ORGANIZATION

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  president
 
Susie L. Hoeller
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Susie L. Hoeller, President and Co-Founder of AMCIPS, is an international business attorney with over thirty years experience. She has represented companies in the banking, employee benefit, high technology, and retail business sectors. She was previously a partner at a prominent Texas law firm. Along with handling her duties as President of AMCIPS, Susie heads up the Hoeller Law Firm which has a practice focusing on food safety, product safety and international contracting and compliance, as well as training module consulting.

Ms. Hoeller has been recognized by bar associations and legal publications for her pro bono legal work on behalf of refugees, overseas war victims seeking medical treatment in the U.S. and victims of human trafficking and abused mail order brides. She traveled to Bosnia and other Eastern European countries in connection with her refugee work.

Ms. Hoeller has published legal articles and been a speaker at legal and public policy conferences in the U.S. and Canada. She has been an instructor and guest lecturer at colleges and universities and a guest on national and local TV and radio programs discussing a wide range of legal and international policy issues.

Ms. Hoeller is currently an outside director of corporate and non-profit organizations, has received leadership awards and has served on a Board of Directors appointed Ethics Committee for a Fortune 100 company.

Ms. Hoeller received her law degree from Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee and her B.A. cum laude, in history and government from Colby College in Waterville, Maine. She was born in Chicago, Illinois and was raised in Baie D’Urfe´, Quebec, Canada.

Ms. Hoeller was also a pioneer in opening up new opportunities for girls and women in sports in the 1960s and 1970s. She was one of the first girls to play on a boy’s hockey team in Canada; started the women’s hockey team at Colby College; won the Quebec Junior Sailing Championship, when she was the only girl in the regatta; and was a student leader at Vanderbilt University, who championed more access to college athletic facilities and programs for women.


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