Trial Lawyer’s Journal is built on the voices of trial lawyers like you. Share your journey, insights, and experiences through articles, interviews, and our podcast, Celebrating Justice.
Sign up for our newsletter to get the latest from TLJ.
By Sally Cook
It was not part of my 25-year plan to live on top of a remote mountain in Santa Barbara, California. It was not a part of my plan to build a place of refuge for girls rescued from sex trafficking.
It was not part of my plan to leave behind friends and family to fight the modern-day slavery that exists on my own doorstep. In fact, as a city girl from Los Angeles with a successful career in the entertainment industry, it was something that was definitely not on my radar.
Luckily, it was a part of God’s plan. And because of it, I am more of the woman I was created to be.
Over a decade ago, I was visiting a local church when I heard the following: “Sex trafficking is the fastest growing criminal industry in the USA and the average age of entry is 12 years old1. ”. When I heard this statistic, I was horrified. Twelve years old! I thought of my 12-year-old niece. I thought of the sweet 12-year-old girl next door. I thought of so many innocent young girls ensnared in this depravity, and I knew I couldn’t just stand by. The lioness in me raised her head and roared, “No way, not our vulnerable ones, not on my watch!’ It’s not that I felt incredibly brave or ready to fight; it was that I knew I couldn’t do anything.
And nothing in my world was ever going to be the same again.
Big bad oil companies and their big bad, money-hungry legal teams. Sound familiar? Across the globe, corporations have tried to build countless new projects at the expense of environmental sanctuaries, oceans, wildlife, and our communities. Key word:tried.
You work hard. Long hours, stressful cases, endless meetings — always striving for the best, always at the top of your game. As a trial lawyer, your focus is unwavering, your dedication unmatched. But every so often, even the most committed attorneys need a moment to breathe, step back, and find a space that’s just…
DANIEL KAUFMAN’S PAINTINGS are “something strange.” They seem to slice their way into reality from an unusual angle and at a stroke. His actual artistic process is nothing like that, of course. A similar gulf separates the artist’s own personal manner from the manner of these canvases as one stands gazing into them.
Discover Next
Learn from industry experts about key cases, the business of law, and more insights that shape the future of trial law.