A former public defender, Karen first developed her interest in the cross section of criminal law and human rights as a Thomas J. Watson Fellow in 1986, after observing Southeast Asian refugees detained in a local prison without trial. In 1994, she moved to Cambodia to train the country’s first core group of public defenders and subsequently served as a United Nations Judicial Mentor. Under the auspices of the U.N., she trained judges and prosecutors, and established the first arraignment court in Cambodia.After witnessing thousands of prisoners of all ages being held without trials, usually after being tortured into making ‘confessions’, Karen founded International Bridges to Justice in 2000 to promote systemic global change in the administration of criminal justice. A graduate of UCLA Law School and Harvard Divinity School, Karen was named by U.S. News & World Report as one of America’s Best Leaders in 2007. She has been recognized by the Skoll Foundation, Ashoka and Echoing Green as a leading social entrepreneur. Karen was the recipient of the 2008 Harvard Divinity School’s First Decade Award, and the 2008 American Bar Association’s International Human Rights Award. She also received the 2009 Gleitsman International Award at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government
Carole Amselem
Carole has been living in Europe for several years even though she is originally from New York. After graduating from Benjamin Cardozo School of Law, she specialized in Criminal law, working at a criminal defense firm in Manhattan and then as an Assistant District Attorney in the Bronx. Although her career took a more corporate path when she left the U.S, her volunteer work at IBJ reminds her of why she became a lawyer in the first place. While at IBJ, Carole is involved in the e-learning project and lawyer trainings
Christopher Leibig
Chris Leibig worked as a public defender in Alexandria, Virginia from 1996 until 2002, where he handled thousands of criminal cases of all varieties. He is currently a partner at Zwerling, Leibig, and Moseley, a nationally known law firm which practices exclusively criminal defense.
Roshan Paul
From 2003-2006, Roshan helped launch Ashoka’s Youth Venture program in India, focusing in particular on strategy development and Fellow collaborations. In 2008, he rejoined Ashoka, with the Global Venture and Fellowship team, which manages the Ashoka Fellow selection process and expansion to new countries and areas of work. He also runs Ashoka's Fellow Security Program. Originally from Bangalore, Roshan has a Bachelor’s in International Relations from Davidson College and a Master’s in Public Policy from the Harvard Kennedy School. He is keenly interested in issues of conflict and disaster mitigation, and is particularly interested in launching/strengthening Ashoka’s work in some of the hardest parts of the world to be a social entrepreneur.
Larisa Dinsmoor
Larisa Dinsmoor is an attorney with the Orange County Public Defender's Office in Southern California, where she has practiced for four years. Her prior work experience includes working at the United States Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) Civil Rights and Civil Liberties Office, and for the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). Larisa has lived in Russia, Uganda, and South Africa, and continues to be active in international development as a board member of a local nonprofit, The Africa Project. Larisa holds a J.D. from the Washington College of Law, Washington D.C., and a B.A. in International Studies from American University, Washington, D.C. She is licensed in California and Washington, D.C.
Anthony Natale
Anthony J. Natale, “Tony,” has been a practicing trial lawyer for 30 years. Presently, he is a Supervising Assistant Federal Public Defender in Miami, Florida and the training coordinator for the Federal Defender Office and the private panel attorneys for the Southern District of Florida. Previously, he was in private practice for more than 20 years concentrating in criminal defense and civil trials both state and federal. The hundreds of cases Tony has taken to trial include capital murder, terrorism, complex fraud matters, simple misdemeanors, civil rights violations and personal injury actions. Although the vast majority of his clients have been those too poor to afford an attorney his former clients include a Donald Trump enterprise and the rock group The Red Hot Chilli Peppers. Tony has been a member of the National Criminal Defense College faculty since 1982. He has organized and presented continuing legal education programs for the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers and lectures extensively throughout the United States on criminal defense topics such as jury selection, advanced cross-examination, cross-examination of experts and theory of the case. Tony has also taught in criminal defense training programs in China and Vietnam. He is a member of a Florida and District of Columbia bars and has been specially admitted to practice in several jurisdictions throughout the United States. He is a graduate of the School of Foreign Service of Georgetown University and the Antioch School of Law.
Mimi Wright
Judge Wilhelmina M. Wright was appointed to the Minnesota Court of Appeals on September 3, 2002. Previously, she was a trial judge on the Ramsey County District Court in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Judge Wright graduated with Honors in Literature from Yale University in 1986 and received her J.D from Harvard Law School in 1989. Prior to joining the bench, Judge Wright was an Assistant U.S Attorney for the District of Minnesota, working on complex economic fraud cases and violent crime cases. She was awarded the United States Department of Justice Special Achievement Award in 1997 and the United Department of Justice Director's Award for Public Service in 2000. Judge Wright also practiced in a Washington, D.C. law firm, primarily representing school districts across the nation seeking to enhance educational opportunities for public school students. Judge Wright is active in her community, serving on the Board of Trustees of William Mitchell College of Law, the Mardag Foundation Board of Directors, and the Ramsey County Community Corrections Advisory Committee. She received the B. Warren Hart Award for Public Service in 2001 and the Ten Outstanding Young Minnesotans Award in 2000.
Scott Rechler
Scott joined Ashoka in August 2004. Working closely with Ashoka's Global Fellowship and Law for All teams he launched the Ashoka Fellow Security Initiative in 2005, which he led through 2009. Scott graduated from Harvard University in 2003 with a degree in social anthropology, having written his thesis on social entrepreneurship and social capital in southern Chile. He is currently pursuing an MBA degree at George Washington University's School of Business while volunteering part-time with Ashoka. Scott is also Director of the LearnServe International Fellows Program, a global leadership and social entrepreneurship program for DC area high school students.