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Biography

Kimberly Rosales is an attorney at Waters Kraus Paul & Siegel in the firm’s Dallas office. Kimberly’s practice concentrates on asbestos litigation. She earned her bachelor’s degree cum laude at the University of North Texas, and her Juris Doctor at UNT Dallas College of Law. During her time in law school, she served as president of the Hispanic Law Students Association, was a member of the law review as well as the College of Law board of advocates. Kimberly was a recipient of both the William E. Collins clerkship at the Dallas City Attorney’s Office and the Dallas Hispanic Law Foundation scholarship in 2018. She was admitted to the State Bar of Texas in 2020. Kimberly is fluent in Spanish.

Areas of Practice

  • Asbestos

Bar Admissions

  • Texas, 2020

Education

  • UNT Dallas College of Law, Juris Doctor, 2019
  • University of North Texas, B.A. cum laude, 2016

Professional Associations & Memberships

  • Staff member, UNT Dallas College of Law-Law Review, On the Cusp and Accessible Law journals
  • Member, UNT Dallas College of Law Board of Advocates, 2017-2019
  • President of the Hispanic Law Students Association, 2018-2019

Pro Bono and Community Service

  • Attorneys Serving the Community, 2022 to present

Honors & Awards

  • National Trial Lawyers Top 40 Under 40, 2023
  • Dallas Hispanic Law Foundation Bar Study Grant, 2019
  • Recipient, William E. Collins Clerkship, Dallas City Attorney’s Office, 2018
  • Recipient, Dallas Hispanic Law Foundation Scholarship, 2018
  • Top 16, Judges Gavel Oral Argument Competition, 2017

Individual Awards & Honors

Our Results

$880 million award

Historic settlement for over 1,300 survivors of clergy and adult abuse within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles, marking a pivotal moment for justice.

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$725.5 million award

A Philadelphia jury awarded a record verdict against ExxonMobil for failing to warn about cancer risks due to benzene in its petroleum products.

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$20 million award

Confidential settlement for the wife of a Rhode Island man who died of mesothelioma cancer after exposure to window glazing compound contaminated with asbestos.

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