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Colorado Legal Legends: A Fireside Chat with Honorable Roger Cisneros in 2012 Out of Stock

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December 2012
 
Colorado Legal Legends:  A Fireside Chat with Honorable Roger Cisneros in 2012
 
 
Program Description  
 
You are cordially invited to join us on December 18, 2012, for a fireside chat and luncheon with Honorable Roger Cisneros, a Colorado Legal Legend, who will share with us his ethical and professional words of wisdom and his personal and practical advice that have delivered him to his admired position as one of Colorado's leading legal minds.  
 
This is your once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to hear Judge Cisneros speak from the heart and leave you with thoughts and words to live by to enhance your professional and personal life.
 
 
Agenda:
 
11:30 am - 12:00 pm
Registration
12:00 - 1:15 pm
A Fire-side Chat and Luncheon with Honorable Roger Cisneros joined by Federico Peña
1:15 pm
 
 
About the Faculty:  
 
The Honorable Roger Cisneros (Retired) and former Colorado State Senator began life as the fifth child born to parents living in the small New Mexico hamlet of Questa, New Mexico, on January 22, 1924, where he attended a one-room school. For this budding scholar, the one-room school was an asset rather than a liability since it provided him with the opportunity to listen and participate in third grade activities. Judge Cisneros recalls that at that time, there were no electric lights, no radio and no television. Reading was a joy to him, and as an eighth grader, he was found to have the highest IQ for his age group in Taos County. Educating a boy in those days was a real sacrifice for struggling farmers who could barely eke out a living from barren, lifeless land with no irrigation, but sacrifice they did, and at Menaul High School in Albuquerque, New Mexico, he earned medals both as a scholar and as a track star.  Who could have known that his early struggles with the English language, herding sheep in lonely terrain, running barefoot in the sand, riding horseback for days and reading at every opportunity would prove to prepare him for his role as a distinguished attorney, able legislator, extraordinary leader and a champion of civil rights.  
 
Following high school, he served as a sergeant with the Army Air Corps from 1943 until 1946 with the 333rd Bomb Group in Okinawa, in the South Pacific. When he enlisted, he had hoped to become a pilot, but the quota was full, so he was tested and sent Cryptography school to learn to decode messages. During his deployments over seas on crowded military ships he was often requested to change places with some other soldiers because some did not want to be in the company of “Blacks.” Under the Okinawan sun he became very dark and when he returned to Longmont, Colorado where his parents had started a dairy farm, he was refused service in the local café that had signs that said "white trade only."  Discrimination had become a way of life.
 
Finding his opportunities limited, he decided to attend the University of Denver and obtained a Business degree in 1950. After graduating and going to work for the federal government, he realized there were very few Hispanic lawyers so he obtained a Law degree from Westminster Law School in 1957 and became one of only five Latinos who practiced Law in the State of Colorado.  One of his first cases as a lawyer, Gallegos v. People, involved an involuntary confession by a juvenile. The Colorado Supreme Court affirmed the defendants' convictions, but he appealed the case to the U.S. Supreme Court, which reversed the lower court's decision.
 
He carried on a successful law practice for many years and was elected to the Colorado State Senate in 1964, serving his Denver district for 12 years. As a Senator, he served as Caucus Chairman for two sessions, served on the Organization of State Government Committee implementing State Constitutional amendments, and was chosen by Tom Gavin of the Rocky Mountain News as one of three outstanding first term Senators. In 1978, Governor Richard Lamm appointed him to the State of Colorado District Court where he served in the domestic, civil and criminal divisions. Judge Cisneros retired in 1986 and served three more years as a senior judge.
 
Throughout his professional life he has found time to serve on a multitude of civil boards and organizations. In addition to serving on the Denver Commission on Community Relations, the National Advisory Board of the Small Business Administration and the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Commission, Judge Cisneros was a founder of the Marlee Garfield Improvement Association, founder of the Board of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund and founder of the Latin American Research and Service Agency (LARASA). He also served as president of the Latin American Educational Foundations and the United Latin American Organization.
 
Additionally, he served on The Colorado Olympic Commission when Denver was assigned the Winter Olympics, the Denver YMCA, the Denver Art Museum, Girls Club Inc., the West Side Action Council, and The Southwest Youth Service Board. He was appointed by the Denver School Board to serve on the Denver Equality of Education Opportunity Committee, and was appointed by Federal Judge William Doyle to the Community Education Council to supervise Denver Schools' integration program. He has served on the Colorado Board of Law Examiners, as a Vice President of the Denver Bar Association, as Chairman of the Continuing Legal Education Committee and was a member of the Governor's Commission on Child Support.
 
In honor of Judge Cisneros' dedication to the community, a jury room inside the new Denver Justice Center was named after him in 2009. He is truly a Colorado Legal Legend.
 
Roger Cisneros will joined by his good friend and colleague, Federico Peña.
 
Federico F. Peña, J.D., serves as Senior Advisor of Vestar Capital Partners. He serves on the boards of Wells Fargo Co; Sonic Corp; Toyota's North American Diversity Board. He also served as a National Co-Chair for the Obama campaign.  In addition, he served as the U.S. Secretary of Energy from April 1997 to July 1998, and as the U.S. Secretary of Transportation from January 1993 through January 1997. As a Secretary of Energy, Mr. Peña developed and implemented a comprehensive national energy strategy. As a Secretary of Transportation, Mr. Peña implemented the first international aviation policy for the United States since the 1970s, opening aviation markets around the world. He served as the Mayor of Denver from 1983 to 1991 and in the Colorado House of Representatives from 1979 to 1982.  
  •   CLE Pass Price
    *FREE! - exclusions may apply
  •   Standard Price
    $69.00 USD
  •   Member Price
    $59.00 USD
  •   General Credits
    2.00
  •   Ethics Credits
    1.50
  •   EDI Credits
Live Seminar Date
12/18/2012
Expiration Date
12/31/2014
Non-Member Price
$69.00 USD
Member Price
$59.00 USD
Product Code
GP121813N
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