About Jamie
Jamie Cashio built a law practice from classrooms in Baton Rouge to a small firm that regularly appears in court. He pursues cases methodically. He speaks plainly about the law and organizes his files the way he organizes his courtroom strategy: clearly and without clutter.
Cashio came to law after a long engagement with the social sciences. He earned a Bachelor of Science in Psychology from Louisiana State University in 1992 and a second Bachelor of Science in Sociology from LSU in 1998. He then completed both a Juris Doctor and a Bachelor of Civil Law at the Paul M. Hebert Law Center at Louisiana State University in 2001. Those degrees combine common-law and civil-law training, a background that shaped how he approaches evidence and procedure.
He opened Cashio Injury Lawyers in 2004 and remains the firm's owner. The firm name signals the work he accepts. Cashio has steered the practice through nearly two decades of litigation and client counseling. He handles intake, evidence review, and trial preparation, and he is the lawyer who signs pleadings and appears on motion days. Running a small litigation firm has meant wearing many hats: business manager, advocate, and trial lawyer.
Cashio is licensed to practice in Louisiana and Texas. He is a current member of the State Bar of Texas. Professional recognition includes selection to the Top 100 by The National Trial Lawyers, an organization that highlights trial attorneys nationwide. He has used that visibility to discuss case strategy with peers and to refine trial presentation techniques. Those conversations shape how the firm evaluates damages and prepares witnesses.
In practice Cashio represents plaintiffs in personal injury matters. He files suit against insurers and defense counsel, pursues negotiated settlements when the facts and law suggest it, and prepares cases for trial when settlement is not adequate. He places particular emphasis on evidence gathering and witness preparation. He also manages client communications, explaining options in plain terms and setting realistic expectations about risks and timelines. The office he leads handles case intake and litigation tasks, and he remains the primary contact for many clients.
Today, he continues to lead Cashio Injury Lawyers, representing people in personal injury cases and overseeing the firm's litigation work.