Jennifer Loynd

Education

  • J.D., Lewis and Clark Law School, 2002
  • Honors: Outstanding Oral Advocate,
    Moot Court
  • University of Nairobi Faculty of Law, 2000
  • Coursework in International Intellectual
    Property and Environmental Law
  • B.S., Engineering and Environmental Science,
    University of Notre Dame, 1996

Admitted to practice

  • Washington (2002)
  • Oregon (2010)
  • U.S.D.C., Western Washington
  • U.S.D.C., Eastern Washington

Affiliations

  • Washington State Bar Association
  • Oregon State Bar
  • Washington Defense Trial Lawyers

Presentations

  • Case Law Update, Annual Construction Law CLE, 2008

Jennifer D. Loynd

Jennifer has substantial experience in litigation of insurance defense and insurance coverage disputes. She has represented general contractors, subcontractors, developers, owners as well as product manufacturers and suppliers in construction defect litigation and construction contract disputes. Jennifer also has significant experience in litigation of construction-site injury claims, premises liability, product defect liability, toxic torts and other personal injury claims in addition to environmental law issues.

Jennifer has handled all aspects of litigation including mediations, arbitrations, trial and appeals. Jennifer was named a “Rising Star” for 2009 by Washington Law & Politics magazine.

Jennifer was born in Montreal, Canada, and grew up in Eastern Washington. She attended the University of Notre Dame, where she competed with the Notre Dame Rowing Club. She then returned to the Pacific Northwest and worked as an Environmental Engineer for several years in Seattle. Jennifer attended law school at Northwestern School of Law at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Oregon, and then returned to Seattle to begin her law career in 2002.

Jennifer loves living in Seattle, where she enjoys visiting new restaurants and old music venues. She makes annual pilgrimages back to Notre Dame for football games and loves travelling internationally, especially when her adventures take her up in the mountains to ski or down below sea level for scuba diving.