Admitted to the Connecticut Bar and United States Tax Court
Goal
To provide sophisticated legal services at an affordable rate in Connecticut.
Education
Lafayette College, BA
University of Connecticut School of Law, JD with a certificate in Tax Studies
Biography
Attorney Simon Weissman is a Connecticut attorney who specializes in real estate transactions, landlord-tenant litigation, estate planning, probate litigation and civil litigation. He previously worked as a commercial real estate attorney for an Am Law 200 firm, where he maintained his office out of the firm’s Stamford office.
While Simon has specialized, his wide-array of experiences created a strong foundation to provide a generalized law practice. Throughout law school, Simon interned with the Office of the Corporation Counsel for the City of New Haven and clerked with a commercial litigation firm. After gaining admission to the Connecticut Bar, Simon worked as a generalized practitioner at a small New Haven firm with a focus on sell-side mergers and acquisitions and business litigation. From there, Simon was recruited to work for a large law firm in Stamford, where he worked on commercial real estate transactions, primarily through acquisitions, dispositions, leasing, development and financing transaction. After leaving “Big Law,” Simon began pursuing his own practice while developing new skills and prospective in the Connecticut court system, primarily providing guidance to pro se parties. Simon worked as an assistant clerk in Hartford Housing Session, facilitating eviction litigation and real estate disputes. Simon has also served as a Staff Attorney for the New Haven Probate Court, navigating the complexities of Connecticut’s Probate system.
There are many great attorneys in this state and Simon is proud to be one of them. Simon puts his heart and soul into his clients’ pursuits. Included on this page is a photo of Simon from when he began his practice. He has not taken a good picture since and will continuously recycle that image until he is accused of not being the same person.