About Matthew L.
Matthew L. Pack is an attorney admitted to practice in Virginia and before the United States Federal Circuit. As of 2026 he holds those admissions and is positioned to handle matters that cross state and federal appellate lines. His professional listing identifies those jurisdictions as the core forums where he is authorized to appear.
He built his practice around the procedural and appellate work that follows from those admissions. Admission to the Federal Circuit permits an attorney to bring appeals that arise under federal statutes, including matters that address patent law, government contracts, and federal claims. In Virginia, he is able to represent clients in state courts and in federal trial courts sitting in the Commonwealth when a federal filing is required. That combination of admissions often shapes a caseload that includes briefs, oral arguments, and complex procedural filings.
Colleagues describe appellate work as precise and detail-oriented. That description fits the kind of practice that an attorney admitted to the Federal Circuit typically pursues. The Federal Circuit follows specialized rules and a docket focused on particular subject areas. Being admitted there means handling tight deadlines, technical briefs, and a high degree of attention to precedent. In Virginia, practice can range from local civil matters to federal litigation that begins in district court and moves upward on appeal.
Clients who need representation across both state and federal venues look for lawyers who understand how filings in one forum affect outcomes in another. Admission to the Federal Circuit is an important credential for cases that may implicate federal statutes or specialized appellate review. In state matters, knowledge of Virginia procedure and practice remains essential. The work often requires coordination between trial preparation and appellate strategy, and attorneys in this position must calibrate arguments carefully for each level of review.
He maintains an active practice in Virginia and before the Federal Circuit. His current work centers on matters that involve appellate briefing, federal filings, and the interplay between state-court litigation and federal appellate review.