Mairiam Ebrahimi, PLLC

Mariam Ebrahimi

Mariam Ebrahimi, Principal, has been practicing law and litigating cases since 2000.  A magna cum laude from Catholic University School of Law, Ms. Ebrahimi served as senior editor of the Health Law Journal; also, she holds a B.A. with distinction from George Mason University.  Her law licenses are held in Virginia and Maryland as well as in the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia and the Fourth Circuit.  She also practices before the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Virginia and has appeared in Immigration Court on behalf of clients.

Ms. Ebrahimi has spent the last 8 years handling a variety of civil and criminal cases and has tried cases in a multitude of jurisdictions in a wide variety of legal areas.  Her extensive experiences include family law matters, i.e., divorce, custody, spousal and child support, employment law, immigration law, traffic and criminal law, civil areas of business disputes, i.e., tortious interference with contract and business relationships, trade secret and non-compete issues, discrimination, etc.

Mariam Ebrahimi has practiced before the Supreme Court of Virginia, Virginia Court of Appeals, the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, all the courts in Fairfax, Arlington, Prince William, Loudoun, Stafford and Spotsylvania counties, in addition to the city of Alexandria, and in Montgomery, Prince George’s, Anne Arundel and Cumberland counties in Maryland.   She has also appeared pro hac vice in the District of Columbia and Maryland District courts.

“I thrive on representing and helping my clients during a very difficult time in their lives,” she says.  Ms. Ebrahimi litigates cases vigorously, and tries to get the best result she can for her clients, priding herself on maintaining professional and cordial relations with opposing counsel and others involved in the process.

You may contact Ms. Ebrahimi directly at her Vienna, Va. office at 703-438-7676.  You are welcome to send her e-mail , but any information received in an e-mail will not be considered privileged or confidential and does not imply or create an attorney-client relationship -- e-mail is not a secure means of communication and should not be considered such.

 

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