About Mark
Mark Heath earned his B.S. in history from Brigham Young University–Hawaii in 2004 and completed his J.D. at Roger Williams University in 2007. He built a legal foundation rooted in classroom study and courtroom rules. Those years shaped his understanding of procedure and precedent.
After law school, Heath moved into active practice and secured admission across several jurisdictions. He is admitted to the bar in Arizona and holds credentials to appear before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and the Federal Circuit. Those admissions reflect work that can range from state-level litigation to matters on appeal in federal courts.
Throughout his career Heath has maintained professional memberships. He keeps current his standing in those associations and stays engaged with continuing legal education and bar activities. He has combined that engagement with day-to-day legal work, balancing case preparation, filings, and advocacy in court settings.
Colleagues describe Heath as methodical and dependable. He approaches filings and courtroom deadlines deliberately. He prepares appellate briefs and handles procedural requirements for circuit-level practice. That attention to procedure is a practical asset when litigation moves beyond trial courts.
Clients and fellow lawyers can expect a steady approach to case work. Heath organizes facts, pinpoints governing statutes and precedent, and applies court rules to the task at hand. He adapts written advocacy to the requirements of each forum, whether state trial courts or federal appellate dockets.
Heath’s practice has involved matters that traverse both state and federal systems. He has handled filings and appearances that require familiarity with Arizona law and with federal appellate procedure. He maintains his bar memberships and stays current on procedural changes that affect appellate work.
Today, Heath serves as a lawyer and continues to practice in Arizona and before the Ninth and Federal Circuits. His current practice focuses on matters that proceed through state courts and on appeals filed in federal appellate courts.