About Todd Robert
Todd Robert Slack built a career at the junction of law and technology. He earned a B.S. in Computer Science and Accounting from Grove City College in 1990, followed by a J.D. from Loyola University New Orleans in 1996. He returned to formal technical study years later and completed an M.S. in Digital Forensic Science from Champlain College in 2016.
After law school Slack moved into practice and gradually expanded the technical side of his work. He has maintained admissions in multiple jurisdictions and developed experience that crosses litigation, investigation, and regulatory matters. Over time he added credentials that reflect that mixture of disciplines rather than leaving them separate.
Slack holds privacy credentials from the International Association of Privacy Professionals: he is a Certified Information Privacy Professional (CIPP/US) and a Certified Information Privacy Manager (CIPM). He has been a member of The Sedona Conference since 2015 and participates in Working Groups 1 and 11, contributing to the organization’s collaborative efforts on electronic discovery and data protection topics.
Colleagues describe his practice as one grounded in both legal training and technical competence. He applies digital forensic methods to support investigations and to produce defensible evidence in discovery. That work includes forensic collection and analysis, expert support in contested matters, and advising organizations on how to manage the technical aspects of compliance and incident response.
His background in computer science and accounting informs how he approaches complex fact patterns. It helps him interpret data, assess chain-of-custody issues, and evaluate the significance of electronic records in a dispute. Slack has worked on matters that require coordination between legal teams, technical specialists, and external vendors. He aims for clarity when translating technical findings into legal strategy and courtroom-ready reports.
Slack practices across Texas, California and Louisiana. He combines courtroom experience, forensic science training and privacy certifications to serve clients facing discovery challenges, privacy inquiries, and digital investigations. He currently concentrates his practice on privacy law, digital forensics, e-discovery and related litigation support.