|

Norman
was born in Washington, D.C. on January 31, 1948. He received
his B.A. from the University of Wisconsin in 1970 and then
proceeded to earn his J.D. from the Loyola University of Chicago
in 1973. He was admitted to the Bar in Illinois in 1973 and
in California in 1976.
In
1973 and until 1975, Norman was a Law Clerk to Justice Thomas
J. Moran of the Illinois Supreme Court. He has been an instructor
of Oil and Gas Law at the California Western School of Law
in 1981 and the University of San Diego School of Law in 1983.
Norman served as President and Chairman of the Board of the
San Diego Petroleum Club Inc. in 1985 to1986. In addition,
he held the position of the Chief Operating Officer and General
Counsel for the Brumark Corporation from 1980 to 1987.
Norman
is a member of the San Diego County, Illinois State and American
Bar Associations, as well as the State Bar of California.
Norman
says, "Ever
since I can remember, I always wanted to be an attorney. I
like the idea of keeping people honest. Lacking funds, I started
law school as a night student and taught school in the Chicago
Public School System as a substitute teacher during the day.
This was quite an experience dealing with the real world during
the day and learning how to make the world a better place
at night. On weekends I worked in the law library to be close
to the books. This was before libraries became obsolete.
One
summer during law school, I went to Cambridge, Mass. to take
a break. I ended up selling the "Phoenix" for spending
money and volunteering at the Harvard Volunteer Defenders
for action. This turned into a paying job when Professor Hugo
Bedau hired me to write a summary of the effect that the elimination
of the death penalty had on the murder rates in foreign countries
for the Supreme Court brief that the Legal Defense Fund was
writing. Working for $3.00 an hour I immediately came to the
realization that time was money. The best part was that my
research was used in the Appendix in the brief submitted in
the Supreme Court case of Furhman v. Georgia.
My
big break came when Illinois Supreme Court Justice Thomas
J. Moran hired me as his law clerk out of law school. At that
time he was still on the Court of Appeals and after my two
years with him he liked to tell others about how I helped
him to be elevated to the Supreme Court. The truth is that
he helped me. What I learned in two years with Justice Moran
was the ability to look at the law as a vehicle for social
change. He would like to say that the law moves like a pendulum
and when the law moved too far one way, the weight of the
extreme caused it to move in the opposite direction with a
continued search for the middle ground. After two years, he
offered me a position as a judge if I would work with him
for three more years. I declined because I simply could not
take the weather in Chicago. I always wanted to live in California,
so off I went to San Diego without a license, job or any visible
means of support. I left under the assumption that what my
Dad always said was true - "Knowledge is power and no
one can take away from you what you learn". After passing
the California Bar, I started out on my own. I ended up with
an oil company for a few years along with teaching oil and
gas law under the mistaken notion that being an entrepreneur
rather than practicing law, would satisfy my career needs.
After discovering my mistaken notion, I went back into the
private practice of law.
I
immediately discovered that being an attorney on my own created
a situation where every day had the potential for handling
the next great case to champion justice in a world where business
at the extremes takes unfair advantage of consumers. With
my eyes and mind open, the good Lord surrounded me with exceptional
partners, associates, staff, family and friends along with
exceptional cases to work on. Needless to say, I enjoy practicing
law and helping consumers as a group who do not individually
have the power to help themselves."
Email:
norm@bamlawlj.com
|