Tiffany Cartwright

Tiffany Cartwright

Partner at MacDonald Hoague & Bayless

Accurate profile (2 sources)

Practice

Rating 4.72 stars 1 Reviews, 0 Recommendations

Practice area: Civil rights, Employment and labor, Appeals, Criminal defense

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About

Tiffany is dedicated to helping her clients stand up for their rights against powerful institutions, whether a corporation, a police department, or a prosecutor.  Since joining MacDonald Hoague & Bayless in 2014, she has focused on civil rights and employment litigation, and also represents clients in criminal trial, appellate, and post-conviction proceedings.
Tiffany is a strong believer in the power of preparation and is committed to knowing the facts of her cases inside and out.  Her clients appreciate her attention to detail and ability to translate complicated cases into compelling legal arguments.  She is a passionate written and oral advocate for her clients at all stages of a case, whether in pre-trial settlement negotiations, at trial, or on appeal.
Tiffany graduated from Stanford Law School in 2010, where she was a member of the Stanford Supreme Court Litigation Clinic, gaining a wide range of appellate experience writing petitions for review, merits briefs, and amicus briefs filed in the United States Supreme Court.  During law school, Tiffany also worked at the Federal Public Defender’s office in Seattle and at the United States Department of Justice Public Integrity Unit, which prosecutes public corruption cases.
After law school, Tiffany served as a judicial clerk to the Honorable Betty Binns Fletcher of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals and the Honorable Dana Fabe of the Alaska Supreme Court.  Prior to joining MacDonald Hoague and Bayless, Tiffany was a litigation associate at Jenner & Block in Chicago, where she litigated a variety of cases at the state and federal level and maintained an active pro bono practice focusing on death penalty appeals.  She was a co-author of an important amicus brief relied on by the United States Supreme Court in Hall v. Florida, which held that Florida’s definition of intellectual disability in death penalty cases violated the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

Contact

Address: 705 2nd Ave Ste 1500, Seattle, WA, USA

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