Courtney Miller is a partner at HWG LLP, where she enjoys a diverse practice that focuses on legal ethics and includes trial and appellate litigation, government investigations, criminal defense, and telecommunications law.

Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility

  • Represents lawyers and law firms in attorney discipline matters and related civil litigation, including through trials against the D.C. Office of Disciplinary Counsel and the Attorney Grievance Commission of Maryland, as well as appeals before the D.C. Board on Professional Responsibility, the Supreme Court of Maryland, and the Fourth Circuit.
  • Advises and represents clients a range of legal ethics issues, including misconduct, criminal conduct, fee disputes, law firm partner disputes, client complaints, unauthorized practice of law, admission to the D.C. Bar, and character and fitness evaluations.

Litigation, Government Investigations, and Criminal Defense

  • Secured dismissals with prejudice of charges against not only our client but most of the defendants in the “J20 Inauguration Day” protest cases.
  • Filed amicus brief concerning discrimination based on sexual orientation.
  • Successfully defended client on appeal by obtaining ruling that its Terms of Service were enforceable and barred appellant’s defamation and negligence claims.
  • Secured dismissal of unfounded child abuse allegations through a motion for judgment as a matter of law at the end of the county-level Department of Social Services’ case.
  • Successfully represented low-income clients fighting eviction in landlord-tenant case.

Telecommunications Law

  • Represents clients with respect to the FCC’s Universal Service Fund, with particular experience with the Rural Health Care Program and Form 499 issues.
  • Advises and counsels clients on all aspects of compliance pertaining to interconnected VoIP service.

Prior to joining HWG, Courtney clerked for the Honorable Catharine F. Easterly of the D.C. Court of Appeals and summered as a Law & Policy Fellow for the National LGBTQ Task Force.

During law school, she served on the editorial board of the Virginia Law Review, on the managing board of the Virginia Journal of Social Policy & the Law, and as a teaching assistant for the Legal Research & Writing Program. Her Note in the Virginia Law Review—“Spiritual But Not Religious”: Rethinking the Legal Definition of Religion—won two awards in 2016: the UVA Law School Alumni Association’s Best Note Award and second place nationally in the Religious Liberty Student Writing Competition.