About Mark A
Mark A Morenz-Harbinger attended Northern Kentucky University and earned his J.D. in 2012. He completed his legal education after several years of study and entered practice in the early 2010s. His academic record placed him among a generation of lawyers who moved between state and federal practice areas, and his subsequent admissions reflected that range.
He is admitted to practice in Washington and Kentucky, and he is also admitted to the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington. His bar and organizational memberships include the American Bar Association (since 2009), the Kentucky Bar Association (since 2013), the National Lawyers Guild (since 2015), and the Washington State Bar Association (since 2016). Those affiliations track a period of geographic and professional transition as he expanded the jurisdictions where he could appear.
Early in his career he established a footing that crossed state lines. That path required courtroom preparation and the procedural work that comes with federal admission. He gained experience appearing in state and federal venues. The record of his admissions shows a lawyer who maintained connections in both Kentucky and Washington while adding federal practice privileges in the Western District of Washington.
Colleagues describe him as methodical and attentive to procedural detail. He spends time on case preparation and on the written work that supports courtroom arguments. His professional memberships indicate an engagement with bar activities and organizations that address legal practice, ethics and public-interest perspectives.
He maintains an office in Kent where he meets clients and handles matters arising under the laws of the states in which he is licensed. That office serves as his local base while he also operates in matters that require appearances in federal court. He is active in professional circles that span both regional and national organizations, reflecting the dual-state character of his license set.
In practice he represents clients in matters that require admission in Washington and Kentucky and in federal proceedings before the Western District of Washington. He continues to practice from his Kent office and remains active in the bar organizations listed above.