About Jameson R.
Jameson R. Jones trained as both an engineer and a lawyer. He earned dual undergraduate degrees in civil engineering and American studies from the University of Kansas in 2003. He then attended Stanford Law School, completing his J.D. in 2007.
Straight out of law school Jones entered the federal clerkship circuit. He spent 2007 clerking for Judge Jeffrey S. Sutton on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. The following year he served on the Supreme Court as a law clerk to Justice Antonin Scalia. Those two appointments placed him at the center of high-level appellate work early in his career.
In 2009 Jones joined Bartlit Beck LLP as a partner. The move brought him into a litigation practice known for handling complex disputes. His background—an engineering undergraduate degree and Supreme Court experience—gave him a mix of technical literacy and appellate training useful for multi-layered cases. He has been part of teams that manage detailed factual records and intricate legal questions.
Jones holds licensure in multiple jurisdictions. He is a member of the Kansas State Bar and has been a member of the Colorado State Bar since 2010. He is also admitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. Those admissions allow him to handle matters that progress through state and federal appellate channels.
Colleagues describe him as precise in written argument and careful in oral presentation. Those qualities echo the early years he spent drafting opinions and bench memoranda for appellate judges. He combines that approach with an engineer’s attention to detail when parsing factual records and exhibits. That combination informs how he prepares cases for trial and appeal.
Jones maintains an active litigation practice at Bartlit Beck LLP. He continues to represent clients in matters that require sustained appellate work and complex case management, and he remains engaged in cases that reach state and federal appellate courts.