Browse Super Lawyers articles by year in California
2015
Details, Details
How Kathryn Doi’s penchant for wading through regulations helped save dental coverage for millions of Californians
I Don’t Know What I’d Do Otherwise
An oral history of attorneys who remember wearing fedoras and watch fobs, hopping the “C” train to the office, and triumphantly negotiating a salary of $9,000. A year.
When Lawyers Need Lawyers
Karen Goodman defends attorneys facing malpractice claims; Bill Gwire puts them in the hot seat
Annette Hurst: Defending Your Right to Skip Ads
How she got a judge to reject broadcasters’ demands for an injunction against DISH Network
Flip the Script
When Luke Ellis gets a case, the first thing he does is tear it apart
‘We All Need Help Sometimes’
Why Russell Austin can’t say no to community service
Ana de Albaâ's Homegrown Activism
The daughter of immigrant workers returns to Central Valley, law degree in hand
The Five-Tool Player
Inspired by an injustice, bored by the CIA, business litigator Michelle J. Correll keeps moving
Right Way for Right-of-Way
Eminent domain attorney and Expo Line advocate Bradford B. Kuhn on why the easiest way from Point A to Point B isn’t necessarily a straight line
The Return of Lenny Sanz
Employment plaintiff attorney Leonard H. Sansanowicz learned empathy as an actor opposite (among others) Steve Carrell
Prisoners of Wars
From Gitmo to Orange County, Cindy Pánuco fights for inmate rights
Rescuing businesses and other animals
Lindsey L. Smith on the emotional burden of bankruptcy
A Quintessential American Story
Ken Lee’s journey from Seoul, to Koreatown, to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue
‘Hey Chick, Want to Go to Court?’
An oral history of the good, the bad and the ugly experiences of the first wave of female attorneys
Indubitably Holm
Top med-mal attorney Margaret Holm wants you to know she’s not that interesting
The Talent Behind the Talent
Candace Carlo is like Teri Garr in a Game of Thrones town
O Coach, My Coach
What Lester J. Friedman learned from John Wooden
Too Sexy for My … Job?
Employment defense attorney Samantha N. Hoffman, scion of a surfing clan, on gender-plus discrimination cases