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Meet Our Contributors
Each issue of LAT
magazine is supported by a talented group of contributors:
our
writers and
our editorial advisory board. Below you will find more
information about these experts and their invaluable contributions
to the magazine.
Our Writers
All of
the articles in Legal Assistant Today
are original material written by expert authors. Our columnists are
selected because of their experience both in the paralegal field and
the selected topic. The subject matter of each article is a
collaboration between the authors and LAT
’s editorial team, and is based on the writer’s expertise and
reader feedback. Each article is fact checked by the editorial staff
to ensure the accuracy of published information. Below is an
introduction to our regular columnists and writers.
Catherine Astl, CLA,
is a civil litigation trial practice legal assistant working for T.
Patton Youngblood, Jr., in Tampa, Fla., in the areas of personal
injury, medical malpractice,
entertainment
and
criminal
law. Astl is the author of "Behind the Bar –
Inside the Paralegal Profession" (iUniverse, 2003).
Christy Hall Benson, CLA,
has more than 15 years of paralegal experience and lives in Concord,
N.C. She has a Bachelor of Arts in journalism and mass communication
from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a paralegal
degree from Meredith College in Raleigh, N.C. Benson has written
many articles on legal writing and can be reached for questions or
comments at chbenson[at]ctc.net.
Brett Burney
is principal of Burney Consultants in Cleveland, where he focuses
his time on helping clients bridge the chasm between the legal and
technology frontiers of electronic discovery. You can e-mail him at
burney[at]burneyconsultants.com
Therese A. Cannon is
the associate director of the Western Association of Schools and
Colleges, Senior Commission in Alameda, Calif.
She also serves as the educational consultant to the American Bar
Association Standing Committee on Paralegals. She is the author
of “Ethics and Professional Responsibility for Paralegals” and “A
Concise Guide to Paralegal Ethics,” both published by Aspen
Publishers, Inc., and is co-author of “Paralegals, Profitability,
and the Future,” published by the ABA. She has been teaching and
lecturing on legal ethics for more than 25 years.
Cynthia S. Couch
has been a paralegal for more than 23 years. She
has worked for an electric utility corporation located in Kansas for
the past 20 years, specializing in the areas of corporate and
securities law. Before commencing her career as a paralegal, she
earned degrees in French and paralegal studies from Wichita State
University in Wichita, Kan.
Alisa Driscoll
is a freelance writer based in Orange County,
Calif.
Amanda Flatten
is the former editor and publisher of
LAT. She currently is the editor of
Dallas/Fort Worth House & Home magazine based in Dallas.
Mark A. Gediman,
library director for Best Best & Krieger in Riverside, Calif., has
more than 18 years of experience in law firm library management. He
has been with BB&K since 2000, and speaks and writes frequently
about law library management issues.
Oliver M. Gierke
is a litigation case manager in the litigation/IP
practice of White & Case, a leading global law firm with more than
2,300 lawyers in 37 offices in 25 countries.
Mary Girsch-Bock
is an independent business and software
consultant from Rio Rancho, N.M., who currently specializes in legal
and property management software.
Jeffrey A. Helewitz, Esq.,
received his juris doctorate and master of laws degree from
Georgetown University Lw Center, and his masters of business
administration from new York University. He is the author of 20
legal texts and more than a dozen legal articles covering a wide
range of legal theory, and he is a mediator and an arbitrator. He
has been an adjunct professor of law and an adjunct professor of
paralegal studies at various schools in the New York area.
Currently, he is a court attorney to a New York City Court judge.
Nancy B. Heller, RP,
has been a litigation paralegal since 1978, and has been employed
with the Columbus, Ohio-based law firm of Vorys, Sater,
Seymour
and Pease for the past 20 years. She has been a frequent seminar
lecturer on the topic of ethics and is a co-author of the National
Federation of Paralegal Associations’ Model Code of Ethics. Since
1999, she has served on the adjunct faculty for the Capital
University Law School Paralegal Program where she teaches Ethics and
Law Office Practice and Civil Litigation II: Trial Preparation and
Practice. She also is a co-author of the ethics section for NFPA’s
Paralegal Advanced Competency Exam Study Manual.
Milton Hooper
is a litigation support specialist in Macon, Ga. He has worked in
trial graphics, document management and courtroom presentation
technology since 1996. Hooper has been an instructor of Microsoft
PowerPoint and Verdict Systems' Sanction II a the National Advocacy
Center in Columbia, S.C.
