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Access to Justice Gala 2022

Our annual Access to Justice Gala honors our community leaders who go above and beyond to provide justice and hope for those who are less fortunate.

 

 

Honoring Dolores Huerta

Labor Activist &
Civil Rights Leader

Access to Justice Award

Co-founder of the United Farm Workers Association, Dolores Huerta is one of the most influential labor activists of the 20th century and a leader of the Chicano civil rights movement. Born in 1930 in Dawson, New Mexico, Huerta was the second of three children of Alicia and Juan Fernandez, a farm worker and miner who became a state legislator in 1938. Her parents divorced when Huerta was three years old, and her mother moved to Stockton, California with her children. Huerta’s grandfather helped raise Huerta and her two brothers while her mother juggled jobs as a waitress and cannery worker until she could buy a small hotel and restaurant.

Honoring E. Martin Estrada

United States Attorney,
Central District of California

Maynard Toll Award for Public Service

E. Martin Estrada serves as the United States Attorney for the Central District of California. Estrada now oversees the largest United States Attorney’s Office outside of Washington, D.C. The office, which currently employs approximately 270 attorneys, serves approximately 20 million residents in the counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo.

Prior to becoming the United States Attorney, Estrada was a partner at the law firm of Munger, Tolles & Olson where he focused on trials, complex litigation and investigations. There, in addition to representing corporate clients, Estrada handled high-impact pro bono matters in the areas of education, immigration and equal justice.

Excellence in Community Leadership Award

Honoring Brandon Smith

Executive Director & Co-Founder
Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program

Brandon N. Smith is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program (FFRP). Brandon helped found FFRP to help individuals who are formerly incarcerated and worked in fire camps overcome the barriers that prevent them from entering the professional field of fire fighting.

Honoring Royal Ramey

Chief Program Officer & Co-Founder
Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program

Royal Ramey is the Co-Founder and Chief Program Officer of the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program (FFRP). Royal founded FFRP to help individuals who are formerly incarcerated and worked in fire camps overcome the barriers that prevent them from entering the professional field of fire fighting.

Honoring Scali Rasmussen

Pro Bono Law Firm Award

Scali Rasmussen attorneys are thought leaders within their areas of practice, including a formidable knowledge of the automotive industry. The firm’s attorneys provide litigation services in a broad scope of practice areas as well as counsel and education on new and trending issues including distribution and franchise, consumer product safety, privacy and advertising and employment law.

Event Emcee

Giselle Fernandez
Anchor, Spectrum News 1

Since the start of her career as a journalist, Giselle Fernandez has been known for her cutting edge reporting in hot spots throughout the world and interviewing prominent global and local leaders. Today, this veteran anchor is on Your Morning on Spectrum News 1, helping Southern Californians get all the information they need to start their day, and on the Emmy Award-winning weekly series L.A. Stories with Giselle Fernandez, highlighting people who shape lives and create an impact throughout the community.

Thank You to Our 2022 Sponsors

— ANGEL —

— GUARDIAN ANGEL —

— GUARDIAN —

— Guardian ADVOCATE —

— ADVOCATE —

— PATRON —




Debra Fischer & Sherwin Frey

— PARTNER —

Martin & Karen Tachiki
Jim Hornstein & Victoria Diamantidis

LAFLA is following LA County Department of Public Health Guidance for preventing the spread of Covid-19.

For more information, please visit – http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/media/coronavirus/guidances.htm

Co-founder of the United Farm Workers Association, Dolores Huerta is one of the most influential labor activists of the 20th century and a leader of the Chicano civil rights movement. Born in 1930 in Dawson, New Mexico, Huerta was the second of three children of Alicia and Juan Fernandez, a farm worker and miner who became a state legislator in 1938. Her parents divorced when Huerta was three years old, and her mother moved to Stockton, California with her children. Huerta’s grandfather helped raise Huerta and her two brothers while her mother juggled jobs as a waitress and cannery worker until she could buy a small hotel and restaurant.

Alicia’s community activism and compassionate treatment of workers greatly influenced her daughter. Discrimination also helped shape Huerta. A prejudiced schoolteacher accused Huerta of cheating because her papers were too well-written. In 1945 at the end of World War II, white men brutally beat her brother for wearing a Zoot-Suit, a popular Latino fashion. Huerta received an associate teaching degree from the University of the Pacific’s Delta College. She briefly taught school in the 1950s, but seeing so many hungry farm children coming to school, she thought she could do more to help them by organizing farmers and farm workers.

