Niah is the Receptionist and an Administrative Assistant here at Rose Law Group. She was born in Boston, Massachusetts and has been in Arizona for almost one year. She is currently working on her degree in International Relations and has worked in the administrative field for around 2 years.
Her personal motto comes from Rene Descartes, “Dubito, ergo Cogito, Cogito ergo sum,” which loosely translates to “I doubt, therefore I think; I think, therefore I am.”
She aspires to one day work in International Law with a focus on Human Rights and Environmental Law. In her free time, she volunteers at Robinson Ranch in Phoenix, helping them spearhead their horticultural outreach program.
In The News
Darius Amiri, immigration law department chair at Rose Law Group, talks to 3TV/CBS 5 about what Trump’s proposed mass deportation operation means for Arizona
By Alexis Dominguez | AZ Family President-elect Donald Trump campaigned hard on border security and claimed it would be his top priority once he took office. At his rallies in Arizona, he vowed to carry out the largest mass deportation of undocumented immigrants ever. It raised questions on how his return to office could impact the state. Immigration attorneys and the National Border
Shruti Gurudanti: Rose Law Group partner, director of the firm’s corporate transactions department, CEO & co-founder of Televëda, and a featured panelist at the Behavioral Health Tech Conference
At the Behavioral Health Tech Conference (BHT2024) in Phoenix this week, Rose Law Group Corporate Transactions Department Director, Shruti Gurudanti, was a featured speaker on the “Empowering Community-Based Care Through Technology” panel. Gurudanti shared on the power of Televëda, the health and wellness company she co-founded that helps to lower social isolation via digital connections to underserved communities, seniors and veterans. Behavioral healthcare for all: That’s
Pinal Partnership panel tackles affordable housing, with Jordan Rose, founder and president of Rose Law Group, moderating the discussion
By Rofida Khairalla | Pinal Central QUEEN CREEK — Who are the people who need affordable housing? And how are developers hoping to help address a shortage facing thousands of Arizonans? Those were some of the questions that a panel of developers attempted to address at the monthly meeting of Pinal Partnership on Friday. The event was hosted at Schnepf
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