About Christopher
Christopher Fink built his legal foundation at the University of Missouri, where he earned a B.S. in Agricultural Journalism in 1992 and a J.D. from the University of Missouri School of Law in 1996. He later completed training at the Judge Advocate General’s School of the U.S. Army in 1999. Those academic steps preceded a career that crosses private practice and military service.
He began practicing law in 1996 at Kennedy & Kennedy. By 1998 he was working under his own name at Fink Law Office KC. In 2016 he took on partnership roles at Cornerstone Law Office and at Hollingshead, Paulus & Eccher. His résumé also lists military service: in 1992 he served in the Missouri Army National Guard as a Fire Direction Officer and as a captain in the Judge Advocate General Corps.
Fink is admitted to practice in Missouri and in the federal courts for the Western District of Missouri and the District of Kansas. Over the years he has joined several professional organizations related to bankruptcy and consumer law. Those memberships include the American Bankruptcy Institute, the National Association of Consumer Advocates, and the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Attorneys, among others. They reflect a pattern of engagement with practice areas that intersect consumer protection, debtor-creditor relations, and bankruptcy proceedings.
His case work has spanned individual consumer matters and litigation that arises from debt collection and bankruptcy administration. He has handled filings in state and federal court and worked on matters that require navigation of multiple procedural systems. Colleagues describe him as steady in court and attentive to procedural detail.
Today Fink maintains an office in Kansas City under the name Fink Law Office KC. He has continued to combine private practice with periodic roles at other local firms, carrying a practice that includes consumer bankruptcy cases and related litigation. He currently practices at Fink Law Office KC, handling consumer bankruptcy matters and related litigation.