Ad
related to: district of columbia bar lookup
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The District of Columbia Bar (DCB) is the mandatory bar association of the District of Columbia. [2] It administers the admissions, licensing, and discipline functions for lawyers licensed to practice in the District. It is to be distinguished from the Bar Association of the District of Columbia, [3] which is a voluntary bar.
The Women’s Bar Association of the District of Columbia (WBA or Association) is a voluntary bar association in metropolitan Washington, D.C. The WBA has more than 800 members and was founded in 1917.
United States Attorneys for the District of Columbia (40 P) Pages in category "Lawyers from Washington, D.C." The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 753 total.
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, equivalent to a state supreme court. Superior Court of the District of Columbia, local trial court of general jurisdiction; Federal courts located in Washington, D.C.
The United States District Court for the District of Columbia (in case citations, D.D.C.) is a federal district court in Washington, D.C. Along with the United States District Court for the District of Hawaii and the High Court of American Samoa, it also sometimes handles federal issues that arise in the territory of American Samoa, which has no local federal court or territorial court.
Damich is admitted to the Bars of the Supreme Court of the United States, the Federal Circuit, and the District of Columbia. [4] He is a member of the District of Columbia Bar Association, the Bar Association of the District of Columbia, and the Association Litteraire et Artistique Internationale.
Michael Desmond is a member of various associations: (1) American Bar Association, Section of Taxation (2000–present); Council director (2017–present); chair and vice chair, Standards of Tax Practice Committee (2012-2017); chair and vice chair, Tax Shelters Committee (2008-2012); (2) District of Columbia Bar Association, Tax Section (2000 ...
In 1977, Abramson became a partner in Sachs, Greenebaum & Taylor, where he would remain until 1990. In January 1991, he became the first African-American head of the Office of Bar Counsel for the District of Columbia Court of Appeals, [3] supervising investigations of attorneys alleged to have violated the Rules of Professional Responsibility.