Back to top

Andrew T. Ingram

Associate

Andrew’s practice focuses on complex commercial litigation and appeals. He received his J.D. from The University of Texas School of Law where he graduated as the Grand Chancellor and served as an Associate Editor for the Texas Law Review. He was awarded the Dean’s Achievement Award in Contracts, Federal Courts, Criminal Procedure, and Evidence as the top-performing student in the courses. Andrew finished his joint degree at The University of Texas by earning a Ph.D. in Philosophy.

He was a law clerk for Justice Michael Massengale in the Texas Court of Appeals for the First District and Judge Gregg Costa in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit.

Andrew is an accomplished scholar, and before entering private practice, he taught at the University of Alabama, Chicago-Kent College of Law, and most recently at South Texas College of Law where he was a Scholar in Residence.

Read More

Presentations & Publications

  • “Out Of Sight and Out of Mind: Criminal Law’s Hidden Moral Culpability Requirement,” 56 University of Richmond Law Review, 2022 (author)
  • “That’s Not A Burglary!: Classic Crimes And Current Codes,” 58 Houston Law Review 1015, 2021 (author)
  • “Pinkerton Short-Circuits the Model Penal Code,” 64 Villanova Law Review 71, 2019 (author)
  • “The Good, The Bad, And the Klutzy: Moral Concern and Criminal Negligence,” 34 Criminal Justice Ethics 87, 2015 (author)
  • “Breaking Laws to Fix Broken Windows: A Revisionist Take On Order Maintenance Policing,” 19 Berkeley Journal of Criminal Law 112, 2014 (author)
  • “A (Moral) Prisoner’s Dilemma: Character Ethics and Plea Bargaining,” 11 Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law 161, 2013 (author)
    Note, “Parsing the Reasonable Person: The Case of Self-defense,” 39 American Journal of Criminal Law 425, 2012 (author)