robyn: My clients were very pleased. Of course, it was probably the most fascinating piece of litigation I may ever participate in, so I would have loved to at least put on my opening statement!
Jan: Was there an “aha” moment that resulted from avoiding trial and settling the case?
Robyn: Yes. Although the terms of the settlement are confidential, the parties issued a joint press release indicating that they were planning to collaborate on future projects, which, of course, may be of enormous financial value to all parties.
Jan: Do you think that being a woman made a difference to how this case was handled?
Robyn: Once Shepard Fairey settled out, all of the lead counsel on both sides were women. I think that allowed us to dispense with some of the posturing we see and cut to the chase.
Jan Frankel Schau is chair of the WLALA ADR Section. Ms. Schau is a mediator with ADR Services, Inc.
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Women in the Federal Criminal Justice System Who Get it Done!
Join us for a program that will showcase six dynamic women working in the federal criminal justice system, who “get it done,” every day, in today’s over-scheduled and economically challenging times. Learn the secrets to successful criminal practice in federal court from the women who make the system work.
Speakers will be Kate Corrigan, Criminal Justice Act Panel Attorney; Judith Glascoe, United States Pretrial Services Officer; Eunice Habig, United States Probation Officer; Terry Nafisi, Central District Clerk of the Court; Callie Steele, Federal Public Defender; Jennifer Waier, Assistant United States Attorney.
This panel will be moderated by Nina Marino of Kaplan Marino, PC.
To add this event to your Outlook Calendar, please CLICK HERE.
To read more about the program as well some WLALA history, please CLICK HERE.
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SUCCESS: What is it … REALLY … and how to get it, YOUR WAY
On Thursday, February 23, 2012, the LACBA-WLALA Joint Task Force on the Retention and Promotion of Women, along with the National Association of Women Lawyers (NAWL), will hold a FREE program called SUCCESS: What is it … Really … and how to get it, YOUR WAY at the Omni Hotel in Downtown Los Angeles from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. Karen Kahn will lead an interactive discussion to encourage attendees who have now attained the level of partner or other benchmark for which they have been working so hard to get off autopilot and think beyond the standard definitions of success. Ms. Kahn will talk about success in a very personal way: what it is, how to pursue it in a way that is consistent with one’s individual desires, personality, comfort zone and life style, and how to attain it. This program is designed for lawyers who have been in practice for at least 10 years.
To add this event to your Outlook Calendar, please CLICK HERE.
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WLALA Litigators Forum
Crisis in the Court: Navigating Through the Budget Cuts
Save the Date!
Thursday
March 15, 2012
For more information, please call the WLALA Office at (213) 892-8982.
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WLALA Solo & Small Firm Practice Committee Meeting
Thursday
February 16, 2012
San Francisco Bar and Grille
11501 W. Pico Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90064
To RSVP, please email Becky Walker James at becky@walkerjameslaw.com.
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WLALA Jail Project is Starting on February 15, 2012!!!
Are you looking for an opportunity to give back to the community, and to help less fortunate women? WLALA Jail Project volunteers provide assistance in civil matters to inmates at the county women's jail facility. A large percentage of these women are young mothers who need help with child-related matters. We do not personally represent inmates, but instead offer short-term counseling in selective areas of civil law, to help the inmates maintain control of their lives during their incarceration.
The women’s facility is located at the Lynwood Jail, 11705 South Alameda Street, Lynwood, CA 90262. WLALA Jail Project volunteers generally offer their services one Wednesday evening a month, from 3:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. No prior experience in any particular area of the law is required*. Volunteers are given a .pdf handbook with information about the most-requested legal topics.
*IMPORTANT - The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department requires all pro bono attorneys to submit an Application for Access to Custody Facilities directly to them and to attend a four hour jail orientation before they volunteer at the Lynwood facility. If you are interested, please complete the application and mail it to Sgt. Christina Baker at 450 Bauchet St. Rm #E888, Los Angeles, CA 90012, Attn: Sgt. Christina Baker. Once Sgt. Christina Baker processes the application, she will email the applicant a time to attend the jail orientation. Do not send your Applications to WLALA, they will not be opened and will be returned.
For further information, contact WLALA Jail Project Chair Jill Piano at (310) 429-0090.