Stacey Hunt, CLA, CAS,
is a graduate of
the Fresno
City College paralegal program and a litigation paralegal
with Duggan Smith in San Luis Obispo, Calif. She is the
co-author of Evidence Management for the
Paralegal (Cengage, 2007), as well as two other paralegal books.
Hunt taught legal writing and ethics for the paralegal studies
program at
California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo. She is a past president of the
California Alliance of Paralegal Associations and currently is working
on modules for the Commission for Advanced California Paralegal
Specialization’s new online
program.
Melody Ip
is a freelance writer based in Seattle.
Sally A. Kane, J.D.,
is a freelance writer specializing in legal and career topics. She
has over a decade of experience in the legal industry as a paralegal
and an attorney. For more information, visit her legal careers Web
site at
http://legalcareers.about.com
Tammy R. Pettinato
is a law librarian and lecturer all the
University of California, Los Angeles School of Law in Los Angeles.
Kim Plonsky
has been a paralegal for over 30 years, specializing in civil
litigation of all types, and presently is working in Lafayette, LA.,
as a freelance paralegal and writer. Plonksy recently was selected
as a Court Appointed Special Advocate for children for the 15th
Judicial District, an entity of Louisiana CASA.
Carolyn M. Saenz, AACP,
is a senior paralegal at Western-Southern Life Insurance Company in
Cincinnati, where she has been employed since 1995. She is the
membership director for the American Alliance of Paralegals, Inc.,
and is on the advisory council of the Cincinnati Paralegal
Association. She is an adjunct instructor and advisory board member
at The College of Mount St. Joseph in Cincinnati.
Lori Thompson
is a paralegal specialist for the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation headquarters in Washington, D.C., where she has been
employed since March 1991 and works with the legal division's
consumer/ compliance section. Thompson currently is serving as the
National Federation Paralegal Associations' coordinator for the Navy
Legalman and Military Paralegal Outreach Program and is the
immediate past NFPA Pro Bono
coordinator and liaison to the ABA Standing Committee on
Pro Bono
Public Service. She was the recipient of NFPA's 2000 Individual
Pro Bono
Award and the National Capital Area Paralegal Association's 2007
Pro Bono
Service Award.
Jamie Ann Tyo
is a freelance journalist and former managing
editor of LAT.
Our Editorial Advisory Board
The Editorial
Advisory Board was established in 1999 and consists of 12 respected
leaders from a variety of legal backgrounds, including paralegals in
many different specialties, attorneys and paralegal educators and
managers. Each of our Board members has 20 years or more of
experience in the legal field, and they each provide invaluable
contributions to the magazine by supplying LAT with ideas, contacts
and feedback. In addition, since 1999,
LAT ’s
Editorial Advisory Board has selected the Paralegal of the Year and
runners up, and since 2003, has selected the Rookie Paralegal of the
Year.
Therese A. Cannon
is
the associate director of the Western Association of Schools and
Colleges, Senior Commission in
Alameda, Calif.
She also is the educational consultant to the ABA Standing
Committee on Paralegals. She is the author of “Ethics and
Professional Responsibility for Paralegals,” now in its fifth
edition, and “A Concise Guide to Paralegal Ethics,” both published
by Aspen Publishers, Inc., and is co-author of “Paralegals,
Profitability, and the Future,” published by the ABA. She has been
lecturing on legal ethics for more than 25 years.
Lana Clark
is a
California
attorney with offices in Santa Barbara, Calif., and
Solvang,
Calif. Her work involves
corporate, business, and estates and trust law. Prior to becoming an
attorney, Clark was a litigation paralegal for 20 years, a paralegal
instructor and a columnist for LAT. She also teaches legal analysis
and writing at Santa Barbara College of Law in
Santa Barbara, Calif.
Nancy B. Heller, RP,
has been a litigation paralegal since 1978, and has been employed
with the Columbus, Ohio-based law firm of Vorys, Sater,
Seymour
and Pease for the past 24 years. She has been a frequent seminar
lecturer on the topic of ethics and is a co-author of NFPA’s Model
Code of Ethics. Since 1999, she has served on the adjunct faculty
for the Capital University Law School Paralegal Program where she
teaches Ethics and Law Office Practice, and Civil Litigation II:
Trial Preparation and Practice. She also is a co-author of the
ethics section for NFPA’s Paralegal Advanced Competency Exam Study
Manual.
