About Adam
Adam Shapiro built his legal foundation at the University of Pittsburgh and then Rutgers University School of Law. He arrived at law school after undergraduate studies and left with the credentials lawyers rely on when cases get complicated. Those academic years shaped the contours of a practical practice.
He is admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals and in the states of New Jersey and Pennsylvania. Those admissions reflect a career that moves between trial work, appellate filings and matters that cross state lines. Colleagues say he is steady under pressure and comfortable in both written advocacy and courtroom settings.
Shapiro practices at Danziger Shapiro, P.C. There he handles a variety of civil matters. His work there has included representation in state and federal courts and counsel to clients navigating procedural and substantive challenges. He has been part of teams preparing briefs, arguing motions and advising on litigation strategy.
Outside the courtroom his name appears in local professional circles. He maintains memberships in the Pennsylvania Bar Association and the New Jersey Bar Association. He is also active in the Greater Philadelphia community. Those ties have kept him connected to trends in regional practice and policy discussions among local attorneys.
Volunteering is part of how he spends time away from office work. He volunteers with Habitat for Humanity and participates on the building committee at Philadelphia’s Society Hill Synagogue. That service complements pro bono and community-facing work that many attorneys perform alongside their paid practices.
Shapiro’s professional hours are split between litigation tasks and client counseling. He has experience drafting pleadings, pursuing appeals and coordinating discovery. He works with peers in multi-jurisdiction matters and has handled cases that required filings in different forums.
Clients and peers find him straightforward in explaining legal options. He does not rely on buzzwords or overblown promises. Instead he lays out practical steps, timelines and likely outcomes. He remains active in bar organizations and local civic projects. His current practice concentrates on civil litigation and appellate work at Danziger Shapiro, P.C.