hamburger

Twyla Carter

Attorney-In-Chief/CEO

Twyla Carter (she/her) serves as the Attorney-in-Chief and Chief Executive Officer of The Legal Aid Society, becoming the first Black woman and Asian American to lead the organization in its 150-year history.

Prior to joining Legal Aid, Carter was the National Director of Legal and Policy at The Bail Project (TBP), a national nonprofit organization that pioneered a movement to provide free bail assistance and pretrial support to thousands of low-income people each year. At TBP, Carter defined the department’s strategic mission and led legal, policy, and advocacy efforts at the federal, state, and local levels. Carter has also served as a senior staff attorney in the Criminal Law Reform Project at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) national office, where she litigated local and state bail inequities and right-to-counsel protections in the federal courts and designed alternative bail and representation policies and procedures for targeted jurisdictions.

Prior to working at the ACLU, Carter was a public defender for ten years. She was the Misdemeanor Practice Director for the King County Department of Public Defense in Seattle, overseeing all misdemeanor casework across the department’s four divisions. As a Staff Attorney at The Defender Association, Carter handled felony and misdemeanor trial caseloads, represented juveniles, and appealed misdemeanor convictions. She won a published decision from the Washington State Court of Appeals, Division One, in State v. Green, which affirmed parents’ due process rights when accused of trespassing in public schools.

Against the backdrop of the legislative attacks against the teaching of white supremacy and anti-Black racism in schools, Carter serves as President of the Board of Directors of The Who We Are Project. Founded by Jeffery Robinson, a renowned expert on the role of racism in the criminal legal system, the project aims to correct the social, legal, political, and economic aspects of racism in the United States through educational materials, including a feature-length documentary entitled Who We Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America.

Carter is admitted to practice law in New York and Washington State, and is a nationally recognized expert, having been featured in prominent outlets such as MSNBC, “Inside City Hall,” the New York Law Journal, and Bloomberg Law. She has received numerous awards from elected officials to community organizations. Carter received her associate’s degree from Seattle Central Community College, her bachelor’s degree from Seattle University, and her Juris Doctor from Seattle University School of Law.