About Aleasha J.
Aleasha J. Boling earned her Bachelor of Arts from Ball State University in 2007 and a Juris Doctor from Indiana University Maurer School of Law in 2014. She entered the legal profession after law school and moved into practice the same year. Her academic path combined a liberal arts undergraduate education with three years of legal training in Bloomington.
Boling began her professional career in 2014 as an associate at Parr Richey Frandsen Patterson Kruse LLP. She joined the firm fresh out of law school and has remained associated with it since that initial appointment. Early on she took on the tasks typical for a new associate: supporting trial preparation, conducting legal research and drafting briefs and motions. Those responsibilities gave her practical courtroom and litigation experience inside a firm setting.
She is admitted to practice in Indiana and to the U.S. District Courts for both the Northern and Southern Districts of Indiana. Those admissions allow her to represent clients in state court proceedings and in federal district court matters across the state. Boling also maintains memberships in professional organizations, holding current memberships in the Indianapolis Bar Association and the Indiana State Bar Association, where she participates in events and continuing legal education opportunities.
Colleagues describe her as steady and pragmatic in handling case work. She focuses on applying procedural and substantive law to the facts at hand and on preparing materials for court filings and hearings. Her work within the firm has involved client counseling and collaborating with senior attorneys on case strategy. She has developed particular familiarity with the practical demands of litigation practice in Indiana courts.
Boling’s practice remains rooted at Parr Richey Frandsen Patterson Kruse LLP. She works on matters that proceed in Indiana state courts and in the U.S. District Courts for the Northern and Southern Districts of Indiana. Her current practice centers on representing clients in those state and federal forums.