About Jason
Jason Marcus began his academic life studying political economics. He earned a Bachelor of Arts from Tulane University in 2003 and later completed a Juris Doctor at the University of Georgia School of Law in 2006. Those years shaped an interest in the intersection of public policy and litigation.
He moved into practice after law school and built a federal litigation profile over time. Marcus is admitted to practice in Georgia and has obtained admission to several federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court and the federal appellate courts for the 11th and 6th Circuits. That federal footprint has informed the kinds of matters he takes and the venues where he appears.
Alongside courtroom work, Marcus has engaged with professional groups tied to whistleblower and fraud enforcement. He is a member of Taxpayers Against Fraud and holds a position on the Federal Bar Association’s Qui Tam Section board. Those affiliations place him in regular contact with lawyers and policymakers focused on False Claims Act and related enforcement work.
His practice has combined litigation and counsel roles. He handles cases that require federal filings, appellate briefing and coordination across multiple jurisdictions. Colleagues describe him as attentive to procedural detail and attentive to the demands of complex federal practice. He has worked on matters that involve government recovery and private-party claims brought under federal statutes.
Marcus is one of the principals at Bracker & Marcus LLC, a firm that handles litigation and enforcement matters. At the firm he splits time between case development, client counseling and courtroom appearances. The office concentrates on federal claims and civil litigation that intersect with regulatory and government enforcement schemes.
Outside the office he participates in professional programming and section work through national bar organizations. That involvement keeps him connected to evolving appellate practice and developments in qui tam litigation. It also creates regular opportunities to brief and debate emerging legal issues.
He maintains admissions that enable him to carry appeals and significant federal filings. Today his work centers on cases involving whistleblower and qui tam litigation, federal enforcement actions and related civil litigation across the federal courts where he is admitted.