Stacey Hunt, CLA, CAS,
is a graduate of
the Fresno
City College paralegal program and a litigation paralegal
with Duggan Smith in San Luis Obispo, Calif. She is the
co-author of Evidence Management for the
Paralegal (Cengage, 2007), as well as two other paralegal books.
Hunt taught legal writing and ethics for the paralegal studies
program at
California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo. She is a past president of the
California Alliance of Paralegal Associations and currently is working
on modules for the Commission for Advanced California Paralegal
Specialization’s new online
program.
Sybil Taylor Aytch
has
been a paralegal for more than 20 years in
Phoenix and New York,
specializing in commercial bankruptcy/litigation, and is an adjunct
faculty member of the paralegal program at
Phoenix
College in Phoenix. Active in paralegal organizations
for most of her career, she currently serves as NFPA’s Ethics Board
chair.
Brad Baber
is the
paralegal manager in Troutman Sanders’ Atlanta office. He earned
his bachelor’s degree from Wabash
College in Crawfordsville,
Ind., and a paralegal certificate from Midlands Technical
College in
Columbia, S.C.
Baber has more than 20 years of paralegal management experience and
formerly worked as a paralegal in the areas of bankruptcy and
litigation. He has been an instructor in the paralegal program at
Midlands Technical
College and is a former
columnist for LAT. Baber is an active member of the International
Paralegal Management Association.
Michele Boerder
is a
28-year paralegal with K&L Gates in
Dallas. She has
an associate degree from the El Centro College Paralegal Program in Dallas, and a bachelor’s degree from the University of North Texas
in Denton, Texas. She is a Board Certified
Paralegal-Civil Trial through the Texas Board of Legal
Specialization, and served on the TBLS Paralegal Civil Trial
Commission. She is a NALA Certified Paralegal and a past president
of the Dallas Area Paralegal Association. Boerder has served on the
State Bar of Texas Paralegal Committee since 1991 and was past
president of the bar’s paralegal division, and also has served on
NFPA’s Paralegal Advanced Competency Exam Standards Committee.
Paul D. Guymon
has
been the coordinator of the paralegal program at
William Rainey Harper
College in
Palatine, Ill.,
since 1995. Guymon graduated cum laude with a bachelor’s degree in
political science from Utah
State University
in Logan, Utah,
in 1977, and received his juris doctorate from Western State
University College of Law in
Fullerton, Calif., in 1980. He left the full time
practice of law in 1990, and worked in and directed the paralegal
program at California State
University, San
Bernardino in
San Bernardino,
Calif., for five years. He became
a member of the board of directors of the American Association for
Paralegal Education in 1996, serving as the president for the
1999-2000 term.
Bruce F. Hamm, JD,
received his bachelor’s degree and juris doctorate from
Syracuse University in
Syracuse,
N.Y., where he currently is the
director of legal studies.
Hamm
served on the board of directors of AAfPE and the New York State Bar
Association Law Practice Management Committee, and currently is on
the editorial advisory board for the IPMA’s Paralegal Management
magazine. He is active in several
ABA
sections and regularly does ABA Approval site visits. He has been on
the NALA Certified Legal Assistant Certifying Board and is on the
NFPA PACE Standards Committee. He is a member of the Onondaga County
Bar Association Paralegals Committee, the board of directors and the
Bar Reporter editorial board.
Francine Shay, CP, FRP,
is a paralegal manager at Lewis, Longman & Walker in
West Palm Beach, Fla.
She is active in several paralegal associations and advisory boards,
has authored portions of a paralegal studies textbook, and has
written and presented articles on paralegal career development and
law firm ethics.
Anita Tebbe
has been
program director of the Johnson County Community College
Paralegal/Legal Nurse Consultant Program in
Overland Park, Kan.,
for more than 20 years. She currently is chair of the ABA Standing
Committee on Paralegals’ Approval Commission. She has been active in
AAfPE, serving in numerous positions on the board, including
president. Tebbe has a master’s degree in education from the
University
of Missouri,
Kansas City and also is a licensed
Kansas
attorney.
Marilyn Wass, CP, CAS,
a practicing paralegal for over 30 years, currently works in the
Newport Beach, Calif., office of Lopez McHugh, specializing
in mass tort/product liability litigation. She received her
bachelor’s degree and paralegal certificate from the
University
of California, Los Angeles and has held various positions in
paralegal associations at local, state and national levels.
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