About Greg
Greg Bouquett earned his Juris Doctor from Atlanta's John Marshall Law School in 1997. He completed his legal studies during a period of change for regional law schools. The degree provided the classroom training and practical exercises that shape early courtroom and counseling skills.
The law school he attended offered a curriculum aimed at building legal research, writing and oral advocacy. Those elements are central to modern practice and to the foundations a lawyer takes into practice after graduation. Students at that time navigated a mix of doctrinal courses and practical simulated experiences that prepared them for the bar and for day-to-day client work.
Bouquett is licensed to practice in the state of Georgia. That jurisdiction governs the courts and regulatory framework in which he operates. A Georgia registration places an attorney within a state system that combines metropolitan and rural practices, and requires familiarity with both state procedure and local court customs.
Across the years since he earned his degree, the legal landscape in Georgia has evolved. Laws, technology and client expectations have shifted. Lawyers who began practicing in the late 1990s learned to adapt to those changes while applying core legal skills. Those skills include creating written legal arguments, preparing witnesses and managing case work from intake through resolution.
Profiles of attorneys often point to credentials, but they also respond to how an attorney chooses to apply training over time. For Bouquett, the credential from Atlanta's John Marshall Law School anchors a professional identity tied to Georgia law. The degree year marks an entry point into the profession and into the local legal community.
Today Bouquett continues to practice law in Georgia. His background reflects formal legal training completed in the late 1990s and ongoing involvement in the state’s legal system. He practices law in Georgia.