About Andrew
Andrew Greene trained first as a lawyer and returned to school later to study technology. He earned a J.D. from Northwestern University School of Law in 1991. Decades in practice followed, then a move back to the academic side: an M.S. in computer science from the University of Chicago, awarded in 2017.
Those two degrees shape how he works. The early legal education set the foundation for courtroom practice and case strategy. The later technical degree added formal training in algorithms, systems and data analysis. He brings both backgrounds to bear when cases touch on software, data or complex technical evidence.
Greene is admitted to practice in Illinois and is authorized to appear before the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. Over the years he has appeared in state and federal courts, handling contested matters that require attention to both procedural detail and technical facts. He has taken depositions, argued motions and prepared appellate briefs in matters where technical evidence was part of the record.
His career path has mixed private practice and work that engages the interface of law and technology. Early litigation practice grounded him in civil procedure and trial advocacy. The later study of computer science broadened his practice into areas where code, systems architecture and data processing matter to legal outcomes. He often works on discovery issues, expert analysis and cases where technical experts are essential to understanding the dispute.
In practice he is methodical. He breaks complex problems into discrete questions that can be answered with documents, testimony or technical review. Colleagues note that this approach helps when teams include both lawyers and engineers. Clients receive explanations that aim to be clear about technical tradeoffs and the legal standards that apply.
Greene maintains offices under the names ASG Litigation and ASG Law LLC. He divides time between case work and consulting on technical aspects of litigation. His files include matters that span state court litigation and federal appellate work within the Seventh Circuit.
He also engages in continuing legal education and technical study to keep current on developments that affect litigation practice. His dual background in law and computer science frames his approach to cases that present complex factual or technical questions.
He currently practices through ASG Litigation and ASG Law LLC, handling litigation and matters that involve technical analysis and evidence.