People
Jonathan is a tech lawyer who focuses his practice on AI, cybersecurity, and IP. A former data scientist and current graduate student at Georgia Tech, Jonathan helps manage the legal risks and opportunities that come with cutting-edge technologies. As one tech client put it, "Jonathan was the first lawyer who could actually help."
Jonathan has experience in a variety of tech-related litigation, counseling, and transactional matters.
Jonathan is a former data scientist and a current graduate student in cybersecurity at Georgia Tech. Jonathan also holds numerous privacy and security certifications, having passed the Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP) exam and the AI Governance Professional (AIGP) and Certified Information Privacy Professional, Manager, and Technologist (CIPP/US, CIPM, CIPT) exams.
In his free time, Jonathan enjoys academic writing and vibe-coding.
J.D., Vanderbilt University
B.E., Vanderbilt University
Texas
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
Leading cybersecurity compliance investigations at several of the largest healthcare companies.
Represented a leading frontier AI lab in regulatory investigations involving AI safety, insider threat investigations, and competitor trade secrets and unfair competition litigation.
Represented multiple clients in response to various investigations, ranging from tech privacy to healthcare, launched by a state attorney general. For one set of clients, secured several protective orders and a writ of mandamus that greatly narrowed the scope of the investigation.
Leading cybersecurity compliance investigations at several of the largest healthcare companies.
Represented a leading frontier AI lab in regulatory investigations involving AI safety, insider threat investigations, and competitor trade secrets and unfair competition litigation.
Represented multiple clients in response to various investigations, ranging from tech privacy to healthcare, launched by a state attorney general. For one set of clients, secured several protective orders and a writ of mandamus that greatly narrowed the scope of the investigation.
J.D., Vanderbilt University
B.E., Vanderbilt University
Texas
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office