About Chester J.
Chester J. Gregg began his academic life in the classroom. He earned a B.S. in Secondary Education from the State University of New York at College at Oswego in 1993. He later turned to the law and received his J.D. from New England Law | Boston in 1998.
His early legal career took a military turn. In 2001 he joined the U.S. Army JAG Corps as a judge advocate. That period put him in a disciplined legal environment where military rules, procedure and service-member representation framed everyday practice.
In 2006 Gregg moved into private practice and became an owner and partner at Balbo & Gregg, Lawyers at Law, P.C. He helped shape the firm’s operations and its presence in the region. The firm maintains a Hinesville office among its locations, and Gregg has remained a central figure in the partnership since taking on that leadership role.
Gregg is admitted to practice in multiple jurisdictions. He holds admission in Georgia and Florida and is credentialed to practice before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court. Those admissions allow him to handle matters that proceed through both state and federal levels, including appellate work when necessary.
Colleagues describe Gregg as a lawyer who blends courtroom experience from his JAG service with the practical demands of running a private practice. He has worked on cases that require attention to procedure and evidence, and he handles the administrative tasks that come with firm leadership. He balances client work with managing office responsibilities and coordinating filings in different courts.
Today Gregg practices out of Balbo & Gregg Lawyers at Law, P.C., dividing time between the firm’s Hinesville office and its other offices. He appears in state and federal courts in Georgia and Florida and is admitted to the 11th Circuit and the U.S. Supreme Court, where he handles matters arising from his work in both trial and appellate settings.
He currently practices at Balbo & Gregg Lawyers at Law, P.C., handling matters in state and federal courts in the jurisdictions where he is admitted.