About Mark
Mark White combines decades of technical education with a later career in law. His academic record is strikingly broad. He earned an undergraduate degree in electrical engineering at Cornell University, followed by two master's degrees there in engineering and mathematics. He completed a Ph.D. in the physics program at Northeastern University in 1967 and returned to school two decades later for a law degree from Suffolk University, earning his J.D. in 1989.
His early years were shaped by intensive study in engineering, mathematics and physics. Those programs emphasize problem solving, quantitative analysis and rigorous proof. Those skills informed his work after graduate school and set a foundation for complex technical work that would come to intersect with legal questions later in life.
White moved into the legal profession after receiving his law degree. He is licensed to practice in Massachusetts. The decision to enter law in midcareer gave him a practical perspective. He understood both the technical detail and the legal issues that can hinge on that detail. That dual perspective has guided how he approaches cases and client matters.
At White & Fudala, LC he practices in a small-firm environment. The firm’s size allows for hands-on attention to individual matters. Colleagues and clients encounter an attorney who can parse technical reports and explain their legal significance. That combination of skills has informed his approach to negotiation, dispute resolution and transactional work.
His work tends to involve questions where engineering, mathematics or physics intersect with legal standards. He is known for methodical case preparation and for making complex material accessible to judges, juries and opposing counsel. Outside the courtroom he has handled documentation and analysis that hinge on technical accuracy. He often serves as a bridge between subject-matter experts and legal strategy.
Into the present he continues to work at White & Fudala, LC in Massachusetts. He applies his engineering and scientific training to legal matters that involve technical or scientific questions, helping clients translate complex information into legal arguments and practical decisions.