About George D.
George D. Jebaily earned his Bachelor of Arts from the University of South Carolina in 1978 and returned to the same school for his Juris Doctor, awarded in 1982. Those formative years in Columbia set the foundation for a career rooted in South Carolina's courts. The academic record is straightforward and places him among a generation of attorneys who trained under the state's legal traditions.
After law school, Jebaily secured admissions that allow him to practice across multiple levels of the bench. He is admitted to the South Carolina bar, to the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina, and to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. Those credentials have enabled him to appear in both trial and appellate settings over the course of his career.
His professional life is associated with the Jebaily Law Office. The firm name appears in available records as his principal affiliation. Alongside private practice, he has maintained memberships in several legal organizations. Current memberships include the Association of Trial Lawyers of America, the South Carolina Association for Justice, the South Carolina Bar Association, the Florence County Bar Association, and the South Carolina State Bar. These memberships connect him to peers who handle litigated matters and to local and state bar governance.
Court admissions and association memberships point to a practice built around litigation. Jebaily has operated in venues ranging from county courthouses to federal courtrooms. He has experience in trial work and in preparing matters for higher court review. His participation in trial-focused organizations suggests ongoing engagement with courtroom practice and procedural developments that affect litigators in the state.
Today, he continues to practice under the Jebaily Law Office name. His work is conducted in South Carolina courts and in federal forums where he holds admission. He remains active in bar and trial organizations and handles litigation arising in the jurisdictions where he is admitted.