User talk:Phil Telfeyan

Prior to founding Equal Justice Under Law, Phil served as a trial attorney in the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice for five years, where he specialized in employment discrimination and immigrants’ rights, litigated complex pattern-or-practice cases on behalf of victims of discrimination, and successfully settled the three largest cases in his section’s history. Before that, he clerked for the Honorable Janice Brown on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.

Phil earned both a bachelor’s degree (in Philosophy and Government) and a law degree from Harvard University. During law school, Phil was a Notes Editor on the Harvard Law Review, winner of the Williston Contracts Competition, and the National Champion of the American Bar Association’s National Appellate Advocacy Competition. He was born and raised in Sacramento, California, where his parents still live.

In addition to his legal career, Phil spends his time in Washington volunteering throughout the community, including weekly commitments serving individuals experiencing homelessness at a local food kitchen, helping run a mentoring program for public high school and middle school students, and working with individuals committed for mental health treatment. He enjoys barefoot running, card games, bowling, hiking, friendship, conversation, and philosophy. He has also toured and photographed every state capitol building and every National Park in the United States.