About Avery
Avery Adcock earned a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa before completing her Juris Doctor at Samford University. She began building her legal grounding in classrooms and clinics that emphasized trial advocacy and client work. Those early experiences shaped how she approaches cases now.
Adcock practices in Virginia. Over the years she has taken on roles that center on litigation and courtroom work. She holds an office at Senior Justice Law Office and has appeared in state courts representing clients in contested matters. Her work has involved preparing cases for trial, taking depositions and arguing motions.
Her association activity mirrors the kinds of cases she handles. She is active in the District of Columbia Trial Lawyers Association and serves as Chair of the Education Committee there. Within the Virginia Trial Lawyers Association she serves as Chair-Elect of the Young Trial Lawyers section and participates in the Long-Term Care Litigation Group and the Women’s Caucus. She also belongs to the American Association for Justice and its Nursing Home Litigation Group, where she is involved in the Women’s Trial Lawyer Caucus Convention Committee and the New Lawyers Division.
Those group roles reflect an interest in nursing home and long-term care litigation, and in mentorship for newer attorneys. She speaks at meetings and organizes educational sessions aimed at trial skills and case strategy. Colleagues describe her as someone who prioritizes practical courtroom preparation. Clients see an attorney who moves cases forward rather than letting procedural delays stall progress.
Adcock’s courtroom work involves common tasks for a litigator: drafting pleadings, conducting discovery, and arguing evidentiary and dispositive motions when cases demand it. She also works on settlement negotiations when they serve a client’s interests. Her docket includes matters that touch on elder care and long-term care issues, an area that has become a substantive strand of her practice.
She balances litigation with association leadership. That combination keeps her connected to developments in trial practice and to the next generation of lawyers. Her calendar often blends client hearings, committee meetings and continuing legal education events.
Adcock maintains an active practice at Senior Justice Law Office. She represents clients in civil litigation, with an emphasis on nursing home and long-term care cases, and continues to participate in professional groups that shape trial practice.