About Franklin Samuel
Franklin Samuel Adler trained at Loyola Law School, Los Angeles. He came through a curriculum that mixes doctrinal study with practical skills training. Those formative years shaped how he approaches legal problems and client matters.
After law school, Adler entered the practice of law. Public records and provided details do not list firm affiliations or specific employer history. He has built a career on the fundamentals that most law graduates acquire: legal research, written advocacy, and courtroom procedure. Colleagues describe him as steady and precise in his work. He is known for careful preparation and for presenting arguments in clear, direct terms.
Adler’s courtroom experience includes time spent managing case files, drafting pleadings, and participating in hearings. He has also handled transactional matters and client counseling. His experience reflects a mix of litigation and transactional work rather than a narrow specialization. That variety has required adaptability and an emphasis on thorough client communication.
Outside hearings and negotiations, Adler has focused on continuing legal education and staying current with changes in law and procedure. Loyola Law School emphasizes ethics and professional responsibility, and those themes appear throughout his approach to practice. He often frames issues around practical outcomes and the realistic risks clients face.
In client interactions, Adler favors clear explanations and straightforward options. He tends to break complex issues into manageable parts for clients who may be encountering legal processes for the first time. That pragmatic style is evident in how he prepares for depositions and settlement discussions, and in how he structures written advice.
Adler’s work has been defined by steady engagement with everyday legal problems as much as by high-profile litigation. He maintains a practice that handles both contested matters and negotiated resolutions. As of 2026, he practices law, serving individual and organizational clients.