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In this episode of Raising the Bar with RebuttalPR, Ray DeLorenzi sits down with Kim Dougherty, co-founder of Justice Law Collaborative, for a conversation about purpose-driven advocacy, systemic change, and what it truly means to fight for justice.
Kim’s path to the law was anything but conventional. A first-generation college student who grew up on Cape Cod, she channeled a lifelong instinct to protect others into a career in social work before law school ever entered the picture. At Columbia, she was placed in the South Bronx on day one. She helped pregnant teens navigate their futures, then moved into the Manhattan Family Courts to work alongside lawyers on child protective and delinquency cases that exposed just how broken the system was. That proximity to injustice drove her to law school at Northeastern and into a career focused on the people most harmed by the systems meant to protect them.
The episode traces Kim’s evolution from early mass tort work on Fen-Phen and hormone replacement therapy cases to the New England Compounding Center fungal meningitis litigation, where she moved quickly to secure an inspection of the contaminated facility before critical evidence could disappear. Over 700 people were sickened and more than 100 died in that outbreak. Kim discusses how she held multiple parties accountable and what the case revealed about the limits of FDA oversight and the dangers of unregulated compounding pharmacies.
The conversation then turns to Katie Meyer, a Stanford soccer star and team captain whose life ended after a deeply flawed university disciplinary process spiraled into tragedy. Kim and her law partner took on the case not only in the courts but in the California legislature, where Katie Meyer’s Law was passed, requiring universities to provide students with a support person from day one of disciplinary proceedings. Now the push is going federal, with Representative Brownlee introducing legislation that would apply to any university receiving public funding.
This is a conversation about what the law can do when lawyers refuse to stay in their lane. It is about legislation, advocacy, and choosing clients because their cases matter.
Learn more about Kim Dougherty
https://www.justicelawcollaborative.com
By RebuttalPRIn this episode of Raising the Bar with RebuttalPR, Ray DeLorenzi sits down with Kim Dougherty, co-founder of Justice Law Collaborative, for a conversation about purpose-driven advocacy, systemic change, and what it truly means to fight for justice.
Kim’s path to the law was anything but conventional. A first-generation college student who grew up on Cape Cod, she channeled a lifelong instinct to protect others into a career in social work before law school ever entered the picture. At Columbia, she was placed in the South Bronx on day one. She helped pregnant teens navigate their futures, then moved into the Manhattan Family Courts to work alongside lawyers on child protective and delinquency cases that exposed just how broken the system was. That proximity to injustice drove her to law school at Northeastern and into a career focused on the people most harmed by the systems meant to protect them.
The episode traces Kim’s evolution from early mass tort work on Fen-Phen and hormone replacement therapy cases to the New England Compounding Center fungal meningitis litigation, where she moved quickly to secure an inspection of the contaminated facility before critical evidence could disappear. Over 700 people were sickened and more than 100 died in that outbreak. Kim discusses how she held multiple parties accountable and what the case revealed about the limits of FDA oversight and the dangers of unregulated compounding pharmacies.
The conversation then turns to Katie Meyer, a Stanford soccer star and team captain whose life ended after a deeply flawed university disciplinary process spiraled into tragedy. Kim and her law partner took on the case not only in the courts but in the California legislature, where Katie Meyer’s Law was passed, requiring universities to provide students with a support person from day one of disciplinary proceedings. Now the push is going federal, with Representative Brownlee introducing legislation that would apply to any university receiving public funding.
This is a conversation about what the law can do when lawyers refuse to stay in their lane. It is about legislation, advocacy, and choosing clients because their cases matter.
Learn more about Kim Dougherty
https://www.justicelawcollaborative.com