About Victoria Marie
Victoria Marie Scozzaro earned her J.D. from Vermont Law School in 2017. She completed a law school curriculum that combined classroom study with practical legal training. Her time at Vermont Law School shaped her approach to handling cases that involve multiple legal regimes and procedural rules.
After graduation, Scozzaro gained admission to practice in several Northeastern states. She is admitted in New York, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island. Those credentials allow her to take on matters that cross state lines and to advise clients on obligations under different state systems.
Early in her career she worked on matters that required careful coordination across courts and agencies. Colleagues describe her as methodical in preparing filings and attentive to deadlines. She has experience drafting pleadings, preparing motions and managing discovery. Her background includes courtroom appearances and collaborative work with opposing counsel and regulators.
Over time Scozzaro has developed practical skills in case management and client counseling. She pays attention to the procedural details that often determine how a matter unfolds. Her practice involves translating complex legal rules into clear options for clients. She places emphasis on thorough preparation before hearings and on clear communication about risks and timelines.
Scozzaro has maintained active memberships in several professional organizations. She takes part in continuing legal education to keep current on developments that affect multi-jurisdictional practice. That ongoing study supports her ability to handle filings and procedural issues across the states where she is licensed.
Today she serves clients from multiple practice settings, handling matters that require coordination among different state courts and agencies. She practices across the five jurisdictions in which she is admitted and structures representation to address the practical and procedural needs of each client. She currently practices across the five jurisdictions where she is admitted.