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Duffy opened Duffy Law, LLC in 2015. The firm mainly works on Title IX and college-focused cases, but also retains a team of criminal defense attorneys representing individuals accused of federal and state crimes. Duffy has authored several articles, including a law review article on Title IX.
Consuegra spent 13 seasons as head coach at Charlotte, compiling a 225-169 record. She was an assistant coach at MU from 2004-11. The 45-year-old Consuegra replaces Megan Duffy, who took the job ...
Consuegra went 225-169 in her 13 years at Charlotte as the 49ers earned one NCAA Tournament berth in 2022 and made six WNIT appearances. ... She takes over for Megan Duffy, ...
Cara Ashley Consuegra (born March 4, 1979) [1] is an American women's basketball coach, currently the head coach at Marquette. [2] Previously, she had been the head coach with the Charlotte 49ers women's basketball team, [ 3 ] and before that she spent 7 seasons as an assistant coach at Marquette.
He joined the law firm Chuck & Fujiyama in Honolulu, Hawaii as an associate. In 1975, Duffy became a senior partner and the firm was renamed Fujiyama, Duffy & Fujiyama. [ 3 ] Duffy retired from Fujiyama, Duffy & Fujiyama in 2000 and worked as a mediator from 2000 until his appointment to the Hawaii State Supreme Court in 2003.
Consuegra is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Agustín Díaz De Mera García Consuegra (born 1947), Spanish politician; Cara Consuegra (born 1979), American basketball coach; David Consuegra (1939–2004), Colombian graphic designer and illustrator; Hugo Consuegra (born 1929), Cuban-American architect and artist
Attorney Brett Gibbs claimed to have—but never produced—an original notarized signature of "Alan Cooper, Manager of Ingenuity 13 LLC." [58] [59]On May 6, 2013, Judge Wright sanctioned Prenda Law and its "principals" Steele, Hansmeier, and Duffy, along with Gibbs, whom he termed "attorneys with shattered law practices", $81,319.72 (of which half was punitive) [4]: p.10 for "brazen ...
Upon returning to San Francisco, he chose to join William Coblentz's Coblentz, Patch, Duffy & Bass LLP, rather than the law firm co-founded by his grandfather William Orrick Sr., Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe. [4] Orrick practiced at the Coblentz firm for about 25 years, from 1984 to 2009.