About Q. Lynn
Q. Lynn Johnson earned a business degree at the University of Texas at Arlington before completing a law degree at Oklahoma City University in 2005. The two degrees set a practical foundation. One is grounded in management and the other in law, and that combination shapes how Johnson approaches client problems.
After law school Johnson established a practice centered in Texas. She is licensed to practice in the state and has remained active in the local legal community for more than a decade. Early career moves included joining bar organization sections that reflect the mix of matters she handles. Those affiliations also provided a forum for trial practice and casework development.
Johnson’s association memberships trace a steady professional trajectory. She joined the College of the State Bar of Texas and the National Association of Consumer Bankruptcy Lawyers in 2010. A year earlier she became a member of the Texas Criminal Defense Lawyers Association and, in 2009, joined the Dallas Bar Association where she participates in the Criminal, Bankruptcy, and Probate sections. Since 2012 she has held memberships in both the Texas Trial Lawyers Association and the Dallas Trial Lawyers Association. The timeline suggests sustained engagement in both litigation and insolvency issues.
Her practice blends criminal defense, bankruptcy, and probate matters. Memberships in consumer bankruptcy and trial lawyer groups indicate involvement in contested proceedings as well as in client counseling around financial distress and estate concerns. In criminal cases she has been part of the local criminal defense community for many years. In bankruptcy matters she is connected to practitioners who handle consumer claims, creditor negotiations and related litigation. Probate work rounds out the mix, intersecting with estate administration and dispute resolution.
Colleagues describe Johnson as steady and methodical in her approach to case preparation. She has used professional organizations to stay current on procedural changes and to exchange tactics with peers in trial and bankruptcy practice. That engagement has also created opportunities for collaboration on more complex matters that cut across criminal, financial and probate issues.
Johnson maintains a Texas-based practice that continues to handle criminal defense, consumer bankruptcy, and probate matters.