About Tony S.
Tony S. Kalogerakos earned his J.D. from Western Michigan University Cooley Law School in 2005 after completing a B.S. at Loyola University Chicago in 2002. He attended law school during a period of rapid change in litigation practice, leaving with a law degree that placed him squarely in the trial sphere. The books and classrooms were followed by courtroom hallways and case files.
Admitted to practice in Illinois and New York and admitted to the bar of the U.S. Supreme Court, Kalogerakos moved into practice after law school and by 2007 was working at Injury Lawyers of Illinois, LLC. That early experience established the procedural foundation he would rely on in later matters. He built experience handling filings, client intake, discovery and courtroom appearances at both the trial and motion practice levels.
Outside the office he has maintained active ties to the profession. He is a member of the American Bar Association, the Cook County Bar Association, the Illinois Trial Lawyers Association, the Chicago Bar Association, the New York Bar Association and the Hellenic Bar Association. He also served as president of the Assyrian-American Bar Association in 2017, a role that involved organizing programs and supporting networking among lawyers with shared heritage and interests.
Kalogerakos’s admissions to multiple jurisdictions, including the U.S. Supreme Court, have shaped the types of matters he handles and the venues in which he works. He has experience litigating in state and federal forums and handling the procedural demands that come with contested personal injury claims. His courtroom work is grounded in routine litigation tasks: depositions, motions and trial preparation. The law practice has required steady attention to deadlines and detail.
He continues to practice at Injury Lawyers of Illinois, LLC. His work centers on injury cases, where he manages case preparation, client counseling and litigation strategy. Current practice focuses on representing individuals in injury matters and handling the procedural and substantive work those cases require.