|
Tricia K. Fujikawa Lee joined
the firm in 2006 and practices civil litigation and
business and commercial transactions.
She received her J.D. from the University of Hawaii,
William S. Richardson School of Law, where she
served as an editor of the University of Hawaii Law
Review. Her article, Emergency Contraception in
Religious Hospitals: The Struggle Between Religious
Freedom and Personal Autonomy, is published at 27 U.
Haw. L. Rev. 65 (2004).
She also served as an extern for Chief Judge David
A. Ezra of the U.S. District Court, District of
Hawaii, and in the office of Lieutenant Governor
James “Duke” Aiona. Tricia also was a law clerk to
State of Hawaii Circuit Judge Victoria S. Marks.
Prior to law school, Tricia was for several years an
event coordinator in the Developing International
Markets Division of the Hawaii Visitors and
Convention Bureau, coordinating promotions of
Hawaii’s visitor industry worldwide including
promotions in China, Taiwan, Korea, Thailand,
Germany, Denmark, the UK, Australia, New Zealand and
Brazil. She also worked for many years with a
commercial building contractor in Hawaii providing
administrative and marketing services.
Litigation
Litigate various issues
regarding: environmental law; insurance
coverage; lease disputes; land use; vested
rights and other real property issues.
Business and Commercial
Transactions
• Litigate various issues
regarding: environmental law; insurance
coverage; lease disputes; land use; vested
rights and other real property issues.
• Formation of business entities (corporations,
nonprofit corporations, limited liability
companies, partnerships, etc.)
• Termination of business entities
• Purchase and sale of businesses
• Review and draft business agreements,
contracts and leases.
• Employment matters
American Bar Association
Hawaii State Bar Association Easter Seals Society of Hawaii Big Brothers Big Sisters of Honolulu Hawaii State Judo Association
Constitutional Law: Emergency Contraception in
Religious Hospitals: The Struggle Between Religious
Freedom and Personal Autonomy, 27 U. Haw. L. Rev. 65
(2004)
|