About Justin
Justin Weeks graduated from Widener University Delaware School of Law in 2020. He completed his J.D. as the legal landscape was adapting to new workplace and civil litigation challenges. The timing shaped his early years in practice and informed how he approaches client matters today.
He is licensed to practice in Delaware and is an attorney at Morris James LLP. At the firm he handles disputes that arise in state courts and administrative settings. His practice draws on courtroom procedures and administrative experience, and he regularly prepares pleadings, attends hearings, and manages discovery for clients.
Weeks maintains an active presence in professional circles. He belongs to the Randy J. Holland Delaware Workers Compensation American Inn of Court and the Terry Carey American Inn of Court. He is a member of the Kent County Bar Association, the American Bar Association, the American Association for Justice, and the Delaware Trial Lawyers Association. Those memberships place him in networks that focus on trial skills, workers’ compensation law, and civil justice issues.
Colleagues describe his work as steady and procedural. He often represents clients in workers’ compensation matters and in broader civil litigation. That orientation follows from his Inn of Court affiliations and participation in trial-focused associations. He handles administrative hearings, negotiates settlements, and represents clients at trial when necessary.
Weeks approaches cases in a methodical way. He prepares detailed factual records and pursues legal avenues available under Delaware statutes and court rules. He also stays involved in continuing legal education through the professional groups he has joined. Those activities help him track changes in workers’ compensation practice and trial procedure in the state.
He practices out of Morris James LLP and accepts matters that involve workers’ compensation and related civil litigation in Delaware. His current practice focuses on representing clients before Delaware courts and administrative agencies in those areas.