About Mr. Charles B. Pyke
Mr. Charles B. Pyke Jr built his academic foundation at Auburn University, where he earned a B.S. in finance in 1988. He continued his legal studies at Emory University and received an LL.D. in 1991. Those two degrees — one in finance and one in law — have shaped the way he approaches client work, combining financial sense with legal detail.
He established himself in Georgia law after completing his education. Over the years he has aligned his practice around matters that intersect with aging, assets and legal planning. His professional affiliations trace a steady path: he has been a member of the American Academy of Estate Planning Lawyers since 1995, joined the National Academy of Elder Law Lawyers in 2003, and became a Certified Elder Law Lawyer through the National Elder Law Foundation in 2004. These long-term associations reflect a career spent in specialized areas of law rather than a generalist practice.
Certification from the National Elder Law Foundation is a defining credential on his resume. The designation identifies lawyers who have met standards specific to elder law and related fields. Mr. Pyke’s certification, maintained since 2004, signals an ongoing engagement with the topics and rules that affect older clients, families and fiduciaries.
Colleagues and clients have encountered him in work that involves estate planning, Medicaid planning, guardianship matters and the legal complications that can arise as people age. He brings to those matters a background in finance, which informs his advice on asset protection and planning techniques. He also draws on long-standing relationships in elder law circles through his National Academy membership, which connects him to peers who handle complex planning and litigation for older adults.
While public records list his jurisdiction as Georgia, there is no firm name provided here. He has maintained an ongoing role in professional organizations that center on estate and elder law since the mid-1990s and early 2000s, suggesting steady practice rather than intermittent involvement.
He continues to practice in Georgia and concentrates his work on elder law, estate planning and related matters affecting older adults.