About Michael A.
Michael A. Graziano holds a Juris Doctor from Widener University School of Law and a Bachelor of Science in Accountancy from Villanova University. His academic path paired technical training in accounting with professional legal education. That combination informs how he approaches factual records and financial documentation. It also shapes the questions he asks in every file.
Graziano's undergraduate degree in accountancy grounded him in the mechanics of ledgers, audits and financial reporting. Those skills are useful beyond tax returns. They matter when contracts hinge on numbers, when corporate transactions require close review, and when disputes turn on a ledger line. His legal training followed, and it provided the doctrinal framework for applying rules to complex, numeric facts.
Early in his professional life he moved between the language of balance sheets and the language of statutes. That movement is steady in his work. He reads financial statements carefully. He treats evidence methodically. He tends to break problems into discrete elements. Those habits come from formal training and from handling cases that depend on both legal reasoning and numeric precision.
Colleagues and clients have noted an emphasis on clear explanation. Graziano aims to make financial concepts accessible in legal settings. He prepares documents intended to be read by judges, opposing counsel and clients who do not share an accounting background. He writes memos and briefs that set out facts plainly and that connect the record to legal standards.
Graziano's practice reflects the overlap of law and numbers. He often works on matters where accounting detail influences legal outcomes. That might include contract disputes, corporate record review, regulatory filings or other matters in which careful financial analysis affects case strategy. He pursues factual clarity and prefers to let the record drive advocacy.
He currently concentrates his practice on matters that sit at the intersection of legal analysis and financial issues.