Cheyenne Joshua-Gross is an associate in the San Francisco office of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP, where she practices in the firm’s Litigation Department.
Cheyenne earned her J.D. from Stanford Law School in 2024, where she served as Co-President of the Black Law Students Association. She represented indigent criminal clients through Stanford’s Three Strikes Project and Criminal Defense Clinic, notably arguing and securing a motion for early termination of her client’s three-year supervised release term in the Northern District of California. Additionally, Cheyenne was a Teaching Assistant for 1L Criminal Law and a Research Assistant to Professor Richard Ford.
Before attending law school, Cheyenne graduated from Carleton College with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and a minor in Neuroscience.
She is admitted to practice in the State of California.
Capabilities
- Litigation
- Appellate and Constitutional Law
- Law Firm Defense
- Trials
- White Collar Defense and Investigations
Credentials
Education:
- Stanford University - 2024 Juris Doctor
- Carleton College - 2019 Bachelor of Arts
Admissions:
- California Bar