About Bridget
Bridget Sciscento earned her J.D. from Case Western Reserve University School of Law in 2021. While in law school she took part in the school’s constitutional law program and was named an Honors Fellow in Constitutional Law in 2020. She also worked as a teaching assistant to Professor Jonathan Adler for the Law, Legislation, and Regulation course that same year.
Her time in law school was marked by a string of practical placements. In 2018 she interned in the office of U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown, gaining exposure to federal legislative work. She spent the summer of 2019 as a summer associate at the Legal Aid Society of Cleveland, where she handled matters tied to low-income clients and community legal needs. The following year she held multiple internships: she worked at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission and served as a Legal and Enforcement Intern at ReliabilityFirst Corporation. These positions gave her experience in regulatory processes, enforcement practice, and workplace-discrimination investigations.
The combination of academic honors and public-sector internships shaped her early professional interests. Her constitutional law fellowship and work with Professor Adler involved detailed legal research and classroom discussion on separation of powers and statutory interpretation. The EEOC role introduced federal administrative procedures and charge handling. The Legal Aid placement added direct-client work and courtroom exposure in civil matters. At ReliabilityFirst she encountered industry standards and enforcement frameworks used in regulated sectors.
Sciscento is licensed to practice in Ohio. She has moved from internships and academic roles into private practice while maintaining an eye on public-law issues. That background informs how she approaches casework: attention to statutory text, careful factual development, and a preference for thorough written advocacy. Her experience spans administrative agencies, public-interest representation, and regulatory compliance matters.
She practices at N.P. Weiss Law. There she handles matters that draw on her past experience in employment and civil-rights contexts, regulatory and enforcement settings, and public-interest civil work. Her current practice focuses on employment and civil-rights matters, regulatory compliance, and representing individuals in public-interest cases.