About Gunda Yohanna
Gunda Yohanna Brost began her legal path in the Midwest. She enrolled at Hamline University School of Law in 2003 and earned her J.D. in 2006. The law school years set a practical tone for her career. They also coincided with a broader interest in federal practice.
After law school she moved into practice that touches federal systems. Her listed jurisdiction is federal, and much of her professional life has been tied to organizations that operate at the national level. She has been a member of the American Immigration Lawyers Association under the name AILA since at least 2007, and records show a noted membership in 2013 as well. That continuity of association suggests a steady engagement with issues that cross state lines and engage federal law.
Her professional associations extend beyond AILA. Brost holds current memberships in the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Bar Association. She is also listed with other professional groups. Those ties give her regular contact with developments in civil liberties, administrative procedures and broader bar initiatives. They also place her in networks where federal policy and litigation often dominate the agenda.
Brost’s work has been anchored by private practice. She runs Brost Law Office, where she manages client matters and directs case strategy. The office has represented clients in proceedings that require federal filings and appearances. Colleagues describe her approach as steady and practical; she tends to emphasize the procedural steps that move a case forward. That posture fits a federal practice, where paperwork, timing and clear statutory argument frequently determine outcomes.
Over the years she has balanced memberships in national organizations with day-to-day practice. Her involvement in AILA, the ACLU and the ABA has kept her engaged in policy discussions as well as in case work. Those dual commitments show in how she prepares for hearings and drafts pleadings: attentive to both legal principle and institutional detail.
She maintains her practice at Brost Law Office and continues to handle matters that require federal filings and advocacy. Her current practice concentrates on federal-level issues and matters involving civil liberties and administrative processes.