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Nominations for WLALA’s Nominating Committee
WLALA is accepting nominations for members of the 2012 Nominating Committee, which will interview and select the nominees for WLALA’s Executive Committee for the coming 2012-2013 year. The Nominating Committee consists of Immediate Past-President Angela S. Haskins, President-Elect Ruth D. Kahn and five WLALA members, no more than three of whom may be current Board members. The five members will be elected by a ballot vote on March 15, 2012, at the 2012 Litigators Forum. Nominations for the committee must be made no later than 10 a.m. on February 17, 2012. Anyone interested in serving on the Nominating Committee should contact Angela S. Haskins at ahaskins@bknlawyers.com or (213) 477-7745 or Kay Burt at info@wlala.org or (213) 892-8982. All WLALA members are encouraged to attend the Litigators Forum to vote for the Nominating Committee.
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On January 12, 2012, WLALA held a fantastic program, “Hear Our Voices: Women Lawyers Making a Difference Through Alternative Paths Towards Justice.” The evening was nothing less than awe-inspiring, as everyone who attended will attest. There are so many compelling ways in which women in our community are lending their time, energy and intellect to make a true difference in the lives of women and girls in the Congo and Darfur, children in the foster care system, former addicts struggling to recover not only their lives but the relationships they've harmed, women who serve long term imprisonment, youth in gangs and the communities they impact, and women and girls in regions without safe drinking water. Watch for this program again next year as we highlight progress made and welcome new innovations.
The Women at the United States Supreme Court
Register now for The Women at the United States Supreme Court: A Special Panel Discussion Featuring Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. The program is followed by Keynote Luncheon Speaker Chief Justice Tani Cantil-Sakauye, Supreme Court of California. The program and lunch will take place at Southwestern Law School on February 24th from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. WLALA is co-sponsoring this program. The fee for WLALA Members is $75.00. For more information on the program, please go to http://www.swlaw.edu/pdfs/advancement/scf12.pdf. To register online, please go to www.swlaw.edu/scf12.
WLALA Foundation Receives Grant for Power Lunch Program
WLALA Foundation would like to thank Northrop Grumman for its generous grant of $2,000 for the Power Lunch Program. The Power Lunch Program invites students from low socio-economic status schools to courthouses around Los Angeles County for lunch and introduces volunteers, as well as court room personnel (e.g., bailiff, court interpreter), to give the kids a sense of the different jobs in our judicial system, and our personal educational backgrounds. The lunch and mentoring portion is followed by a game of "Legal Jeopardy" that tests the students’ knowledge of various subjects. By providing the students with role-models and a pleasant experience with the legal system, the Power Lunch Program hopes to empower, inspire, and cultivate a diverse new wave of future members of the legal system.
WLALA Foundation sincerely appreciates Northrup Grumman’s commitment to helping students in under-served communities.
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Nominations Sought for 2012 Ernestine Stahlhut, Myra Bradwell and Distinguished Service Awards
by Ruth D. Kahn
WLALA is seeking nominations for the Ernestine Stahlhut, Myra Bradwell and Distinguished Service Awards to be presented at the 93rd Annual Installation and Awards Dinner in September 2012. Members of the legal community are encouraged to submit names of candidates, along with the candidate’s biography and the reasons why the candidate is deserving of the particular award, to the WLALA office atinfo@wlala.org. Please include (1) the name, address, telephone number and email address of the nominator, (2) the nominator’s relationship with the nominee, if any, and (3) the name, address, telephone number and email address of the candidate. The deadline for submissions is February 28, 2012.
Ernestine Stahlhut Award Criteria: This award is given annually to a women in the legal profession who has attained the respect, admiration and affection of the Bench and Bar by her outstanding character, her dedication to service and her significant contributions to the cause of justice; a person who has challenged women in our profession to excel, and who has been an encouragement to young women in our society to seek the law as a profession.
Past award recipients of the Ernestine Stahlhut Award include The Honorable Mildred L. Lillie, The Honorable Shirley M. Hufstedler, The Honorable Consuelo B. Marshall, Molly Munger, The Honorable Audrey B. Collins, and Edith R. Matthai. For the history of this award and a complete list of past honorees, please visit: http://www.wlala.org/displaycommon.cfm?an=1&subarticlenbr=9#Ernestine
Myra Bradwell Award Criteria: This award is given to honor a law firm, corporate or government office, or other entity that has been exemplary in promoting and advancing women lawyers and issues important to women.
