Kim Suzanne Millman
Kim S. Millman brings her own unique history and experience to the practice of law. Her practice focuses on estate and tax planning, estate and trust administration; charitable planning and giving; and business succession planning.
Ms. Millman received her Juris Doctor degree from Pepperdine University School of Law, graduating cum laude in 2006, and she received her Bachelor of Arts degree from California State University, Northridge, gradating cum laude in 1982. She was admitted to the State Bar of California in 2007.
For more than twenty-five years, Ms. Millman was a successful entrepreneur overseeing the daily operations of a thriving family run business with hundreds of employees and literally millions of customers. Along with various family members, Ms. Millman founded the teen apparel mail order catalog Girlfriends LA, which sold apparel, shoes and accessories to millions of teen girls nationwide. After many years as a successful and profitable operation, Girlfriends LA was sold to a New York based conglomerate.
Ms. Millman utilizes this in-depth understanding of the distinctive needs of the entrepreneur and family business owner in her practice of estate, tax and business succession planning. Additionally, her many decades of experience in the business world allows her to gain an immediate understanding of the goals and expectations, both personally and professionally, of clients.
- Estate Planning
- Guardianship & Conservatorship Estate Administration, Health Care Directives, Trusts, Wills
- California
- California St Univ Northridge
- Undergraduate Degree
- Pepperdine Univ School of Law
- Law Degree
- California State Bar  # 250108
- Member
- - Current
- American Bar Association
- Member
- - Current
- California State Bar, Trust and Estate Section
- Member
- - Current
- Los Angeles County Bar Association, Trust and Estate Section
- Member
- - Current
- San Fernando Valley Bar, Trust and Estate Section
- Member
- - Current
- An Argument for Cadillacs Instead of Chevrolets: How the Legal System Can Facilitate the Needs of the Twice-Exceptional Child
- Pepperdine Law Review
- Website
- Website