About Jonathan C.
Jonathan C. Bond built his legal foundation at two California schools. He earned a B.A. from the University of California, Irvine in 2008 and a J.D. from the University of Southern California Gould School of Law in 2011. Those years covered classrooms, clinics and the first practical experiences that often shape a young lawyer’s path.
He began his career in a clerkship at Merino & Yebri LLP in 2010. That early year in the trenches gave him exposure to day-to-day practice and the rhythms of case preparation. After law school he moved into associate roles, starting at Robert J. Jackson & Associates, Inc. in 2011. Each subsequent position broadened his experience and let him handle increasingly complex assignments.
In 2014 he joined Hart King as an associate. Three years later he took an associate post at PIB Law in 2017. In 2019 he became an associate at Lynberg & Watkins, APC. Across those moves he picked up practical courtroom and office skills, as well as experience working for different firms and client bases. The chronology shows steady progression rather than abrupt pivots.
Bond is admitted to practice in both California and the District of Columbia. That dual admission reflects time spent practicing on both coasts and an ability to work under different state and local rules. He has spent the majority of his career in private practice, performing tasks typical of an associate attorney: research, drafting, motion work and client communication. His resume does not include judicial appointments or public office; it is a record of private-sector practice.
Peers and employers have relied on him for reliable legal work. He has filled roles that require attention to procedure, careful document preparation and coordination with senior attorneys. Those are the everyday skills of practice and the ones that determine how efficiently a team moves through discovery, briefing and hearings.
He currently practices at Lynberg & Watkins, APC. There he handles matters for clients in California while maintaining his admission in the District of Columbia. His day-to-day work continues to reflect the steady progression of a lawyer who has moved through clerkship and successive associate appointments to an established role in a multi-attorney firm.