Alexander Greficz III
Founding Attorney & Managing Partner
Alexander Greficz III is a proud member in good standing of both the State Bar of Maryland and the Maryland State Bar Association. He is a graduate of the University of Maryland School of Law, a top ranked institution and the second oldest law school in the United States. His legal career has been shaped by years of direct service to the people and small businesses that hold Maryland’s communities together. Alex has represented small businesses across the state in disputes, contracts, liability matters, and formation. He has helped abused and financially vulnerable elders secure protection through guardianship. He has stood with underserved, poor, and working class clients during custody battles and divorces, offering pro bono or reduced rate legal services when hardship left them with nowhere else to turn. Alex brings to every case a blend of rigorous training, practical judgment, and steady compassion that has guided his work for more than fourteen years.
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Education
2009-2012
University of Maryland School of Law
Alex attended the University of Maryland School of Law, where he earned his Juris Doctorate with a focus in Health Care Law, completing one of the top health law programs in the country, ranked number 2 nationally. Maryland’s curriculum taught more than doctrine. It demanded precision, disciplined reasoning, and a close study of how law shapes real lives. As part of the university’s Clinical Law Program, ranked number 5 in the United States, Alex worked directly with clients and helped deliver more than 110,000 hours of free legal services each year to some of Maryland’s most underserved communities. Those experiences grounded him in the practical work of listening, advocating, and carrying people through moments that would define their futures. That foundation has shaped the work he has continued for fourteen years.
2001-2005
Wayne State University
Alex completed his undergraduate studies at Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, where he pursued coursework in both medicine and philosophy. Detroit shaped his education as much as the classroom did. The study of biology and health sciences gave him a close view of how bodies break and heal, while philosophy trained him to question assumptions, examine power, and look for the human story behind every conflict. The combination left him with a deep respect for evidence, a habit of careful reasoning, and a commitment to the people whose lives are changed by the systems he would later navigate as an attorney.
