About Robson
Robson Powers earned his J.D. from Stetson University College of Law in 2009. He is licensed to practice in Florida and built his early career in litigation roles that placed him in courtrooms and client conferences alike. The law school training he received at Stetson provided the foundation for work that would quickly become centered on contested matters.
Powers began his post-law school practice as a litigation lawyer at Maddux Lawyers in 2012. He moved into an in-house litigation capacity two years later, taking the title of Chief Litigation Counsel at the Law Office of Conrad Willkomm, P.A. in 2014. Those positions gave him hands-on experience managing cases from pleading through trial preparation, and handling the day-to-day demands of contested files.
In 2018 he stepped into a managing litigation role at Burandt, Adamski, Feichthaler & Sanchez, PLLC. That year also marked the start of his membership in the Lee Bar Association, where he engaged with local practitioners. His professional memberships include the Florida Bar Trial Lawyers section dating from 2012 and earlier involvement in the Florida Bar Young Lawyers Division through 2022. These affiliations reflect steady participation in the Bar community across the past decade.
By 2023 Powers took on formal leadership posts. He served as Managing Lawyer at Light Path Law, P.A. and, later that year, co-founded Powers & Rogers, PLLC. The firm represents the latest stage of a practice shaped by years in litigation roles and internal firm management. Colleagues describe him as a lawyer who moves between casework and administrative responsibilities, balancing client demands with the operational needs of a growing practice.
Across his career Powers has concentrated on litigation, handling both routine and more complicated contested matters. He has experience directing teams, overseeing case strategy, and shepherding files through litigation lifecycles. Today he practices at Powers & Rogers, PLLC, where his work continues to center on litigation matters.