About Eric
Eric Weiss followed a steady academic path into law. He earned a B.A. from the University of Pennsylvania in 1986 and a J.D. from Fordham University School of Law in 1990. Those years laid the groundwork for a career spent practicing in New York courts.
He is admitted to practice in New York and in the United States District Courts for the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York. Over time he has built a practice that regularly interacts with the state and federal dockets that shape legal work in the region. Court appearances and filings in Manhattan and Brooklyn are part of his routine.
Much of his professional life has been associated with the Law Offices of Weiss & Weiss. Records list that firm as his place of practice. At that office he handles matters arising in the jurisdictions to which he is admitted. The office listing does not provide further details on a specialty, but it does place him within the day-to-day environment of litigation and client counsel in Westchester and New York City.
Outside the courtroom, he has ties to both legal and extracurricular communities. He has been a member of the Westchester County Bar Association since 2008. That membership connects him to local lawyers and bar activities across County lines. He is also a current member of the Society for American Baseball Research, an organization that brings together people interested in the history and analysis of the game.
His career shows a steady course rather than frequent moves from firm to firm. The available information centers on his long-standing affiliation with Weiss & Weiss and his registrations to practice in New York’s state and two principal federal courts. That combination suggests routine work in filings, appearances and client counseling related to matters that arise in those venues.
He maintains a professional profile that ties academic credentials to practical court admissions and local bar involvement. Today he continues to practice at the Law Offices of Weiss & Weiss, handling matters in New York state and federal courts.