Allison Margolin is an American attorney and author of Jury Nullifications and Reasonable Doubt and Just Dope: A Leading Attorney's Personal Journey Inside the War on Drugs. Margolin became a well known criminal defense attorney, and early on became known for her advocacy for drug legalization and criminal justice reform. She is the daughter of Bruce Margolin, one of the first lawyers to champion efforts to decriminalize marijuana in the 1970s. In 1999 Margolin completed her undergraduate at Columbia University where she graduated magna cum laude in Political Science and obtained a certificate in Creative Writing, and taught a section of Judicial Politics, in connection with receiving the Arthur Rose Teaching Assistantship. She then entered Harvard Law School. Her Harvard application essay
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| - Allison Margolin is an American attorney and author of Jury Nullifications and Reasonable Doubt and Just Dope: A Leading Attorney's Personal Journey Inside the War on Drugs. Margolin became a well known criminal defense attorney, and early on became known for her advocacy for drug legalization and criminal justice reform. She is the daughter of Bruce Margolin, one of the first lawyers to champion efforts to decriminalize marijuana in the 1970s. In 1999 Margolin completed her undergraduate at Columbia University where she graduated magna cum laude in Political Science and obtained a certificate in Creative Writing, and taught a section of Judicial Politics, in connection with receiving the Arthur Rose Teaching Assistantship. She then entered Harvard Law School. Her Harvard application essay (en)
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| - Marijuana Advocate & Attorney (en)
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| - Allison Margolin is an American attorney and author of Jury Nullifications and Reasonable Doubt and Just Dope: A Leading Attorney's Personal Journey Inside the War on Drugs. Margolin became a well known criminal defense attorney, and early on became known for her advocacy for drug legalization and criminal justice reform. She is the daughter of Bruce Margolin, one of the first lawyers to champion efforts to decriminalize marijuana in the 1970s. In 1999 Margolin completed her undergraduate at Columbia University where she graduated magna cum laude in Political Science and obtained a certificate in Creative Writing, and taught a section of Judicial Politics, in connection with receiving the Arthur Rose Teaching Assistantship. She then entered Harvard Law School. Her Harvard application essay argued that all drugs should be legalized. Margolin graduated Harvard with a J.D. in 2002. Margolin began her legal career representing people with terminal diseases who were facing criminal charges for marijuana activity. By 2008, she had a reputation for getting cases dismissed, and for recovering marijuana plants that had been seized by police. She has represented growers and distributors in marijuana cases in both state and federal court, including the Supreme Court of California and the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. Margolin is based in Beverly Hills, California and also has an office in Yreka, California, where she practices criminal defense, code enforcement defense, and water law. She has currently been profiled for her work in the Asian American discrimination case, Lo et al v. County of Siskiyou et al. She initially gained notoriety for "unorthodox ads" that proclaimed her "L.A.'s dopest attorney". Margolin was one of the first attorneys to advertise her law practice on YouTube. She is a founding partner of the law firm Margolin & Lawrence, where she practices medical marijuana regulatory and business law, as well as federal and state criminal defense. Margolin is also the author of Jury Nullifications and Reasonable Doubt, published by Phoenix Books in January 2008. As a cannabis lawyer, she is an advocate for regulations that remedy the effects of the drug war and promote social equity. From 2018 to 2023 she was named a SuperLawyer by Thomson Reuters and was selected to Rising Stars 2010 to 2012 and 2015 to 2017. She is the only cannabis attorney in the United States with this distinction. (en)
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