About Raeann Carol
Raeann Carol Warner built her foundation in the liberal arts at Florida State University’s Panama City campus, where she completed a Bachelor of Arts in 2002. She went on to earn her Juris Doctor from Widener University Delaware School of Law in 2006. The trajectory from undergraduate classrooms to law school corridors was direct and purposeful, marked by steady academic progress and preparation for courtroom work.
After law school, Warner entered practice and by 2007 was working as a lawyer at Jacobs & Crumplar, P.A. That early period put her in a firm environment where litigation was central to day-to-day work. The record shows her taking on responsibilities typical of early-career litigators, from case preparation to courtroom appearances, and building practical skills that would shape later roles.
Warner is admitted to practice in Pennsylvania, Delaware and New Jersey. Those multi-state admissions have allowed her to handle matters that cross state lines and to counsel clients in a variety of procedural settings. She has maintained memberships in professional groups that align with trial work. She holds current membership in the Delaware Trial Lawyers’ Association and in the American Association for Justice. She also serves on the Board of Governors of the American Association for Justice as the Revitalization Governor representing Delaware, a role that connects her to wider policy and organizational efforts within the national trial bar.
Colleagues describe Warner as methodical in litigation preparation and deliberate in courtroom presentation. She has worked in offices located in Wilmington and Georgetown, balancing the differing demands of those legal markets. That mix of locations has required adaptability—handling matters that move between local courthouses and regional venues and managing client needs across communities.
Warner’s professional path reflects steady accumulation of courtroom experience, bar admissions across three states, and active participation in trial-focused associations. She continues to engage in organizational leadership at the American Association for Justice while practicing law. She focuses her practice on civil litigation and trial advocacy.