About Noah M.
Noah M. Wexler built his legal foundation in Texas. He earned a B.S. in Economics from the University of Texas at Austin in 2004, then completed his J.D. at South Texas College of Law in 2007. Those years laid the groundwork for a practice that spans state and federal courts.
Early in his career he joined Arnold & Itkin as a lawyer in 2010. That role placed him in a busy environment handling contested matters and courtroom work. The record shows experience in firms that litigate in multiple forums, and his admissions reflect a wide geographic reach.
He is admitted to practice in Texas, Louisiana, Pennsylvania and New Mexico. He also holds admissions to the U.S. Supreme Court and to federal appellate panels, including the Fifth Circuit and the Third Circuit. Those credentials allow him to appear in trial courts and on appeal across several jurisdictions.
Outside courtrooms he maintains professional ties through a range of bar organizations. He is a member of the American Bar Association and the Houston Bar Association. He also belongs to the Texas Trial Lawyers Association and the American Association for Justice. Those memberships track with a career that engages both trial-level and appellate practice communities.
Wexler has worked from offices in Texas and Louisiana. That geographic presence aligns with his admissions and the multi-jurisdictional nature of his practice. Colleagues and clients see the practical effect of having counsel admitted in multiple states and at the federal appellate level: fewer hurdles when cases cross state lines or move into federal court.
He arrived in the profession following study of economics and law, then gained courtroom experience early on. His professional path has been steady: law school, admission, firm practice and expansion into multiple jurisdictions. The combination of state bar admissions and federal appellate credentials frames the kinds of matters he accepts and the venues where he appears.
He currently practices litigation in state and federal courts across the jurisdictions where he is admitted.