About Jeremy L.
Jeremy L. Fetty built his legal foundation through consecutive degrees in law and public affairs. He earned a B.S. from Manchester College in 1999, received his J.D. from Michigan State University College of Law in 2002 and completed an LL.M. in Labor and Employment Law at Wayne State University Law School in 2005. The advanced study in labor and employment law complements his broader regulatory work.
Early in his career he served as a law clerk to Judge Kathleen Jansen at the Michigan Court of Appeals in 2003. That clerkship gave him exposure to appellate procedure and judicial decision-making. A few years later he took on a leadership role at Parr Richey Frandsen Patterson Kruse LLP, becoming a partner in 2006.
Fetty is admitted to practice in both Indiana and Michigan. He is also admitted to several federal courts, including the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, the U.S. District Court for the Northern and Southern Districts of Indiana, the District of Columbia Court, and he is authorized to appear before the Sixth and Seventh Circuits. Those admissions reflect a practice that spans trial and appellate work as well as federal and state forums.
His education and memberships point to the sectors he commonly represents. The LL.M. in labor and employment law informs his handling of workforce and regulatory matters. Membership in the Energy Bar Association and the Electric Cooperative Bar Association tracks to work for utilities and cooperatives. He serves on the board of the Indiana Cooperative Development Association and participates on the Legal Committee of the National Telecommunications Cooperative Association, roles that place him in regular contact with cooperative governance, regulatory compliance, and transactional issues.
Fetty’s roster of professional associations includes the Indiana State Bar Association, the State Bar of Michigan and the International Municipal Lawyers Association, among others. Those affiliations align with recurring municipal and local-government matters, and they keep him engaged with developments in municipal law and utility regulation.
Clients in his practice tend to include cooperatives, municipal entities and regulated service providers. He handles a mix of transactional work, regulatory filings and litigation tied to those industries. Fetty practices at Parr Richey Frandsen Patterson Kruse LLP, where his work centers on energy, cooperative, municipal and employment matters.