Adam is one of the first quantitative strategic litigation consultants working with big data. With a background in legal doctrine and sophisticated statistical modeling, he combines qualitative and quantitative expertise. His clients range from AM Law 100 firms to small practices, local and national companies, in-house counsel, and large interest groups. He has spoken on numerous academic and professional panels alongside Supreme Court practitioners and federal judges. Adam holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Southern California as well as a J.D. from the University of California, Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall).
Adam is the Statistics Editor for SCOTUSBlog, a regular contributor to Above the Law, and has written for Bloomberg Law. He has authored over a dozen law and peer-reviewed articles.
Along with his business partner Badri Narasimhan, Adam has developed automation software ranging from machine learning audio tools to complex databases using LLMs. He works with research assistants and data analysts to support ongoing projects.
Time Magazine The Economist Bloomberg Big Law Business Bloomberg BNA National Law Journal Volokh Conspiracy / Reason.com BuzzFeed Legal Sports Report CNN Empirical Legal Studies Blog Above the Law Texas Standard / NPR Mother Jones Colorado Springs Gazette The American Lawyer Yahoo News FactsPress Colorado Independent SCOTUSBlog US News & World Report ESPN Washington Post Standard-Examiner Huffington Post The Root New Republic Slate Washington Examiner Law 360 Daily Caller Houston Chronicle Vanity Fair Reuters FindLaw Supreme Court Mic Sports Illustrated Business Insider LexTalk Los Angeles Daily Journal General Counsel News Fox News USA Today CQ Roll Call CNBC WGN Radio Vox The Hill FiveThirtyEight PBS News Hour Barrons His blog Empirical SCOTUS was rated an ABA Journal Top Blawg for three consecutive years before the rankings were no longer provided.