About Rami
Rami Zahr took his legal training at Mitchell Hamline School of Law, where he developed the foundations of courtroom practice and legal research. He left law school prepared for the procedural work that follows litigation: drafting motions, preparing witnesses and managing the many details that keep a case on track. His academic background includes the practical clinics and coursework that feed into trial and federal practice.
He moved into public-interest work early in his career. In 2018 he worked at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC), assisting on matters that intersected law enforcement, child welfare and digital evidence. That year shaped how he approaches cases that require coordination among agencies and careful handling of sensitive materials.
Zahr is admitted to practice in Virginia and to federal courts that serve that region, including the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit and the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. He keeps professional ties through membership in the Virginia State Bar, the Federal Bar Association, the Minnesota State Bar Association and the American Association for Justice. Those memberships reflect a practice that spans state and federal procedures and the professional networks that support trial work.
His work history mixes institutional experience and private practice. After his time at NCMEC he took on roles that deepened his experience in litigation and federal filings. He now operates out of Eirene Law Office, P.L.L.C., where he handles case intake, strategy development and litigation management. Colleagues note an attention to court deadlines and the administrative demands of moving cases through federal dockets.
Clients encounter an attorney who is comfortable in both state and federal forums. Zahr files in district court, presents arguments in briefing, and handles appellate filings where necessary. His practice balances courtroom preparation with the procedural mechanics of federal litigation.
He maintains an active role in bar organizations that connect trial lawyers and federal practitioners, and he continues to draw on his experience at NCMEC when cases raise questions about digital records or interagency cooperation. He currently focuses his practice on litigation in state and federal courts, including matters filed in the Eastern District of Virginia and appeals in the Fourth Circuit.