About Aaron K.
Aaron K. Bergman earned his law degree from the University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law in 2007. He completed the rigorous curriculum there and graduated into a legal market that required quick adaptation. His academic background provided the foundation for early courtroom exposure and policy work that followed.
He began his post-law school career in California. In 2007 he worked as a law clerk at Dreyer, Babich, Buccola, Callaham & Wood. The role offered practical experience in litigation support and client-facing matters. The next year he served as a law clerk for Sacramento County Counsel in 2008. That position placed him inside local government practice and gave him experience with municipal law, public agency procedures, and the day-to-day demands of a county legal office.
In 2009 Bergman returned to Utah to take a judicial externship in the First Judicial District of Utah. Working in the judicial chambers afforded him a closer look at case management and judicial decision-making. He assisted on research and drafting for the court and observed the mechanics of trial and appellate procedure firsthand. Those months in the district court rounded out earlier experience and deepened his understanding of how courts treat factual records and legal argument.
Across these roles, Bergman developed strengths in legal research, brief writing, and the logistics of litigation. Clerking for a county counsel’s office and then for a judicial district gave him perspectives from both the executive branch of local government and the judiciary. He handled factual development, drafted memoranda, and supported counsel in hearings. Colleagues from those years described him as methodical and precise in his written work.
Today he practices law in Utah. He brings to his practice the combination of public-sector legal work and courtroom familiarity he built early in his career. His practice reflects experience in municipal matters, judicial procedure, and litigation support accrued during his clerkships and externship. He continues to work on cases and matters in Utah courts and agencies, focusing his practice on the kinds of issues that align with his earlier public-sector and judicial experience.