About Amanda M.
Amanda M. Lesinski graduated from Southern Illinois University School of Law in 2017. She finished law school at a time when many recent graduates were moving across jurisdictions to begin practice. Lesinski chose to build her career in Texas, where she maintains admission to the state bar and to the U.S. Southern District of Texas.
After law school, Lesinski began her legal career in positions that exposed her to courtroom practice and firm work. Records show that in 2020 she served as a lawyer at Hoblit Darling Ralls Hernandez & Hudlow, LLP and at The Lee Firm, P.C. Those roles gave her hands-on experience in firm environments and in the management of client matters under supervision of more senior attorneys.
Her work has involved matters filed in Texas courts and in the federal courts of the Southern District of Texas. That dual jurisdiction practice means she has been involved in procedural work in both state and federal settings, including filings and appearances tied to disputes that progress through court dockets. She has navigated the practical differences between state and federal procedures as part of her day-to-day responsibilities.
Colleagues and records indicate Lesinski has operated in traditional firm settings, performing legal research, preparing pleadings and briefs, and contributing to case strategy. Those activities are typical for litigators and trial teams, and they reflect the tasks lawyers in her roles undertake while advancing client positions before judges and opposing counsel.
Lesinski’s educational background and early career roles place her among attorneys who moved quickly into active practice after graduation. She has combined courtroom exposure with firm-side responsibilities, and she has worked under different firm structures. That variety of experience has informed her approach to handling procedural and substantive tasks in litigation matters.
As of 2026 Lesinski practices in Texas and appears in the U.S. Southern District of Texas, handling matters filed in those courts and continuing her work in private practice.