About Lindsay
Lindsay Weibel combined numbers and law from an early point in her education. She earned both a Bachelor of Science and a Master of Arts in Accounting from Syracuse University, then turned to law and received her J.D. from Seton Hall University School of Law in 2019. Her academic path gave her a grounding in financial detail before she began practicing law.
After law school, Weibel entered private practice and built a practice that draws on her accounting background. She is admitted to practice in New Jersey and New York. Colleagues describe her as precise and methodical in approach; clients say she is practical and clear about next steps. She has worked at Menz Bonner Komar & Koenigsberg LLP, where she has handled matters that benefit from both legal training and familiarity with accounting principles.
Her early training in accounting influences how she approaches cases. She reads financial statements closely. She looks for hidden issues in records other attorneys might treat as routine. That attention to financial detail informs her legal analysis and the way she prepares for negotiation or litigation. The combination of accounting and law also shapes how she communicates complex issues to clients who may not have specialized financial backgrounds.
In the office she balances client work with research and drafting. She prepares transactional documents, reviews financial data, and participates in negotiations. She also spends time on pleadings and briefs when disputes escalate. She tends to prefer clear, direct writing. In court or at the negotiating table she steers conversations back to concrete numbers and contractual language.
Outside the day-to-day, Weibel keeps up on changes in both accounting standards and legal precedent. That ongoing study helps when regulations change or when a case turns on a technical financial question. She works in a collaborative environment at her firm and often consults with other attorneys on matters that require multiple areas of expertise.
Her career path reflects an ordinary progression from specialist training to legal practice, rather than a single defining case or public office. She remains based at Menz Bonner Komar & Koenigsberg LLP, handling matters that sit at the intersection of law and accounting in New Jersey and New York. Her current practice centers on legal issues that arise from financial and accounting matters.