About Neil
Neil Rosen has spent decades at the intersection of courtroom procedure and legal education. He earned his Bachelor of Arts from the University of South Carolina in 1972 and followed that with a J.D. from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in 1976. Those credentials set the stage for a long career centered on trial work and the practical mechanics of evidence.
Early in his career Rosen combined practice with teaching. He has returned to the University of Pittsburgh School of Law as a lecturer, sharing real-world lessons with students and situating doctrinal rules in live litigation contexts. His teaching engagements extend beyond the university. He has lectured for the Pennsylvania Bar Institute and for the Academy of Trial Lawyers of Allegheny County, addressing practicing lawyers as often as he has students.
Rosen’s professional commitments include service on a rules committee for the state’s highest court. He serves as a committee member on the Rules of Evidence for the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. That role places him in the room where evidentiary standards are reviewed and refined. It also reflects a practice that repeatedly returns to questions of admissibility, proof, and courtroom procedure.
He stays active in bar organizations. Rosen holds memberships in the Pennsylvania State Bar, the Allegheny County Bar Association, and the Pennsylvania Bar Association. He is also associated with the Pennsylvania Association for Justice, where he is listed in the President’s Club. These memberships mark him as a regular participant in the professional life of Pennsylvania’s bench and bar.
Community service has threaded through his career. He is a past vice chairman of the National Kidney Foundation of Western Pennsylvania, and he previously served as president of Adat Shalom Synagogue. Those leadership roles indicate an interest in organizational governance outside the law, and they reflect a pattern of civic engagement alongside his legal work.
For decades Rosen has balanced litigation, teaching, and committee work. He practices at Rosen Louik & Perry, PC, where his day-to-day work draws on his evidentiary expertise and courtroom experience. His practice involves civil trial work and matters relating to the rules of evidence.