About Megan Grace
Megan Grace Knoll built a legal pathway that moves steadily from study to courtroom. She earned her Juris Doctor from Temple University Beasley School of Law in 2017, after completing a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and Criminal Justice at Temple University in 2014. Those academic years laid a foundation in both human behavior and the criminal justice system. They also shaped the practical side of her legal training, from classroom debate to clinic experience.
After law school she joined Morris Wilson, P.C. as an associate in 2017. That role has been the center of her professional life. As an associate lawyer she has worked on cases that touch state and federal procedures. Her responsibilities have included drafting pleadings, preparing motions, and participating in hearings in Pennsylvania courts and in federal court in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
Knoll is admitted to practice in Pennsylvania and to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Those admissions allow her to move cases through different layers of the judicial system. They also mean she handles filings and court appearances under both state and federal rules. Colleagues describe her as steady in court preparation and practical in managing deadlines. Clients see an attorney who pays attention to procedural detail and follows through on required filings.
Her early years at Morris Wilson involved learning firm procedures and building experience across matters assigned to her. She has had the routine tasks that shape junior lawyers: discovery work, client interviews, and research assignments that feed into larger case strategies. Over time she took on more responsibility in case management and courtroom support. She has worked alongside more senior lawyers on contested matters, helping to shape strategy and manage litigation calendars.
Outside court dockets, Knoll applies lessons from her undergraduate studies when interviewing witnesses and assessing case dynamics. That background in psychology informs how she organizes testimony and prepares clients for what to expect during proceedings. It is a practical tool rather than a specialty label.
She remains at Morris Wilson, P.C., where she continues to practice and to handle matters in both Pennsylvania state courts and the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Her current practice centers on litigation work across those jurisdictions.