About Lindsey
Lindsey Thomson began a path to law after a broad undergraduate course of study. She earned a Bachelor of Arts in Biology, History and Chemistry from Ouachita Baptist University in 2006, then moved on to William H. Bowen School of Law, where she completed her J.D. in 2008. Those academic years set up a practice that crosses municipal rules and the everyday problems people bring to a small-firm lawyer.
Her earliest recorded position was at Hosto & Buchan in 2009. There she worked as an associate in a firm environment, gaining courtroom experience and exposure to the kinds of client work that often arrives at local firms. The following year she opened her own practice, taking the title of general solo practitioner under the name Lindsey A. Thomson, Lawyer at Law. That move shifted her role from an associate to the range of responsibilities a solo lawyer handles: client intake, pleadings, courtroom appearances and the business side of running a law office.
In 2015 she expanded public-sector experience by serving as city lawyer and prosecutor for the City of Ashdown, Arkansas. The post required handling municipal legal matters and representing the city in prosecutions. It also meant advising local officials on ordinances and enforcement, a role that can require both legal analysis and plain-spoken communication with elected leaders and the public.
Thomson is admitted to practice in Arkansas and Texas. Her career path contains strands common to lawyers who split time between government work and private practice: courtroom work, advisory duties for public entities and a steady stream of client matters as a solo practitioner. That mix has given her a view of how municipal systems and private disputes intersect at the local level.
Colleagues and clients who work with her describe a lawyer who handles the case load typical of small offices: civil matters, municipal issues and prosecutions. She has built practice skills in drafting ordinances and filings, appearing in municipal and county courts, and managing the day-to-day demands of a solo practice.
As of 2026 she maintains her solo practice, serving clients across Arkansas and Texas. Her current practice focuses on municipal law, prosecution matters and general civil representation in local courts.