The intellectual challenge that comes with confronting a new legal/factual scenario with each new case. No two clients have the same story to tell and the same issue to deal with.
Ray L. Ngo, Esq., is a member in good standing of the Utah State Bar (Bar # 11936) as well as the State Bar of New York (Bar # 4780706). He is licensed to practice law in all state courts of Utah and New York, as well as in the United States District Court for the District of Utah and the United States District Court for the District of Colorado. He has had legal experience in multiple areas of the law, is a member of the Utah Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, and is the author of "America's Forgotten Progeny: Taking Nguyen v. INS a Step Beyond the Court Opinion," published in the 2006, Volumn 4, issue of the Utah Law Review. His alma mater is the University of Utah College of Law, where he was a member of the Utah Law Review.
The intellectual challenge that comes with confronting a new legal/factual scenario with each new case. No two clients have the same story to tell and the same issue to deal with.
The law is hardly ever black and white. There are almost always ways to win. You just have to be creative.
Can count to 10 in about 6 different languages.