In 1955 Huerta began her career as an activist when she co-founded the Stockton chapter of the Community Service Organization (CSO), which led voter registration drives and fought for economic improvements for Hispanics. She also founded the Agricultural Workers Association. Through a CSO associate, Huerta met activist César Chávez, with whom she shared an interest in organizing farm workers. In 1962, Huerta and Chávez founded the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA), the predecessor of the United Farm Workers’ Union (UFW), which formed three year later. Huerta served as UFW vice president until 1999. Despite ethnic and gender bias, Huerta helped organize the 1965 Delano strike of 5,000 grape workers and was the lead negotiator in the workers’ contract that followed. Throughout her work with the UFW, Huerta organized workers, negotiated contracts, advocated for safer working conditions including the elimination of harmful pesticides. She also fought for unemployment and healthcare benefits for agricultural workers. Huerta was the driving force behind the nationwide table grape boycotts in the late 1960s that led to a successful union contract by 1970. In 1973, Huerta led another consumer boycott of grapes that resulted in the ground-breaking California Agricultural Labor Relations Act of 1975, which allowed farm workers to form unions and bargain for better wages and conditions. Throughout the 1970s and ‘80s, Huerta worked as a lobbyist to improve workers’ legislative representation. During the 1990s and 2000s, she worked to elect more Latinos and women to political office and has championed women’s issues.

The recipient of many honors, Huerta received the Eleanor Roosevelt Human Rights Award in 1998 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2012. She has served as a board member of the Feminist Majority Foundation, the Secretary-Treasurer Emeritus of the United Farm Workers of America, and the President of the Dolores Huerta Foundation.

Martin Estrada serves as the United States Attorney for the Central District of California. Estrada now oversees the largest United States Attorney’s Office outside of Washington, D.C. The office, which currently employs approximately 270 attorneys, serves approximately 20 million residents in the counties of Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside, San Bernardino, Ventura, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo.

Prior to becoming the United States Attorney, Estrada was a partner at the law firm of Munger, Tolles & Olson where he focused on trials, complex litigation and investigations. There, in addition to representing corporate clients, Estrada handled high-impact pro bono matters in the areas of education, immigration and equal justice.

Estrada is a fellow of the American College of Trial Lawyers. He also was an Adjunct Professor for Loyola Law School’s Ninth Circuit Appellate Clinic, part of the Alarcón Advocacy Project, where his teams achieved success for indigent clients.

From 2007 to 2014, Estrada was an Assistant United States Attorney in the Central District of California. As a federal prosecutor, Estrada served as Deputy Chief of the Violent and Organized Crime Section and as the International Organized Crime Coordinator. He prosecuted a broad array of criminal violations, including the nation’s largest racketeering prosecution targeting members and associates of Eurasian organized crime; one of the country’s largest bank fraud and identity theft prosecutions, in which more than $8 million was stolen from elderly victims; and a major public corruption matter involving the illegal leaking of sensitive, under-seal information by a federal court clerk who tipped off organized crime figures before law enforcement could arrest them.

For his work as a prosecutor, Estrada received the U.S. Department of Justice’s prestigious Director’s Award for Superior Performance as well as other recognitions.

Estrada graduated with distinction from Stanford Law School and earned his undergraduate degree in history from the University of California, Irvine, where he graduated magna cum laude. Estrada served as a law clerk for U.S. District Judge Robert J. Timlin of the Central District of California and Judge Arthur L. Alarcón of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.

Brandon N. Smith is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program (FFRP). Brandon helped found FFRP to help individuals who are formerly incarcerated and worked in fire camps overcome the barriers that prevent them from entering the professional field of fire fighting. 

Brandon, a husband and a father, grew up in Altadena, California and has a Bachelor of Arts in African American and Liberal Studies from the University of California, Berkeley. In 2008, Brandon was incarcerated at Wasco State Prison. During his incarceration, Brandon was approached to join a Conservation Camp (“Fire Camp”). While initially reluctant to join, Brandon was ultimately convinced by the prospect of living and working closer to family and loved ones. Ultimately, Brandon was drawn to professional fire fighting after serving in a fire camp and feeling a sense of purpose and recognizing the opportunity to give back to the community. Brandon met his co-founder, Royal Ramey, at the Bautista Adult Conservation Fire Camp in Hemet in Riverside County.

