About Jason
Jason Imler earned his law degree from Pennsylvania State University’s Dickinson School of Law in 1998 after completing a bachelor’s in political science at West Chester University in 1991. He entered the legal world soon after law school, carrying with him an earlier credential as a licensed insurance agent, obtained in 1993. That combination of legal training and insurance industry experience would shape the practical side of his practice for years to come.
He began his post-law school career at Handler, Henning & Rosenberg in 1999. There he learned the rhythms of litigation and client work at a hands-on pace. In 2008 he joined Mooney Law as a lawyer. The move placed him in a firm with multiple offices across south-central Pennsylvania and a caseload that required regular court appearances and cooperative work with fellow attorneys in the region.
Imler is admitted to practice in Pennsylvania and Maryland, and he holds admission to the U.S. Supreme Court. He keeps active memberships in state and national professional organizations, including the Pennsylvania State Bar, the Maryland State Bar, the Pennsylvania Association of Justice, the Maryland Association of Justice, and the American Association of Justice. Those affiliations reflect sustained engagement with the procedural and ethical developments that affect trial work across state lines.
His background includes years of courtroom experience and a thread of insurance knowledge running back to the early 1990s. That background informs how he approaches claims, evidence and case preparation. Colleagues describe a methodical approach to case development. He has handled matters that required coordination among different courts and counsel, and he is accustomed to shifting between state and federal procedures when a case calls for it.
Imler practices out of a cluster of offices that serve central and south-central Pennsylvania: Hanover, Gettysburg, Carlisle, York, Harrisburg, Chambersburg and Shippensburg. He maintains a practice that takes cases in Pennsylvania and Maryland and handles matters that are appropriate for federal courts, including those eligible for filing before the U.S. Supreme Court.