About Sara
Sara Boeller brings an uncommon academic mix to her legal practice. She earned a B.S. in psychology from the University of Wisconsin–Platteville, a J.D. from Stetson University, and an M.A. in rehabilitation and mental health counseling from the University of South Florida. Those three degrees shape how she reads a file, interviews a client, and prepares for court.
After law school she moved into practice, building a routine that draws on both legal training and clinical understanding. Her courtroom work, client interviews, and case planning reflect that dual perspective. She has worked with medical providers, social workers, and other professionals to develop case positions that consider legal and human factors. Clients often notice the combination of legal analysis and attention to psychological and rehabilitative details.
Her background in psychology and rehabilitation counseling informs the way she approaches issues of capacity, disability, and access to services. She evaluates evidence through both legal and clinical lenses. That means treating medical records and expert reports as legal materials and as documents that require careful clinical interpretation. It also means preparing witnesses and experts to explain complex health and behavioral topics to judges and juries.
Colleagues describe her as thorough on paper and direct in court. She prepares written work to be concise and persuasive. She prepares witnesses so they deliver plain, usable testimony. She litigates when necessary and seeks settlements when they better serve a client’s needs. Her work requires translating between medical language and legal standards so decisionmakers can resolve difficult issues.
Boeller practices at Boeller Law, P.A., where she spends time on both litigation and client counseling. She remains connected to her academic roots by keeping up with developments in mental health research and disability law. That ongoing study allows her to bring current clinical and legal information to each matter she handles.
She works from an interdisciplinary perspective that blends law, psychology, and rehabilitation counseling. That approach guides her current practice focus.