Kylie Hernandez

ASSOCIATE

Kylene (“Kylie”) Hernanadez joined Milgrom & Daskam as an Associate in April 2024. Her practice focuses on commercial real estate, and clients rely on Kylie to provide practical solutions by delivering a range of legal services during the life cycle of a real estate transaction. Prior to joining Milgrom & Daskam, Kylie was an associate at Polsinelli, P.C., where she supported and advised a variety of clients in commercial real estate acquisitions and dispositions, leasing, financing, diligence, development, and contract preparation and negotiation.

Kylie holds a B.A. in Psychology and a M.A. in Communication from Stanford University, where she participated on the women’s varsity softball team from 2013-2017. She earned her J.D. from Chapman University Dale E. Fowler School of Law in Orange County, California, graduating magnum cum laude and receiving the Distinguished Graduate Award. While at Chapman, Kylie served as an Academic Fellow for a variety of legal classes including Corporations, Federal Income Taxation, and Legal Research and Writing. During Kylie’s 3L year, she served as Vice President of Moot Court and published an article in Volume 25, Issue 2 of the Chapman Law Review, where she also served as Executive Production Editor. 

Born and raised in southern California, Kylie moved to Colorado in the summer of 2022 and has not looked back. In her free time, she enjoys reading, golfing, trying new foods, and spending time with her husband Dakota, and their son Hunter. 

FOCUS AREAS

Commercial Real Estate Acquisitions & Dispositions

Commercial Leasing

Commercial Finance

Articles

Miscellaneous

Water Protection and Sports Betting: How Coloradoans are Funding Conservation Efforts

Colorado is one of only four states in the continental U.S. that houses a sports team in each of the four major professional leagues: MLB (Major League Baseball – Rockies); NHL (National Hockey League – Avalanche); NBA (National Basketball Association – Nuggets); and NFL (National Football League – Broncos). And everyone in Colorado is on board— once September arrives each year, the sea of orange has less to do with the changing leaves and more to do with NFL’s most loyal fan base. During the winter months, those leaving downtown Denver after work can count on an extra 15-20 minutes as they try to escape the inevitable stampedes to Ball Arena. And in my admittedly biased opinion, there isn’t much that tops a spring evening ballgame at Coors Field.

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