Josh represents clients in a wide range of complex and high stakes matters, in every aspect of litigation, and in internal investigations. He has helped clients achieve successful outcomes through motions practice, at trial, on appeal and via settlement. He has worked on, and won, cases in federal and state courts, including the United States Supreme Court, the First and Second Circuit Courts of Appeals, federal district courts, the Massachusetts Superior Court’s Business Litigation Session, and other state courts.
Josh is a strategic thinker and enjoys working with clients to fully understand and pursue their litigation goals efficiently and effectively. Josh represents clients in complex business litigation, consumer protection and civil rights cases, insurance matters and a range of other civil litigation, and in internal investigations. He has successfully defended clients facing billions of dollars in claims, worked on a multi-district litigation involving more than 3,000 state and federal cases, and was part of the team that won a historic victory in the U.S. Supreme Court establishing the constitutional right of same-sex couples to marry.
Prior to joining NBP, Josh was a litigator at Ropes & Gray and clerked for Chief Justice Ralph D. Gants of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court. Josh also worked on Capitol Hill as a legislative assistant – focusing on financial reform and equity market structure issues – for Senator Ted Kaufman.
Josh graduated from Yale Law School in 2013, where he worked as a research assistant to Dean Heather Gerken and served as a Marshall-Brennan Fellow teaching constitutional law to local high school students. Josh graduated magna cum laude from Cornell University in 2009, where won the Janice N. and Milton J. Esman Prize for Outstanding Undergraduate Scholarship in Government. He was captain of the Division I men’s tennis team and First-Team All-Ivy League.
Josh is admitted to the courts of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts and the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts. He served as co-chair of the Newton Special Education Parent Advisory Council and is active in disability-related advocacy efforts.
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