About Mallory McKnight
Mallory McKnight Fuller earned her law degree and a diploma in comparative civil law from the Paul M. Hebert Law Center at Louisiana State University in 2014. She arrived at law school after completing a Bachelor of Arts at the LSU School of Architecture in 2011. That combination of technical training and legal education has shaped the way she approaches complex discovery and litigation matters.
Her early legal work included a string of clerkships and internships. In 2012 she worked for both the Bateman Law Office and the East Baton Rouge District Lawyer's Office, roles that introduced her to courtroom procedures and case preparation. In 2013 she served as a research assistant at the Paul M. Hebert Law Center while also taking on summer clerk roles at Kean Miller LLP and at Breazeale Sachse and Wilson LLP. Those positions gave her exposure to corporate and public-sector practices.
Soon after finishing law school, Fuller moved into roles that combined legal research with technology-driven processes. In 2014 she joined Kean Miller LLP as Senior Counsel and Director of E-Discovery. The post placed her at the intersection of litigation and information management, overseeing electronic evidence review and developing workflows for large-scale document productions. She has argued the practicalities of managing data in litigation and worked on teams that handle voluminous, often complex, collections.
Fuller is admitted to practice in Louisiana and in the federal courts for the Eastern, Middle and Western Districts of Louisiana, as well as before the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. She maintains memberships in the Baton Rouge Bar Association and the Louisiana State Bar Association. Those affiliations keep her engaged with local practice developments and procedural changes that affect discovery and trial preparation.
At Kean Miller LLP Fuller’s work sits inside litigation practice groups, where she coordinates e-discovery strategy, technology-assisted review, and document production. Her background in architecture and law informs an orderly approach to case logistics, stressing process and attention to detail. She continues to handle the technical and procedural aspects of electronic evidence for clients in state and federal matters.
Fuller practices at Kean Miller LLP, where her current work concentrates on e-discovery, electronic evidence management, and litigation support matters.