About Tiffany
Tiffany Johnson built a foundation in criminal justice before turning to the law. She earned a Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice and Criminology from Arizona State University in 2014. She later completed a Juris Doctor at the James E. Rogers College of Law at the University of Arizona, bringing academic training in both fields to her legal career.
After law school, Johnson pursued admission to practice in Idaho. She practices through Johnson Law LLC, where she handles client matters from an office based in that state. Her educational background in criminal justice informs how she approaches cases and client counseling, and it shapes the questions she asks early in an engagement.
Johnson maintains memberships in professional organizations and holds a registered membership with the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma. That registration signals an engagement with tribal systems and may play a part in matters that touch on tribal jurisdiction or the intersecting threads of state and tribal processes. She has kept those connections current as part of her broader professional activity.
Colleagues describe Johnson as pragmatic in the way she prepares a file. She tends to separate immediate tactical needs from longer-term strategy. That approach shows up in client communications and in how she prioritizes work in the office. She balances written work, courtroom preparation and client meetings in ways that reflect her training in both law and criminal justice.
Johnson Law LLC serves as the vehicle for her practice. The firm handles matters in Idaho and engages with questions that sometimes intersect with tribal registration and governance because of Johnson’s association with the Choctaw Nation. The office operates in the state where she is licensed to practice and where she manages intake, filings and representation.
She continues to maintain active professional ties to organizations that relate to her education and areas of practice. Her current practice at Johnson Law LLC in Idaho centers on matters that draw on her criminal justice background and her registered association with the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma.