About Allison
Allison Huebert earned her J.D. from the University of Virginia School of Law in 2012 after a stint as a visiting student at the University of Chicago Law School in 2011. She completed her undergraduate studies at Miami University of Ohio, receiving a B.A. in 2009. Those years framed an early course toward courtroom work and federal practice.
She began practical legal work while still in school, serving as a summer associate at Kirkland & Ellis in 2011. After graduation she joined Kirkland & Ellis as an associate in 2012. The early part of her career at Kirkland provided exposure to complex commercial matters and firm-based litigation practice.
In 2017 Huebert moved to Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, where she continued her development as an associate. Her résumé lists steady experience at two large national firms, and her professional path reflects a trajectory through major defense and litigation shops in the years after law school.
Huebert is admitted to practice in Illinois and Texas and holds admissions to the 7th and 9th U.S. Courts of Appeals as well as the U.S. Supreme Court. She maintains membership in the State Bar of Illinois. Those credentials indicate a practice that intersects state and federal forums, including appellate courts.
Colleagues describe her work as precise and methodical, the sort of preparation that appellate and trial dockets demand. She has handled filings and court appearances across multiple jurisdictions, and her training at large firms has given her experience in briefing, motions practice, and courtroom procedures.
Outside of casework, her path reflects the common pattern of summer associate work leading to an associate position and then to lateral movement between firms. That progression shows sustained involvement in high-volume litigation environments and the professional networks that large national firms create.
She remains based at Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, LLP, where her practice concentrates on litigation and appellate matters in both state and federal courts.