About Anthony
Anthony Miley trained in Delaware and emerged from law school at a moment of change. He entered Widener University Delaware School of Law in 1987 and received his J.D. in 1990. The law degree set the course for a career that spans state and federal practice.
He is admitted to practice in Pennsylvania and before the U.S. Supreme Court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Those admissions reflect a range of courtroom options, from trial-level matters in Pennsylvania to appeals at the federal level. Miley’s bar memberships also connect him to broader professional networks; he maintains active association memberships that keep him engaged with peers and developments in the field.
Miley’s early years in practice coincided with a shifting legal landscape. He came of age professionally during the 1990s, a decade that demanded adaptability from lawyers confronting new procedural norms and evolving case law. He built his practice from that foundation, handling matters that required both trial preparation and appellate readiness. The combination of state and federal admissions allows him to move between trial courts and higher tribunals when a client’s case warrants it.
His courtroom experience includes filings and appearances that invoke federal appellate jurisdiction and, when necessary, recourse to the Supreme Court. Admission to those courts is procedural but consequential. It permits him to file briefs and petitions at the highest levels and to represent clients in complex appeals that raise significant legal questions.
Outside of court filings and briefs, Miley participates in professional circles through association membership. Those ties provide regular exposure to continuing legal education and collegial exchange. He has used that engagement to stay current on procedural developments and appellate practice trends that affect litigation strategy.
Colleagues describe him as methodical in preparing filings and attentive to the demands of appellate work. He favors clear, concise briefs and careful preservation of issues at the trial level so they remain viable on appeal. His approach reflects an understanding that appellate practice often turns on record-building and precise legal argument rather than dramatic courtroom moments.
Today, Miley continues to practice, drawing on a J.D. earned in 1990 and admissions that include the Pennsylvania bar, the Third Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court. He maintains professional memberships and concentrates his work on matters that may require representation in state courts and at the federal appellate level.