About Skye
Skye Martin built a varied legal career by moving between private practice, corporate compliance and public agency work. She often takes roles that require steady judgment and attention to procedure. The path is practical. The work is procedural. That pattern runs through her résumé.
She earned a Bachelor of Arts in psychology from the University of Arkansas at Little Rock in 2005 and completed her Juris Doctor at William H. Bowen School of Law in 2012. Those classroom years set the stage for a practice that blends client work with regulatory and organizational responsibilities.
Martin began practicing law at the Law Offices of Gary Green in 2012. She shifted to a compliance position at Delta Dental in 2014. That role involved policy review and internal controls rather than courtroom litigation. In 2015 she opened Skye Martin Law, an effort that ran alongside a stint in donor relations at the Heifer Foundation. The mix of private practice and nonprofit work gave her exposure to transactional matters and institutional fundraising concerns.
Her next moves saw her return to firm practice. In 2016 she was a lawyer with Wilson & Associates and in 2017 she worked at Destiny Law Office. These roles deepened her experience in day-to-day client representation and the mechanics of running a law practice. In 2018 she joined the Office of Chief Counsel at the Arkansas Department of Human Services. That position placed her inside state government, advising on administrative matters and the application of agency rules.
Across those posts Martin has handled compliance reviews, counsel work for agencies, nonprofit donor relations and private client matters. She also holds a notary public certification from the Arkansas Secretary of State. Her record shows a lawyer comfortable toggling between transactional, organizational and regulatory tasks, and one used to interpreting policy for clients and institutions.
She practices law in Arkansas and maintains roles that reflect experience in agency counsel, compliance, nonprofit matters and private civil practice.