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Attorney

12121 Wilshire Blvd., Suite 740
Los Angeles, CA 90025

Hammers & Baltazar, LLP

(310) 458-0796

My road to becoming a lawyer was not the usual route. I was the typical “failure” that you were warned about by your parents. I didn’t like school mostly because I was an “outcast” as my family couldn’t afford the clothes, toys, nice home, and other material things all the “cool kids” had in the 1960s as I was growing up. I was an unwed mother at age 16, dropped out of high school and then married at age 17. I spent almost 10 years in an abusive marriage before I broke free after becoming a licensed hairstylist, mainly because “beauty school” was the only school my husband allowed me to attend as it didn’t threaten him. Once I got my cosmetology license, I got a job, secretly saved money and fled my abuser when I had enough to rent a home with my daughter.

I loved my career as a hairstylist because I really loved people. In a profession where you touch people who are strangers when they first come to you, there is a bond formed that can last a lifetime. Being a hairstylist for 20 years gave me an education money couldn’t buy. The more I interacted with people, the more I knew I wanted a career working with them beyond doing their hair. Even though I hated school as a kid, and vowed never to go back, I decided to pursue a degree in psychology at the age of 32. I went to school full time while working full time running my own hairstyling business and completed my degree in 5 years. I thought I wanted to be a psychologist.

During my junior year in college, I took a course in criminal justice and became interested in the law. I decided to take the LSAT that summer. Unfortunately, a horseback riding accident put me in a wheelchair the last semester of my junior year so my plans got delayed. After a complicated surgery, I could walk again and was able to start my senior year with the help of a cane and a brace on my leg. I took the LSAT that October and put in my applications to law school. I was accepted to UCLA Law School in my senior year of college and started attending UCLA Law at the ripe old age of 37. I graduated and took the bar exam when I was 40.

During my second year of law school, I clerked during the summer for a family law firm in Santa Monica. I also clerked for other firms practicing different areas of law but I was drawn to family law because of the people. Family law affected real people in a way a contract negotiation or business lawsuit did not. It could change the course of a child’s life in a positive way. I met wonderful people and the lawyers I met were dedicated and caring. I decided on a career in family law and never looked back.

So what do I believe? I believe that the only thing that is constant in life is change. I believe that growth can happen throughout one’s life. I believe that everyone brings something to the table if you just look for it. I believe that peace is almost always better than conflict and it comes from within. I believe I can make a difference by helping people through some of the most difficult times of their lives so they can come through it with dignity and peace.

My activities outside of the law include gardening (I’m an avid rosarian), gourmet cooking (six months in culinary school), wine, flower arranging, reading and being outdoors. I love animals and my current menagerie includes cats, dogs and rescued desert tortoises.