About Gregg S.
Gregg S. Freeburn earned his J.D. from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in 2012. He arrived in law school after earlier work that exposed him to both corporate and community settings. At Pitt, he combined classroom study with a steady stream of practical placements.
Those placements shaped the early arc of his career. He held legal internships at iQor in the United States and at neighborhood legal services through Southwestern Legal Services. He spent time as a judicial intern for Judge Cercone in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania, observing pretrial practice and courtroom procedure at the federal level. He also worked as a summer associate at Freeburn & Hamilton during law school, gaining hands-on exposure to case preparation and client work.
The variety of his early positions reflects a willingness to test several sides of legal practice. The internships ranged from corporate settings to public-interest offices. The judicial internship provided a view inside the federal bench that often shapes how young lawyers think about litigation strategy and case management. He has continued to be involved in groups that emphasize trial work and plaintiff advocacy.
His professional memberships reflect those interests. He is listed among The National Trial Lawyers’ Top 40 Under 40 and holds memberships in the Pennsylvania Association of Justice and the American Association for Justice. He is also a member of the Dauphin County Bar Association. Outside the courtroom, he participates in local civic and communal organizations, including the Sports and Fitness Committee of the Harrisburg JCC, the Board of Chisuk Emuna Congregation of Greater Harrisburg, and the John Dickinson Society.
Colleagues describe him as methodical in approach and attentive to the procedural details that matter in litigation. He has combined that workaday focus with an active role in professional circles that emphasize trial experience. His path through internships, a federal judicial clerkship, and early firm work provided a broad base for the litigation practice he pursued after law school.
He is licensed to practice in Pennsylvania and continues to build a practice there. He handles litigation and trial advocacy in state and federal courts, and he remains involved in local bar and community organizations as part of his professional life.