About Marcus L
Marcus L Rogers built a law career that blends private practice, public service and courtroom work. He studied law at Western Michigan University Cooley Law School, earning a J.D. with a litigation concentration. Before that he completed a B.A. in Philosophy and Economics at Purdue University, Indiana University/Purdue University at Fort Wayne.
He opened the Law Office of Marcus L. Rogers in 2010. That early period established him as an attorney working directly with clients and managing a small practice. Over time he moved between public and private roles, returning several times to the mix of tasks that come with running one’s own firm.
In 2018 he served as a Deputy Prosecutor in the Allen County Prosecutor's Office. The position placed him in the county courtroom and in the prosecutorial chain of duty. It was a year that added trial and courtroom exposure to his résumé.
In 2020 he joined Shambuagh Kast Beck & Williams, LLP. After that role he took a position in 2022 as a lawyer for the Indiana Department of Child Services. Those appointments broadened his experience in institutional settings and exposed him to different facets of client representation and public law practice.
Rogers is admitted to practice in Indiana and Alaska. He also holds admission to several federal courts, including the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana, and the U.S. District Court for the District of Alaska. Those admissions allow him to appear in both state and federal matters across two states.
His background combines litigation training from law school with on-the-ground work in private practice, prosecutorial duties and departmental legal work. He has moved between roles that emphasize courtroom presence and those that require advising agencies or managing client files. That variety shapes how he approaches cases and clients.
He currently practices from the Law Office of Marcus L. Rogers and represents clients in matters in state and federal courts. He focuses his practice on civil and criminal representation in those jurisdictions.