Browse Super Lawyers articles by year in Arizona
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The Voice
Booker T. Evans Jr. speaks softly but powerfully for clients who might otherwise go unheard

The Art of Advice
David Wm. Engelman on what he’s learned after 40 years of law and a lifetime of helping the less fortunate

Speaking the Language
James A. Ryan approaches business law as only a former NSA intelligence agent could: by decrypting coded information and putting the pieces back together

Embedded
Arizona Justice Project founder Larry A. Hammond speaks about the cases that have “gut-hooked” him

Perfect Balance
Pamela Overton Risoleo juggles high-stakes litigation, her family and empowering young women

All Along the Watchtower
Media lawyer and Dylan sound-alike David J. Bodney protects the media’s access to public records

Word for Word
What advice would you give to young attorneys today?

The Sailor
Legendary Phoenix defense attorney Larry Debus is equally adept at navigating sea currents and jury trials

Serving Injured Parties Five, and Only Five, at a Time
When people hire personal injury attorney Patrick McGroder, they know they’re getting his full attention

All Things Chapters 7 and 11
Lewis & Roca’s Susan Freeman climbs mountains and bankruptcy ranks

In Cicero’s Footsteps
Phoenix attorney Shawn Aiken on law, Latin and the perfect hazelnut cheesecake

Q&A: Tom Salerno
Tom Salerno on saving hospitals, handling obnoxious lawyers and earning blood wings

‘I Like Working With People Whose Hair Is on Fire’
Tom Curzon keeps his cool-at work and on the taekwondo mat

Easy Rider
Marc Lieberman's whole life is an adventure. Even his seemingly sedate law practice

Raising Arizona
The status quo is not good enough for Amy Gittler

Give Her Your Tired, Your Poor …
Gloria Goldman fights for the American dream

Q&A with Lonnie Williams, Quarles & Brady, Phoenix
Labor and employment trial lawyer Lonnie Williams talks to Super Lawyers about his struggle to be taken seriously, the art of trying a case and what it's like hosting a cooking show.

The Bad Guys’ Good Guy
Tom Henze finds something to defend in Arizona's most notorious murderers and corporate criminals