About Rebecca Mariscal
Rebecca Mariscal is an editor on Super Lawyers’ staff. She serves as editor for Southwest, Mountain States, Oklahoma and Indiana magazines, as well as being a writer, fact-checker and proofreader. She studied communication and journalism at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota where she was also a senior reporter for the university’s news site TommieMedia. She has previously worked for newspapers in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Her work has been featured in the Pioneer Press, Duluth News Tribune, Star-Observer and more.
Articles written by Rebecca Mariscal
Moving Forward
Three young attorneys on the outlook for the futureOf all the challenges facing the youngest generation of lawyers, one of the biggest has been navigating disruptions during the very first days of their careers. Thanks to the COVID-19 pandemic, Derrick Maultsby Jr. of Frost Brown Todd in Pittsburgh had to take his Bar exam remotely. In addition to abiding by the standard clothing rules, he had to be on camera at all times and was even told not to touch his face. “I was able to take it in a corporate office setting, but I felt for people who …
The Unicorn
Jessie Pellant turns a wild idea— a hybrid law firm/creative agency—into realityWhile working in intellectual property law at a large firm in the early 2010s, Jessie Pellant repeatedly tried to push the idea of reaching out to creative agencies to synergize between a client’s legal work and brand work. “We’re getting cease and desist letters for our client brands that were never researched and cleared, never vetted after they spent $20,000 on their branding package,” she says. “And I was like, ‘There needs to be a better system for this.’” Her idea wasn’t …
Farm Aid
Former farm kid Cecelia Neihouser Harper now represents agribusiness clientsCecelia Neihouser Harper grew up on a crop farm in the Francesville area, surrounded by a rotation of corn and soybeans. The oldest of four, she helped out as needed, learning to drive the tractor that pulled the grain cart in the fall and the anhydrous ammonia tanks for fertilizer in the spring. It’s not the easiest job for a young teenager. “It’s stressful because you don’t want to hit anything,” she says. “You don’t want to spill any corn or beans.” But she enjoyed the …
Good Behavior
Beth Hutchens’ behavioral therapy background brings depth to her immigration practiceAfter graduating from UNC with a political science degree, Beth Hutchens moved to San Francisco, planning to work on political campaigns. Instead, she took the first job she was offered, as a behavioral therapist. “I ended up loving it,” she says. The nonprofit FACES provided services to children with autism. Hutchens had an interest in psychology as an undergrad, but to prepare for the new role she attended classes at the University of Nevada at Reno followed by six weeks of training, and …
Paying It Forward
Why Payal Salsburg averages two hours a day of volunteer workWhen Payal Salsburg moved to Boston from Florida in 2012, the walk to her office took her six minutes. Today, it’s closer to 20. “I’m standing and talking to everybody, ‘Hey, I’ll see you next Sunday,’” she says. After starting a white-collar criminal defense practice at Laredo & Smith, Salsburg began volunteering as a way to feel more connected to the community—helping out at places like Rice Sticks and Tea Asian Food Pantry, St. Francis House day shelter, and Massachusetts …
Protecting the Future
Thirty-two moments, cases and people that have defined Kathleen Flynn Peterson’s careerAfter working for a few years as a nurse, Kathleen Flynn Peterson transitioned to the law in 1981. In the years since, she’s become one of the most celebrated medical malpractice attorneys in the state. We asked Peterson to share some of the most important elements of her life and career—so far. 1. Graduating with a bachelor of arts in nursing from St. Catherine University in 1976. 2. Her nursing experience—an asset in every case she’s handled. “The ability to understand the …
Travels With Nathalie
How Nathalie Bougenies’ travels helped shape her practiceNathalie Bougenies grew up in Ath, Belgium, surrounded by family who rarely left their small town, and her parents were determined that wouldn’t be her. So each year, starting when Bougenies was 9 months old, the family took a trip abroad. A visit to Tunisia when she was 10 or 11 stands out in her mind. “It was the first time that we went to a non-European country and where I felt very different because I looked so different,” she says. “People spoke my language, but the food, the …
Something Had to Be Done
How Annie Andrews led reform of the Charleston County Juvenile Detention CenterAnnie Andrews’ first visit to the Charleston County Juvenile Detention Center as a public defender was a shock. “I was immediately just taken aback by the conditions of the facility,” she says. The building had been constructed in the ’60s and never renovated. “There were plumbing issues where fecal matter and urine came up through the drains and into rooms where the kids slept on the floor due to overcrowding. There was barbaric punishment, all sorts of awful civil rights …
Where Native Culture and American Jurisprudence Meet
How Judy Dworkin’s Indian law practice led her to the tribal court benchIf there’s a common element in Judy Dworkin’s winding path to practicing Indian law and becoming a tribal court judge, it’s water. After earning a Ph.D. in geographical sciences with an emphasis on water resources at Clark University in Massachusetts in 1978, she taught at the University of Toronto before moving to the Department of Hydrology and Water Resources at the University of Arizona. There she worked for the U.S. Water Resources Council on various groundwater laws and management …
Belonging Somewhere
After many years, Rasha Zeyadeh Thompson has found a place in her countryGrowing up, Rasha Zeyadeh Thompson didn’t always have a strong sense of home. She is of Palestinian descent, but was born in Kuwait, where her grandparents immigrated in 1948. She arrived during the Gulf War, in a hospital that had been annexed by Iraq, giving her an Iraqi birth certificate. Her parents fled the conflict immediately thereafter, packing up everything they could in their car and heading to Jordan. “I just remember stories my dad would tell about passing these dead …
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