About Brandon M.
Brandon M. Selinsky is an attorney licensed to practice in both Colorado and Michigan and is a member of the team at Whitcomb, Selinsky PC. He works across two state bars, bringing a practice that spans geographic lines rather than one courthouse or one county.
He completed the necessary legal training that preceded admission to the bars of Colorado and Michigan. That dual licensure underpins his ability to advise clients whose matters touch more than one state or whose legal questions require familiarity with differing state rules and procedures.
Selinsky’s career has been organized around firm practice. At Whitcomb, Selinsky PC he contributes to the firm’s caseload and participates in the day-to-day responsibilities of client representation. His work includes preparing written submissions, engaging in negotiations, and appearing where required in administrative or court settings. He collaborates with colleagues at the firm on complex matters and helps manage the logistical demands that arise when cases involve multiple jurisdictions.
Colleagues describe Selinsky as methodical in approach. He tends to break issues into discrete steps and to keep clients informed as those steps unfold. That style affects how he handles matters that shift between state systems or that involve overlapping regulatory schemes. He balances case preparation and client counseling, shifting emphasis as the needs of a matter change.
Outside of courtrooms and conference rooms, Selinsky handles the practical tasks that make litigation and transactional work possible. He drafts pleadings and agreements, responds to discovery demands, and works on motions and other procedural filings. He also consults with clients about the consequences of strategic choices, such as settlement versus continued litigation, and coordinates work among lawyers licensed in different states when an engagement calls for it.
Over time he has developed a practice posture suited to crossjurisdictional work. He reviews how statutes, rules, and local practices intersect, and he translates those technical elements into options clients can understand. He adapts his courtroom and negotiation tactics depending on whether a case is governed by Colorado or Michigan law.
He currently practices at Whitcomb, Selinsky PC, representing clients in matters that arise under Colorado and Michigan law.