Linda Judson was born in Pittsburgh, and is a lifelong Pittsburgh native. She grew up in a family of modest means, and was raised by her widowed mother. She attended public school and soon after high school she decided she wanted to go to medical school. Since her mother did not have the funds to put her through college, Linda obtained a Practical Nursing License by enrolling in St. Francis Hospital’s Practical Nursing program. Armed with her LPN license, she worked fulltime as a practical nurse to pay for night classes at the University of Pittsburgh.
While she was attending college, she got married, started her own family, and grew interested in the law profession as she saw opportunities for her to use her knowledge of medicine in a legal capacity. She graduated from the University of Pittsburgh where she had earned a degree in political science, all while working full time as a nurse and raising her son, Anthony.
Her interest in the law had not gone away, and so she applied for and was accepted into the night program at Duquesne University School of Law. She studied law for four years while also working full time as a legal clerk at various law firms that saw the value of her medical background from her years of experience as a practical nurse.

After finishing law school, Linda found work at various how to get your ex back law firms and held many positions which would give her the experience that she would later need to become a formidable judicial candidate in the 2009 Commonwealth court judicial elections. She was the risk management director for a very large construction firm, a lawyer for an international insurance brokerage, and a board member and treasurer for the Pittsburgh Parking Authority, which she held as an un-paid position. She was very active in the community, and because of her medical background as a practical nurse, she specialized in worker’s disability claims, workers’ compensation and other areas of law where her knowledge of medicine came into good use.
She decided to run as a candidate for the judicial elections in 2009, and was endorsed by many respected labor organizations in Pennsylvania, and many independent and progressive democrats. She was the only woman running for the position that was recommended by the Pennsylvania Bar Association, and gained the trust and respect of a great number of independent and progressive democrats.
However, despite the popular support, Linda lost the election to republican Patricia McCullough. In spite of this loss, however, Linda still remains one of the no no hair removal reviews most respected successful female lawyers in all of Western Pennsylvania. She has continued her work as a lawyer specializing in workers’ compensation and treasurer and board member of the Pittsburgh Parking Authority, a responsibility that is more demanding than one might think. She has gained the respect of many esteemed leaders and if a seat opens up for a Commonwealth Court Judge in the future, Linda has a good chance of being a successful candidate given her history of fairness, dependability, and ethic of hard work.
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