Past recipients of the Myra Bradwell Award include the Los Angeles Office of Morrison & Foerster, The Office of the Federal Public Defender for the Central District of California, Deloitte LLP, Southern California Edison and Toyota Motor Credit Corporation. For the history of this award and a complete list of past honorees, please visit: http://www.wlala.org/displaycommon.cfm?an=1&subarticlenbr=9#Myra
Distinguished Service Award Criteria: This award is to honor members of WLALA who have brought honor and esteem to the organization by their commitment to public service. The purpose of this award is to publicly recognize WLALA members who have demonstrated such commitment through, among other things, their pro bono, community service or bar association activities, or by providing legal services to the underrepresented and disadvantaged.
Ms. Kahn is a partner at Steptoe & Johnson LLP and currently serves as President-Elect of WLALA.
WLALA is a Community Sponsor for
the Center for Asian Americans United for
Self Empowerment
Women in Power Annual Luncheon
Friday, February 10, 2012
11:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
California Club
538 S. Flower Street
Los Angeles, CA 90071
For more information about the event, please CLICK HERE.
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WLALA is Co-Sponsoring
ABA Section of Litigation Trial Practice Committee
Regional Meeting
Closing Arguments that Rock:
How to Move Judges and Juries
Wednesday, February 15, 2012
2:00 to 6:00 p.m. CLE Program/6:00 p.m. Cocktail Reception and Networking
Marriott LA Live
800 West Olympic Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90015
What works in closing arguments in different practice areas? Learn from the best! A diverse group of high profile trial lawyers demonstrate their effective style in closing arguments, experts in training advocates judge the closings, and discuss the ethical issues in televised closing arguments.
To view the Save the Date flyer, please CLICK HERE.
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WLALA is Co-Sponsoring
Trailblazers of the Bar
Honoring Presiding Justice Joan Dempsey Klein,
Y.C. Hong (posthumously), and Nowland C. Hong
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Registration: 5:30 to 7:00pm
Meal/Reception: 5:30 p.m. reception; 8:00 p.m. dessert and coffee
Program: 7:00 p.m.
California Club
538 S. Flower Street
Los Angeles, CA 90071
Trailblazers of the Bar will celebrate John Marshall Day by honoring three outstanding pioneers in the legal profession at a gala event at the California Club of downtown Los Angeles.
For more information about this event, please CLICK HERE.
Of Interest
California Bar Journal Report - Predominately White Male State Bar Changing . . . Slowly. To read this article, please CLICK HERE
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Member News
Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. appointed WLALA Board Members Michelle Williams Court and Holly Fujie to judgeships in the Los Angeles Superior Court in December 2011.
New Members
Anita Abd, Zhana Aivazi, Caley Albert, Taylor Bristol, Lina Chagoya, Michelle Chan, Stacy Chen, Annie Cho, Shawtina Ferguson, Danielle Gerson, Mary Grant, Robert Greenfield, Elissa Gysi, Heather Habes, Jennifer Hahm, Kendra Hampton, Jacqueline Harake, Crista Haynes, Angel Ho, Betsy Johnson, Kathryn Kelly, Esther Kim, Nina Kinch, June Klein, Esther Lee, Phoebe Malati, Katherine Markowski, Sarah Matos, Jessica Mead, Ashley Mcdow, Tamar Meyouhas, Setareh Mortazavi, Golak Nadery, Allison Neyer, Olga Novak, Arlene Olson, Iveta Ovsepyan, Samuel Pryor, Kristen Richards, Jennifer Rosenberg, Lori Ruk, Kavita Sadana, Trina Saunders, Leslie Schafer, Nancy Schroeder, Davetta Selma, Ladan Shelechi, Susan Stern, Belinda To, Victoria Tokar, Bonnie Treichel, Maria Tucker, Lauren Valenzuela, Ana Vasquez, Jessica Walsh, Donna Weaver, Andrea Yamsuan, Nina Zhang
WLALA Job Bank
Did you know that your WLALA membership allows you to access the WLALA Job Bank? The Job Bank has employment opportunities from different non-profit organizations and law firms. To view the WLALA Job Bank, please CLICK HERE.
WLALA Member Discounts
Did you know your WLALA membership comes with opportunities for discounts on everything from deposition services to dry cleaning? To view our current member discounts, please CLICK HERE
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WLALA Calendar of Events
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Local Bar Calendar of Events
To view the Calendar of Events for local bar organizations, please go to
Thank You to This Month’s Sponsors
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