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Camden Vilkin

Camden Vilkin joined Nolan Barton Olmos & Luciano, in 2020. She received her A.B. from Harvard College and her J.D. from Stanford Law School. While in law school, she served as President of the Criminal Law Society and participated in the Criminal Defense Clinic, where she was awarded the Judge Thelton E. Henderson Prize for Outstanding Performance in Criminal Defense Clinic Practice. Camden is a demonstrated writer and researcher. She was a founding board member of the Stanford Journal of Criminal Law and Policy and an Associate Editor for both the Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties and the Stanford Law & Policy Review.

Camden is a demonstrated writer and researcher. She was a founding board member of the Stanford Journal of Criminal Law and Policy and an Associate Editor for both the Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties and the Stanford Law & Policy Review.
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Camden also served as a Research Assistant for the Stanford Criminal Justice Center. In college, Camden published a book in collaboration with the Harvard Kennedy School. Camden has also worked for the United States Department of Justice, the Federal Public Defender for the Northern District of California, the Harvard Kennedy School, and the National Employment Law Project’s Second Chance Labor Project. After law school, Camden clerked for the Honorable James Donato, United States District Court for the Northern District of California.

Prior to joining Nolan Barton Olmos & Luciano, Camden advocated for clients at all stages of criminal proceedings as an Associate Deputy Public Defender for Alameda County. There she litigated hundreds of criminal cases, achieving not guilty verdicts or dismissals for her clients in cases involving possession of firearms, theft, driving under the influence, domestic violence, elder abuse, criminal threats, assault, and battery. At NBOL, Camden handles cases ranging from sexual assault and domestic violence to murder. She specializes in the intersection of criminal charges and Title IX matters.

 
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