About Elizabeth N.
Elizabeth N. Molea built her path to the law through a mix of classroom study and steady practice. She arrived at Southwestern Law School after completing a bachelor’s degree in Government and Law at the University of Redlands in 2004. She finished law school in 2007 and entered the legal profession at a time when experience in both research and client contact mattered as much as classroom credentials.
Her academic background emphasized the institutions and rules that shape public life. The University of Redlands program gave her an early grounding in government and legal thought. Southwestern Law School sharpened that grounding into practical skills: brief writing, oral advocacy, and the sorts of procedure work that become routine in a busy practice.
After law school, Molea moved into private practice. Over the years she has handled the daily responsibilities that define the work of a practicing attorney: counseling clients, preparing pleadings, conducting legal research, and handling hearings. She has spent her career working in environments where client communication and attention to deadlines are constant demands. Those experiences helped her develop an approach to cases that balances attention to detail with the pragmatic needs of people facing legal problems.
Colleagues describe her as steady and exacting in her preparation. She tends to take on matters that require careful fact development and clear advocacy. Her background in government and law informs how she evaluates regulatory and procedural questions. That training also shapes how she frames issues for judges, opposing counsel, and clients.
Molea practices at The Beringer Law Office. There she works alongside other lawyers and staff to move cases forward and assist clients through legal processes. Her work at the firm involves regular client contact and the management of day-to-day litigation and transactional tasks. She remains engaged in the small, often painstaking tasks that are necessary to prepare a case for motion practice or trial.
She keeps a practical view of the attorney’s role: understand the client’s problem, identify available legal tools, and pursue the most effective path under existing rules. As of 2026 she continues to practice at The Beringer Law Office, handling client matters and day-to-day legal work in the firm’s practice.