Noelle Daniel is an attorney in Pacific Legal Foundation’s Equality and Opportunity practice.
Before joining PLF, Noelle worked as a staff attorney with the Liberty Justice Center, where she litigated cases to protect free speech, the right to bear arms, parental rights, and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 civil rights, among others. During her time at LJC, she wrote six amicus briefs and first-chaired a trial.
Noelle graduated summa cum laude from Central College, where she earned degrees in Spanish and political science. She then attended the University of Kansas School of Law, where she served as an editor of the Kansas Law Review and president of both the Federalist Society and the St. Thomas More Society. During this time, Noelle worked as a judicial intern for the Honorable Judge Daniel Crabtree in the United States District Court for the District of Kansas. She also interned for Americans United for Life and clerked for the Kansas Office of the Solicitor General, sharpening her appellate advocacy skills. She went on to rank first in her appellate advocacy class.
During her final semester of law school, Noelle clerked for the Senate Judiciary Committee for Senator Charles Grassley, working closely with the Special Counsel during the nomination of Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson.
When not actively protecting constitutional rights, Noelle can be found playing piano, searching estate sales, cheering for the Green Bay Packers, visiting amusement parks, and performing musical theater. She enjoys late nights playing board games, over-analyzing movie plots, and spending time with her husband and children.