About Aaron
Aaron Marks built a legal path that crosses public service, private practice and community work. He trained in both the United States and the United Kingdom before returning to Georgia to practice. The arc of his education and early career helped shape a practice grounded in courtroom experience and local engagement.
Marks attended Wheaton College where he completed his undergraduate degree. He continued his studies abroad at the London School of Economics and Political Science and at Trinity College, then earned a J.D. from Georgia State University. Those stops created a mix of liberal arts, international study and formal legal training.
Early in his career he worked at King & Spalding, joining that firm in 2007. He spent time at the larger firm learning the rhythms of litigation practice and the demands of high-stakes client work. In 2010 he left to establish Marks Law Group. Since then he has led the firm and handled matters in Georgia courts.
Marks has kept ties to professional groups that reflect his courtroom background. He holds membership in the American Association for Justice and in the Georgia Trial Lawyers Association. He is also part of the State Bar of Georgia’s General Practice and Trial Law Section. Those affiliations indicate a continuing involvement in trial-level civil litigation and related professional development.
Outside the office he has taken on instructional and community roles. He is an instructor for Georgia Teens Ride with P.R.I.D.E. (Parents Reducing Injuries and Driver Error). He also serves on the board of the Oakhurst Community Garden Project. Those activities place him in community safety and neighborhood improvement efforts.
Clients and colleagues describe a lawyer who came up through both a large-firm environment and the smaller, client-facing demands of his own practice. He manages a case load from his firm, Marks Law Group, and continues to appear in Georgia courts. His professional memberships keep him connected to trial practice and general civil litigation developments.
He currently concentrates his practice on trial work and civil litigation in Georgia.