About Freddy
Freddy Saavedra began his legal path after completing a degree in computer networking at Arizona State University in 2009 and earning his J.D. from the Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law at Arizona State University in 2012. He moved from technical studies into law at a time when courts and clients were increasingly dealing with technology and administrative complexity. That educational pairing shapes the way he approaches cases: attentive to detail and comfortable with procedural nuance.
Early in his career Saavedra joined the Maricopa County legal community and built a practice that blends litigation and administrative advocacy. He is admitted to the Arizona bar and authorized to practice in the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona. Over the years he has maintained ties to local and national bar organizations. He has been a member of the Maricopa County Bar Association since 2012 and holds memberships in several divisions of the American Bar Association, including the Young Lawyers Division and the Law Practice Division.
Saavedra's organizational involvement extends beyond the ABA. He has served on the Board of Directors of the Los Abogados Hispanic Bar Association since 2016. He is also active in the Hispanic National Bar Association and the American Immigration Lawyers Association, both memberships dating to 2015. His professional affiliations include groups that address veterans' issues and social security claims, such as the Veterans of Foreign Wars and the National Organization of Social Security Claimants' Representatives. Those memberships reflect a practice that engages both individual clients and community institutions.
He established Saavedra Law Office, PLC, where he manages a small firm that handles a mix of matters tied to administrative law, benefits, and immigration-related proceedings. The firm operates in Arizona and routinely appears in federal court matters in the District of Arizona. Saavedra holds AV Preeminent recognition from Martindale-Hubbell, an indicator he carries in his professional profile.
Colleagues describe him as methodical in case preparation and pragmatic in dealing with tribunals and agencies. He has balanced private practice responsibilities with board service and active participation in professional committees, including those focused on minorities in the profession. Outside the office he maintains connections to veterans' organizations and legal groups that serve immigrant communities.
Saavedra continues to run Saavedra Law Office, PLC, and he focuses his practice on administrative advocacy, veterans' benefits, social security claims, and immigration-related matters.