About Kevin
Kevin Cornish built a steady private-practice career across multiple jurisdictions. He earned his law degree from George Mason University School of Law in 2007 after completing an undergraduate degree at Pennsylvania State University in 2002. Those two institutions provided the formal training that launched his entry into law firms in the Mid-Atlantic.
Fresh from law school in 2007, Cornish began his legal work at Hamburg, Rubin, Mullin, Maxwell & Lupin. He spent the early years of his career there, gaining practical experience in an office setting. In 2011 he joined Kurtz & Revness, P.C., continuing his development as a lawyer who handles matters for private clients and businesses. A year later he moved to High Swartz, where he has practiced since 2012.
Across those moves he has practiced under several professional umbrellas and in different team roles. The record shows steady employment at established regional firms rather than academic or public-sector positions. His career path reflects a lawyer building a practice through firm work, client matters and case management rather than through headline litigation or public appointments.
Cornish is admitted to practice in Pennsylvania, Virginia, the District of Columbia and Maryland. He maintains memberships in the Pennsylvania State Bar, the Pennsylvania Bar Association and the Montgomery Bar Association. Those affiliations indicate ongoing ties to professional communities in the state where he began and the wider region where he practices. They also suggest involvement in continuing legal education and local bar activities that are common among lawyers working in multiple state jurisdictions.
Today he is listed as an attorney at High Swartz LLP. His work has been carried out from firm offices and through representation that crosses state lines. He continues to represent clients under the licenses he holds in Pennsylvania, Virginia, the District of Columbia and Maryland, and his current practice concentrates on serving those multi-jurisdictional client needs.