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    Alex Barlow Appointed to The Texas Trial Lawyers Association Board of Directors

    November 24th, 2008

    Alex Barlow, Partner

    Alex Barlow, Partner

    Alex Barlow, a partner at Sanford Pinedo LLP and experienced Houston litigator, has been appointed to the Texas Trial Lawyers Association (TTLA) Board of Directors for 2009.  This appointment comes as Alex Barlow has also been appointed to the Continuing Legal Education (CLE) committee and Communications Committee.   Alex is well suited for these positions, having evinced a commitment to complex litigation on behalf of many who have been injured or harmed. His specific areas of practice have included toxic torts (benzene, asbestos, silica, and chemical exposure), environmental property damage, oil and gas royalty disputes, nursing home malpractice, and commercial litigation. Alex also represents a Fortune 500 company in ad valorem tax litigation. He earned a Bachelor of Liberal Arts Degree from the University of Texas as a participant in the prestigious Plan II program and his J.D. with honors from The University of Texas School of Law. In law school he was the recipient of the George E. Seay Endowed Presidential Scholarship and a member of the Order of the Coif, a national honorary society for law school students. Alex will be speaking at the mid-year 2009 meeting of the TTLA on the topic of Emerging Torts: Theories of Recovery.


    Approaching the Promised Land, by Trevin Franklin

    November 10th, 2008

    November 4, 2008 is a day that will forever live in infamy across the globe. To this day I am still in shock that America has elected its first African-American president. As I watched the news channels call the election I felt goose bumps and tears began to run down my face. The scenes of Grant Park in Chicago, Harlem, and Atlanta are forever engraved in my mind. One news organization showed the celebration in Atlanta and there was a shot of a young lady on her knees in tears of celebratory joy. This summed it up for millions of blacks in America. 

      Read the rest of this entry »


    V-Day for Obama and the Nation: A Step toward Healing and Change

    November 5th, 2008

    Gertrude Baines, the daughter of former slaves, cast her vote for Obama at 114 years of age!

    Gertrude Baines, the daughter of former slaves, cast her vote for Obama at 114 years of age!

    Tuesday, November 3, 2008, will go down in history as the day America elected a Black man, Barak Obama, to the presidency of the United States.  Trevin Franklin, a former Prairie View A&M student (a Historically Black University), and now a law student, sat with me at lunch yesterday unwilling to allow himself to hope too much that this nation would elect a Black man.  He stated “I don’t want to hope too much in case he loses.”  While this is a victory for democrats, it is also a victory for the nation—and one which rival John McCain was quick to note in his concession speech last evening.  The nation moved beyond the years in which Black Americans could not even eat in the same restaurants as White Americans, and selected Barack Obama to lead our nation through one of its darkest hours.  This sentiment was echoed across the nation, with many feeling that the great divide between White and Black has been breached—and healing begun. 

    "It has been wonderful!"

    Dr. McGriggs:

    Dr. Lee McGriggs, a professor of Political Science and Law at Prairie View A & M University outside of Houston, reiterated this point, stating “the work of the 60s laid the ground for what we see today.  The people who died did not give their lives in vein.”  When asked if this election will help heal the great divide between Blacks and Whites, Dr. McGriggs stated it was “a big step.”  He added: “The next step is economic.”  Dr. McGriggs said he believes in Barack and Michelle Obama, and feels they will reach across the aisle to help solve the problems of healthcare, transportation and energy, security, and help keep people in their homes who are faced with foreclosure. 
         Perhaps the best example of hope came when Gertrude Baines cast her vote. Mrs Baines was born in Georgia on April 6th 1894, the oldest African American alive today at 114 years of age, and yesterday cast her vote for Barack Obama.  Dr. McGriggs says that was one of the most wonderful stories he has heard of this election.  He added that he always knew this day would come, and remembers when Robert Kennedy predicted that America would have its first Black president in about 40 years.  “I think he got it right” Dr. McGriggs said with a smile in his voice.

     


    A Day of Optimism is Not Without Controversy

    November 4th, 2008

    Professor Joe White

    Professor Joe White

    Founding Partner, Shelly A. Sanford, is in the center of Cleveland, Ohio, on Election Day 2008.  Working in a what is, admittedly, a Democratic stronghold, Shelly Sanford reports that excitement and optimism rule the day.  She interviewed Joe White, a professor of international business and lifetime resident of East Cleveland.  He had just voted, and expressed his optimism at how wonderful it is to be in America today. He reiterated that America “is a wonderful country despite all the ill that has transcended.” Dr. White also said: “It is wonderful to see the consciousness of people risen to the point where they examine a person on his merits.  And if that is done collectively today, Obama will win.”

    sign3In another sign of guarded optimism, an African American veteran came out of the polling booth to circle the American flag before stopping to pray for our nation on Election Day 2008.

    But the day was not without its detractors, as Republican activists repeatedly came to the polling station to complain of election abuses, citing the placement of pro-Obama materials within 50 yards of the polling station.  The activists once brought local law enforcement officials, but no proof of any violation was visible.  While some see this as posturing in the event of a close election or even a possible recount, others see this as simply a matter of a heightened sense of the reality that every vote counts in this election year.


    Shelly A. Sanford and Alex Barlow: Getting Out the Vote in Ohio

    November 4th, 2008
    Founding Partner, Shelly A. Sanford Displays Her Election Credentails

    Founding Partner, Shelly A. Sanford Displays Her Election Credentails

    Founding Partner, Shelly Sanford, is in Cleveland, Ohio, at a polling station in the heart of “Obama Country.”  She has been working with the Ohio Voter Protection Team for several days now. As the morning progresses, Shelly has noted that there are many first-time voters, and this makes the day all the more exciting.  

          No Republican candidate has ever won the White House without winning Ohio.   Nonetheless, many states remain at play in this election, with record numbers of early voters pointing to heavy voter-day traffic at polls across the nation.  The polls are already closed in Dixville Notch, New Hampshire, where for the first time since 1968, the town has voted for a democrat . . . doing so overwhelmingly.  

    World Interest is Evident as a Canadian News Crew Interviews an Ohio Voter

    World Interest is Evident as a Canadian News Crew Interviews an Ohio Voter

    With a new administration coming, regardless of the outcome of today’s election, Shelly, Chris and Tony, attorneys at Sanford Pinedo LLP, joined with other attorneys across the nation in the Tuesday Morning Believer’s Caucus, to pray that God would direct this nation.