Kriss
Halpern is a trial attorney licensed to practice in the State of California
and the Central, Southern and Northern Districts of the United States
Ninth Circuit, and the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
He
was an Editor of the Law Review at the University of Pennsylvania School
of Law and a Member of the University’s National Moot Court team
before his graduation in 1987. He graduated Magna Cum Laude with High
Honors in History and English and American Literature from Brandeis
University in 1983, where he was an Editor of the student newspaper,
The Justice, and an elected member of the University’s Presidential
Search Committee.
He began his practice in California as an Associate with the international
firm Gibson, Dunn and Crutcher, followed by criminal law with well-known
defense attorney Barry Tarlow.
Mr. Halpern formed his own practice in 1992 where he has specialized in
civil litigation involving insurance bad faith, legal malpractice, and
a wide variety of business disputes and consumer protection matters.
As
a result of his own experience with Type One diabetes, Mr. Halpern has
spent years learning both the day-to-day and legal aspects of living with
this chronic illness. He was a volunteer with the largest investigation
ever conducted in the treatment of diabetes, known as the Diabetes Control
and Complications Trial. He is a recipient of the Charles H. Best Medal
for Distinguished Service by the American Diabetes Association and a Certificate
of Appreciation from the United States National Institutes of Health.
Mr. Halpern has twice been awarded by the State Bar of California for
legal services to the poor arising from years of efforts on behalf of
impoverished indigenous refugees from Guatemala seeking political asylum
in the United States after their own villages were attacked during that
country’s brutal civil war. He conducted training lectures for asylum
hearing officers working with the former Immigration and Naturalization
Services regarding the nature of political and racial discrimination in
Guatemala and asylum claims of Maya refugees.

Pondering
tough questions about diabetes: How much insulin is this gonna take?!
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