"For me, I’m the best Jeremy Citron I possibly can be in trial. That’s my goal."
Jeremy Citron didn’t follow a straight line into law — and that’s exactly what makes his trial work stand out. A one-time aspiring baseball umpire, Citron took a detour that led him from Tulane to the courtroom, where he now stands out as a personal injury lawyer known for clarity, confidence, and courtroom commitment. Whether it’s a catastrophic injury or a tightly contested liability case, he approaches trial with a grounded focus: to be fully present, persuasive, and human in front of a jury.
A graduate of Georgia State University College of Law, Jeremy began his legal career at Holland & Knight, one of the nation’s largest firms. There, he honed his litigation foundation while discovering what didn’t fit — the corporate defense lifestyle. What did stick was a fellowship at Atlanta Legal Aid, where he first tasted real responsibility and trial work. That experience, paired with years of criminal defense and municipal prosecution, built a readiness to advocate under pressure and think on his feet.
Jeremy eventually moved into complex civil litigation and plaintiff-side injury law, developing his niche at the intersection of strategic case building and real human storytelling. At firms like Stein & Ward and now at The Hurt Boss and Golf Cart Law, he’s taken the lead on serious injury matters ranging from motorcycle and trucking cases to uniquely challenging claims involving golf carts, scooters, and catastrophic brain and spinal injuries.
His trial work is marked by emotional resonance and technical depth. He doesn’t just chase verdicts — he pursues truth, even in cases that arrive with complications or setbacks. One such matter, involving a quadriplegic client whose case was nearly lost due to a statute of limitations issue, became, in his words, “the case I was made to be a lawyer for.” That’s how he sees the work — not as transaction, but as vocation.
Today, Jeremy Citron practices in Atlanta, where he continues to lead with personality, preparation, and principle. He doesn’t try to be like anyone else in the courtroom — just the best version of himself.
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Georgia Trial Lawyers Association (GTLA)
American Association for Justice (AAJ)
National Trial Lawyers (Top 100)
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The inaugural edition of the Trial Lawyer's Journal set a new standard for law journal publications. With limited ads and one-of-a-kind content, it was created to celebrate wins both in and outside the courtroom.