North Saint Paul Civil Rights Attorneys — 8 found

Neighborhoods

Show lawyers with

Avvo Rating

1.0 to 10.0
Compare
  1. Michael Czarnik

    North Saint Paul Civil Rights Attorney Michael Laurence Czarnik

    Saint Paul, MN Civil Rights Lawyer. Licensed for 17 years.

  2. Carolin Nearing

    North Saint Paul Civil Rights Attorney Carolin Jane Nearing

    Not yet reviewed

    Write a review

    Saint Paul, MN Civil Rights Lawyer. Licensed for 13 years.

  3. Cassandra Fortin

    North Saint Paul Civil Rights Attorney Cassandra Frances Fortin

    Not yet reviewed

    Write a review

    Saint Paul, MN Civil Rights Lawyer. Licensed for 4 years.

  4. Kathryn Downey

    North Saint Paul Civil Rights Attorney Kathryn Rose Downey

    Not yet reviewed

    Write a review

    Saint Paul, MN Civil Rights Lawyer. Licensed for 11 years.

  5. Charles Gross

    North Saint Paul Civil Rights Attorney Charles Andrew Gross

    Not yet reviewed

    Write a review

    Saint Paul, MN Civil Rights Lawyer. Licensed for 17 years.

  6. Mark Hardy

    North Saint Paul Civil Rights Attorney Mark Wells Hardy

    Not yet reviewed

    Write a review

    Saint Paul, MN Civil Rights Lawyer. Licensed for 11 years.

  7. Alan Weinblatt

    North Saint Paul Civil Rights Attorney Alan W Weinblatt

    Not yet reviewed

    Write a review

    Saint Paul, MN Civil Rights Lawyer. Licensed for 44 years.

  8. John Casserly

    North Saint Paul Civil Rights Attorney John Bernard Casserly

    Not yet reviewed

    Write a review

    Saint Paul, MN Civil Rights Lawyer. Licensed for 16 years.

Compare

Civil Rights

A civil rights attorney helps protect the personal rights granted to you by the government. When someone violates those rights, a civil rights attorney can help you make them stop these violations, or repay you for any damage they have done to you. Your civil rights are spelled out in federal and state constitutions and in discrimination laws. In fact, civil rights attorneys are sometimes called discrimination attorneys because they frequently handle cases involving a person being treated differently based on gender, age, ethnicity, or sexual orientation.