About Drew K
Drew K Stutzman built his legal foundation at Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law, earning his J.D. in 1998 after beginning law studies in 1995. He emerged from law school into practice in a field that demands both technical precision and an ability to manage difficult financial problems. Over the years he has concentrated his work on bankruptcy and insolvency matters, developing a steady presence in courtrooms across Coastal Georgia.
His professional path includes admission to practice in Georgia and in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit. He maintains an active membership in the State Bar of Georgia. He is also a member of the American Bankruptcy Institute, a national organization that brings together practitioners and academics to study insolvency issues. Locally, he serves on the Southern District of Georgia Bankruptcy Court Advisory Committee, a role that connects him to the bench and to other attorneys who practice in that federal district.
Those committee and association roles reflect a day-to-day engagement with the bankruptcy bar. Stutzman’s work regularly involves contested hearings, negotiated resolutions and advising clients on the practical consequences of restructuring or liquidation. He appears in federal bankruptcy court and in related state proceedings. Colleagues and court observers note his steady courtroom demeanor and preparedness, qualities that matter in tight procedural settings.
His current office is part of Coastal Georgia Bankruptcy, a practice group of Meyer & Sayers LLP. There he practices alongside attorneys who concentrate on consumer and commercial bankruptcy matters. His practice balances litigation — including adversary proceedings and contested matters — with counseling clients about options under the Bankruptcy Code and state law. He often deals with the overlapping issues that arise when businesses in distress must weigh reorganization against winding down operations.
Outside the courtroom, Stutzman participates in professional discussions on bankruptcy trends and court procedure through the advisory committee and the American Bankruptcy Institute. Those activities keep him involved in conversations about local court administration and broader policy developments in insolvency law. He continues to live and work in Coastal Georgia, where his practice handles a mixture of individual and business bankruptcy matters.
As of 2026 he focuses his practice on bankruptcy law and related litigation in Georgia and the 11th Circuit.