Andrew King
Andrew King focuses his practice on appellate advocacy, business litigation, and media law. He has argued before the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit and written appellate briefs to that court, the Arkansas Supreme Court, and Arkansas Court of Appeals. He frequently assists other lawyers with cases brought into federal and appellate courts.
In the past year, Mr. King has handled several hotly contested lawsuits on behalf of secured creditors in state courts and bankruptcy. These lawsuits have touched on challenging legal questions involving the Uniform Commercial Code, real property law, and the right to a jury trial.
Mr. King represents small businesses in real estate matters and other business disputes. He has assisted clients with Internet domain name disputes, family law matters, antitrust compliance, contract disputes, employment litigation, and property rights.
Mr. King has authored works on Internet law, appellate advocacy, media law, and business litigation. With Harold Evans, he is a co-author of Cybersmears and Cybersteals: Protecting Your Clients Online, which headlined the Spring 2010 edition of The Arkansas Lawyer. He is a contributor to the Arkansas sections of a nationwide appellate practice guide, a nationwide antitrust practice treatise, and a nationwide libel law survey. Other of his writings have appeared in the Arkansas Law Review and publications of the Media Law Resource Center.
From 2007 to 2008, Mr. King served as a law clerk for the Honorable Bobby E. Shepherd of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. In 2007, he was admitted to practice law in Arkansas. He is a member of the Media Law Resource Center and the American, Arkansas, and Pulaski County Bar Associations.
In 2007, Mr. King graduated magna cum laude from the University of Arkansas School of Law, where he was an Articles Editor for the Arkansas Law Review. The same year, he won the Levit Essay Contest sponsored by the American Bar Association Standing Committee on Lawyers’ Professional Liability. In 2003, he received his B.S. in Mathematics cum laude from the University of Arkansas, where he was a Bodenhamer Fellow.
Mr. King is a member of Pulaski Heights United Methodist Church. He lives in Little Rock with his wife Kristen and dog Ruby.