Director Natasha Scruggs, Esq.

 
 
 
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Attorney Natasha Scruggs became hyper-aware of the cruelty of the state and the need for people that knew the law, on our side at a young age through personal experience. She recalls, “I always knew that I wanted to be an attorney, but two things occurred that confirmed it: When I was around 10 years old the police brutally beat my big brother in the mall. They then threatened to charge him with something false. My mother was scared, so we did not pursue anything.” The other formative experience about the failure of the police ended in even more tragedy, “When I was 17 my 29 year old uncle was killed by the police and they covered it up. This was 6 years prior to when Michael Brown was killed.” Now, in this political moment we are living in 2020, Scruggs’ service to the community is even more pronounced and needed. We are in a political moment where the people resisting need someone that doesn’t just know the law, but knows the struggles and the souls of the people they are representing. Natasha Scruggs is the answer to such cries.

“I had a specific interest in helping my community on my terms,” Scruggs says when asked about how she came to create her law firm, The Scruggs Firm. Law has been notoriously weaponized to oppress Black people, both individually and collectively. It is necessary that now, we have representation that serves us and that takes a certain amount of rebellion and innovation. She continues, “I never wanted to attempt to conform to what people believed an attorney was. Now, I feel like I want to make a larger global impact rather than representing individual clients.”

Upon graduating law school in 2016 and returning home to St. Louis, Missouri, she started the first Future Lawyers Camp a few weeks after she took the bar exam. The camp was a hit for the students and she has repeated the camp in the following years. Graduates from the camp are in college and receive donations directly from Scruggs to help their success before law school. The goal is to increase the number of Black applicants to law school. She implemented mentoring systems that will last even after the campers become licensed.

My goal for my community is to educate them so that we move accordingly and become empowered in the best possible way.”This has been the long-term goal and vision for The JustUs System that has been newly incorporated in 2020., As the deaths of Breana Taylor and George Floyd echo in our minds; the need for the work she is doing and the vision she is creating is even that much more necessary. JustUs System Inc. is creating a new way for people to participate in and think about law. The firm is quickly turning into one of the pioneering resources to help organizers and the public alike navigate the legal system. What also speaks to Scruggs’ dedication to the community is how she envisions her future, “I see myself as an owner who gives opportunities to young attorneys. I also see the firm as a facilitator of prison abolition.”

The road she has in front of her is not easy or commonly walked, but nothing truly revolutionary ever truly is, she is paving a way for the next generation of Black women that look to get us just that much closer to a free and just society. She says, “Black women have helped me every step of the way in the law. It feels like Black women understand the larger picture and the issues navigating a white, male dominated field.” Natasha Scruggs and The Scruggs Law Firm are the forces challenging that outdated paradigm and guiding us — legally — into the future.

Written by Myles Johnson

Sigma Gamma Rho Sorority Inc.
B.A. in Criminal Justice - Jackson State University
J.D. - Mississippi College School of Law
Licensed in Missouri