Brandon was released in March 2014 after his sentence was reduced because of his work on a fire crew. After release, Brandon spent 18 months applying to fire stations before enrolling in a fire academy in Victorville and later graduated at the top of his class. In the summer of 2015, Smith got first professional assignment to fight Lake Fire. Shortly after, Brandon was hired by the US Forest Service in Sonora. Brandon comes to this work with 6+ seasons of extensive experience as an industry professional as a firefighter 1 and intermediate faller, having heavily utilized wildfire suppression, prevention, and fuels reduction skills.

During this period of his life as a professional wildland firefighter, Brandon consistently volunteered to visit Fire Camps to speak to incarcerated firefighters about how to find jobs in the Forest Service. Later in 2015, Brandon and Royal founded FFRP to help the thousands of others currently and formerly incarcerated in Fire Camps obtain gainful employment within this sector once they come home. Brandon is a firm believer that those trained and utilized by the State of California should be able to professionally utilize those same skills they have been trained in on reentry. He believes that this model is applicable to all trades taught and utilized by people while in prison nationwide, and that there should be both space and opportunity for them once they come home. Through FFRP’s work led by Brandon, the organization has helped more than 140 people attain gainful, family-winning employment.

For Brandon, FFRP represents a model for states to follow to provide structural support andgainful employment opportunities and prevent recidivism while filling a much needed field.

Royal Ramey is the Co-Founder and Chief Program Officer of the Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program (FFRP). Royal founded FFRP to help individuals who are formerly incarcerated and worked in fire camps overcome the barriers that prevent them from entering the professional field of fire fighting. 

Ramey grew up in San Fernando Valley, California. Growing up, Ramey intended on a career in business, but when was twenty years old he was sentenced to six years at the California Correctional Institution in Tehachapi. He was quickly transferred to Mississippi because of overcrowding in California. Ramey jumped on the opportunity to come home by joining a California Conservation Camp (“Fire Camp”) program in California.

Ramey met FFRP Co-Founder, Brandon Smith, at the Bautista Adult Conservation Fire Camp in Hemet, Riverside County. After his release in 2014, and with the drive to pursue a career as a firefighter, Ramey went from station to station but quickly encountered systemic inequities preventing him from obtaining employment. To bolster his application, Ramey pursued further training at Victor Valley College and after eleven months and graduating top of his class he received an opportunity to join the Mojave Greens (US Forest Service) in San Bernardino, California.

To create opportunities for the thousands of individuals released from Fire Camp that were not afforded to him, Royal co-founded The Forestry and Fire Recruitment Program (FFRP) with Brandon Smith. To him, FFRP represents a pathway for the thousands of highly qualified individuals with a similar background to secure careers professionally despite extensive training by the State. As FFRP’s Chief Program Officer, Chief Ramey sets all expectations around quality of training, fuel mitigation project execution, and program curriculum. Royal created the Buffalo Hand Crew, a 20-person crew and co-agency of FFRP, that offers transitional employment opportunities to FFRP graduates, that provides fire prevention and suppression services statewide.

Royal has spent more than ten years as a wildland firefighter in the US Forest Service, CAL FIRE, and, now, the Buffalos Handcrew as the Chief Executive Director. He is intensely aware of what is needed to train individuals to excel at an advanced level within the forestry and fire sector. FFRP’s placement of more than 170 people directly into this sector speaks to his accomplishments and work ethic.

Royal recently received a Pardon from Governor Newsom on behalf of the State of California.

Since the start of her career as a journalist, Giselle Fernandez has been known for her cutting edge reporting in hot spots throughout the world and interviewing prominent global and local leaders. Today, this veteran anchor is on Your Morning on Spectrum News 1, helping Southern Californians get all the information they need to start their day, and on the Emmy Award-winning weekly series L.A. Stories with Giselle Fernandez, highlighting people who shape lives and create an impact throughout the community. 

Giselle has held many titles throughout her career. Aside from anchor and journalist, she’s also been deemed author, philanthropist, as well as president, director, and producer of her own production company and strategic messaging company. She is a six-time Emmy Award winner and recipient of numerous honors and awards in the fields of journalism and philanthropy. Out of Giselle’s portfolio of reporting, a notable moment for her was the rare interview she did with Fidel Castro. She is also incredibly proud of her documentary titled, “Our Story,” which raised awareness of the healthcare crisis facing low-income children in the Latin community.