John
H. Barron, III is a
member of Barron & Associates, P.C., Of Counsel to DeConcini McDonald
Yetwin & Lacy, PC in the Phoenix office. John received his B.A. and J.D.
degrees from the University of Arizona, and is admitted to the State Bar of
Arizona (May, 1990) and the United States District Court for the District of
Arizona, as well as the State Bar of Georgia. John has served as co-chair and
secretary for the Mental Health, Elder Law and Special Needs Section of the
State Bar of Arizona, and now sits on the section board, and on the Mental
Health Legislation sub-committee. He is an associate editor of the both the 4th
and 5th edition (released June 2014) of the Arizona Probate Code Practice
Manual.
John
Barron was a special deputy Pima County attorney handling mental health
litigation for Pima, Pinal, Yuma, and La Paz counties. Mr. Barron subsequently
served as a deputy Maricopa County attorney representing the Maricopa County
Medical Center Psychiatric Annex with respect to civil commitments and, later, representing
the Maricopa County Public Fiduciary in the administration and litigation of
estate, guardianship, conservatorship and mental health matters.
Subsequent
to his return to private practice in 1997, Mr. Barron has established himself
as a litigator of matters relating to estates, trusts, guardianships,
conservatorships, exploitation and/or abuse of vulnerable or incapacitated
adults, and eligibility of continued services for persons entitled to mental
health and developmental disability related assistance. With his friend and
colleague Jay M. Polk, Mr. Barron formed Barron & Polk, PLLC in 2001, a
firm committed to excellence in probate related matters. In 2006, the firm
became of counsel to DeConcini McDonald Yetwin & Lacy, PC. In 2011, Mr.
Polk was appointed to the bench of the Superior Court of Arizona, Maricopa
County, and thus the firm became Barron & Associates, PC.
In
addition to the specific practice of law, Mr. Barron has also been a presenter
and keynote speaker at seminars related to probate and mental health law,
in-service training programs related to probate, guardianship, and mental
health law for medical personnel, and was the instructor for the Arizona
Supreme Court Fiduciary Training Program, Decision Marking module. Mr. Barron
on several occasions has served on State Bar legislative committees and
actively participates in the drafting of many guardianship, conservatorship,
surrogacy, and mental health statutes.
(Also Of Counsel, DeConcini McDonald Yetwin & Lacy, P.C.)