John W. Gresham - Lawyer in Charlotte, NC

John W. Gresham - Lawyer in Charlotte, NC
301 East Park Avenue,
Charlotte, NC 28203

About the lawyer

John W. Gresham is an excellent lawyer from Charlotte, NC. Attorney John W. Gresham works in an office located at 301 East Park Avenue, Charlotte, NC 28203. Charlotte lawyer Jared K. Miller will help you solve all issues in the following areas of law: Employment Law - Individuals, Litigation - Labor and Employment, Labor, Employment and Employee Benefits, Employment Litigation, Employment Law, Employment Discrimination Law, Litigation, Litigation - First Amendment, First Amendment Law Charlotte, NC. John W. Gresham is the best lawyer in Charlotte, North Carolina state!

Served as a law clerk for United States District Court Judge James B. McMillan in Charlotte, partner in the firm of Ferguson Stein Chambers Gresham Sumter, PA, until retirerment in 2010 and partner Tin, Fulton Walker and Owen 2011-present

? Practice areas are employment litigation and negotiation, public employee rights, constitutional law, general civil litigation, appellate practice, and personal injury.

? Recognized by his peers for his work in employment and civil rights litigation and has been listed in Best Lawyers in America for over a decade in the areas of First Amendment and employment litigation. He has been annually recognized by his peers as a Super Lawyer in employment litigation for plaintiffs, as well as a member of the Legal Elite by Business North Carolina and holds the AV Martindale?Hubbell rating first awarded over twenty years ago.

? Graduated from Davidson College and Boston University School of Law, where he won the Bigelow Prize for greatest potential for scholarship and teaching, and published a note in the Boston University Law Review on the employment rights of veterans. He has taught employment law and civil rights litigation at the Vermont Law School and Campbell Law School.

? Noted cases include Corum v. University of North Carolina, where the North Carolina Supreme Court found that an individual remedy exists under the North Carolina State Constitution for a violation of state constitutional rights and Reed v. United Transportation Union in the United States Supreme Court, where, by an 8-1 decision, the Supreme Court expanded the time period in which union members could sue for violation of their rights.

? Received the Distinguished Service Award from the Education Law Section of the North Carolina Bar Association and has served on numerous bar committees including the Appellate Rules Study Committee and the Mecklenburg County Grievance Committee.

Bar Admissions: North Carolina, 1975 U.S. Court of Appeals 4th Circuit, 1975 U.S. Court of Appeals District of Columbia Circuit, 1975 U.S. District Court Eastern District of North Carolina, 1976 U.S. District Court Western District of North Carolina, 1975 U.S. District Court Middle District of North Carolina, 1977 U.S. Supreme Court, 1987

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