🎙Episode #013: Tiffany Wright (Civil Rights Lawyer and Clinic Co-Director at Howard Law)
👋🏻 Greetings from chilly Washington, D.C. to all 360 of you on the podcast e-mail list.
In this week’s episode of the podcast I speak with my Georgetown University Law School classmate, Tiffany Wright.
Tiffany is the Co-Director of the Howard University Law School's Human and Civil Right's Clinic. Tiffany is a graduate of the University of Maryland and the Georgetown University Law Center where she completed her law degree at night while also serving as Editor-in-Chief of the Georgetown Law Journal's Annual Review of Criminal Procedure and working full time as a law clerk and paralegal at the United States Attorney's Office for the District of Maryland.
Before her position at Howard, Tiffany worked as an associate at two prominent DC law firms: WilmerHale and Orrick, Herrington, and Sutcliffe LLP (where she remains a Managing Associate).
Tiffany started her legal career as a law clerk to three federal judges in Washington, D.C.: Judge Royce Lamberth (DDC), Judge David Tatel (DC Circuit), and Justice Sonia Sotomayor (U.S. Supreme Court).
In our conversation, we discussed her remarkable path to becoming a lawyer that began with a family tragedy, took a detour with some helpful advice from a lawyer who came to her aid as a child, and continues today with her role leading the charge to protect the rights of those who need that protection the most. We also discussed how Tiffany was able to complete law school at night with a full-time job and a young son at home, the many skills she learned as a law clerk including how to write opinions in complex and technical areas, the role and strategy behind amicus briefs including those drafted by her clinic, the power of representation and diversity in our profession, and how to best integrate the policy behind the law, into written legal advocacy.
If you want to learn more about Tiffany, her story has also been featured in the Washington Post and she can be found on Twitter @MooreWright05.
I hope you learn something from this interview and as always please let me know if you have any comments or recommendations.
Stay healthy and see you next week,
Jonah