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The organization was founded in California on March 20, 1972, as La Raza National Lawyers Association; [1] its first president was Mario G. Obledo. [4] The organization's name was changed to Hispanic National Bar Association and reincorporated in the District of Columbia in 1984. [5]
San Diego Municipal Court (1979–1998); San Diego Superior Court (1998–2000) California: retired: Ana M. Bravo [72] Sacramento County Superior Court (Commissioner: appt. 2006) California: inactive: David Briones [73] United States District Court for the Western District of Texas (1994– ) Texas: active: Francisco P. Briseño [74]
R. C. O. Benjamin (1884): [4] [5] First African American male lawyer admitted to the San Francisco Bar Association (1887) Thomas Pearson: [229] First African American male lawyer to practice in the U.S. District Court in San Francisco, California (1905) Chan Chung Wing (1918): [18] [19] First Chinese American male lawyer in San Francisco ...
El Centro de la Raza, a community center in Seattle; Centro Cultural de la Raza, a cultural center in San Diego, California; Galería de la Raza, a San Francisco Bay Area art gallery; National Council of La Raza, a political advocacy group; La Raza Nation, a Chicago-based gang; La Raza National Lawyers Association, a legal organization
San Francisco City Attorneys (16 P) Pages in category "Lawyers from San Francisco" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 216 total.
“The lawyers found opportunities in ad space that wasn't available before.” During the pandemic, personal injury lawyer James Wang was pictured wearing a mask on billboards around Los Angeles.
San Francisco Trial Lawyers Association [16] San Mateo County Trial Lawyers Association [17] Black Women Lawyers Association of Northern California [18] California Association of Black Lawyers [19] Charles Houston Bar Association [20] Colorado. Colorado Trial Lawyers Association [21] Connecticut. Connecticut Trial Lawyers Association [22] Delaware
Felicia Marcus, former chair of the California State Water Resources Control Board, said that the state constitution includes a "prohibition against waste and unreasonable use."