Garza was raised in Brownsville, Texas. Both of her parents were public school teachers. Her father became a teacher, a lawyer and then served South Texas as an elected State District Judge for 21 years.[5] Garza earned her Bachelor of Arts degree with honors from Brown University in 2007 and her Juris Doctor from University of Houston Law Center in 2013.[6]
Career
Garza was a staff attorney for the ACLU.[7] Garza became a managing partner of Garza & Garza Law, PLLC.[8] Garza was a board member at Moody Clinic (January 2018 – January 2020), Director of the Cameron County Bar Association (May 2018 – December 2021), Chair at the Ethics Advisory Committee, City of Brownsville, Texas (January 2021 – July 2021) and a board member at Jane's Due Process since February 2019.[9] On January 26, 2023, Garza was announced as president of the Texas Civil Rights Project, a civil rights litigation and advocacy organization for voting rights, immigration and criminal justice work.[10]
Garza lost in the general election to RepublicanKen Paxton.[18] Garza received 43.7%, 3,482,909 votes while Paxton received 53.4%, 4,268,826 votes.[19]
Notable cases
Garza represented a 17-year-old girl who came to the United States without her parents, and who resided in a government-funded shelter in Texas. The Trump administration would not allow her to leave the shelter to get an abortion.[20][21][22] In 2017 the "Garza Notice", requiring that access to reproductive care be provided to teenagers housed in federal immigration detention facilities, was named after her.[23]
Personal life
Garza grew up in a Catholic household. According to her mother, she was crowd-surfed to Pope John Paul II at eight months old and blessed by the Pope. Her brother, Robby, experienced a brain injury during childbirth that resulted in disabilities and he died before she went to college.[24]
References
^"Rochelle Garza". amarillopioneer.com. October 12, 2022. Archived from the original on February 15, 2023. Retrieved February 14, 2023.
^"Rochelle Garza Commissioner". U.S. Commission on Civil Rights Facebook. United States Government. Retrieved June 30, 2023.