Neel Lalchandani

Neel Lalchandani

Baltimore, MD recognized lawyers icon Recognized in Ones to Watch since 2023
Brown, Goldstein & Levy LLP

8 Best Lawyers awards

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Awarded Practice Areas

Appellate Practice Civil Rights Law Commercial Litigation Litigation - Labor and Employment

Biography

Neel Lalchandani represents individuals, nonprofits, and companies in a diverse array of civil rights and commercial matters. Among other victories for his clients, Neel has helped secure several of the largest payments in Maryland history for victims of police misconduct, including over $15 million in state compensation on behalf of innocent men imprisoned for crimes they did not commit.

Neel has significant experience with complex litigation in both state and federal court as well as in arbitrations. He has successfully resolved cases involving employment discrimination and retaliation, unpaid wages, wrongful convictions and police misconduct, reasonable accommodations and disability discrimination, fair housing, and the Randolph-Sheppard Act. Neel has also successfully represented plaintiffs and defendants in commercial matters involving breach of contract, business torts, and trade secrets. He is well-versed in appellate litigation, having filed briefs in the Court of Appeals of Maryland and U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, and has also served as local counsel in several class action lawsuits.

Because of Neel’s depth of experience, he has been appointed as an adjunct faculty member at the Georgetown University Law Center to teach a semester-long seminar on wrongful convictions. The course surveys the problem of wrongful convictions in the United States by exploring their primary causes, discussing the legal landscape of innocence litigation and considering the moral, ethical and philosophical implications of wrongful convictions for our justice system.

Neel takes pride in building strong relationships with his clients. He has represented blind vendors and state agencies in Randolph-Sheppard matters, founders and CEOs of companies, restaurant workers, exonerees and victims of police abuse, doctors and other medical professionals, and nonprofits that serve people with disabilities.

Prior to joining the firm, Neel clerked for the Honorable Roger L. Gregory, Chief Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, and for the Honorable David O. Carter on the United States District Court for the Central District of California.

During law school, Neel represented clients as a student attorney in the Stanford Community Law Clinic, was Co-President of the American Constitution Society, and participated in the Iraq Legal Education Initiative. Neel also interned with the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice and with Human Rights First as a Ford Foundation Public Interest Fellow.

Prior to law school, Neel taught and mentored high school students at Urban Prep Charter Academy for Young Men in Chicago; completed the Coro Fellows Program in Public Affairs in San Francisco; and studied human rights as a Humanity in Action Fellow in Lyon, France.

Brown, Goldstein & Levy LLP

8 Best Lawyers awards

Brown, Goldstein & Levy LLP logo

Overview

  • University of Pennsylvania, B.A., summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, graduated 2010
  • Stanford University, J.D., graduated 2015

  • California, The State Bar of California
  • Maryland, Maryland State Bar Association

  • Georgetown University Law Center - Adjunct Faculty Member
  • Federal Bar Association - Member
  • Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project - Board Member
  • Civil Justice - Board Member
  • Lawyers' Alliance, Public Justice Center - Member
  • California, The State Bar of California
  • Maryland, Maryland State Bar Association
  • Georgetown University Law Center - Adjunct Faculty Member
  • Federal Bar Association - Member
  • Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project - Board Member
  • Civil Justice - Board Member
  • Lawyers' Alliance, Public Justice Center - Member
  • University of Pennsylvania, B.A., summa cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, graduated 2010
  • Stanford University, J.D., graduated 2015

Client Testimonials

Awards & Focus

Recognized in Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch® in America 2026 for work in:
  • Appellate Practice
  • Civil Rights Law
  • Commercial Litigation
  • Litigation - Labor and Employment
Awards:
  • Stanford Law School: Public Interest Fellow; Pro Bono Distinction

  • Stanford Law School: Gerald Gunther Prize for Outstanding Performance in Constitutional Law I

  • Stanford Law School: Judge Thelton E. Henderson Prize for Outstanding Performance in Community Law Clinic

  • Super Lawyers’ Maryland Rising Stars (2020-2023)

  • The Daily Record and the Maryland State Bar Association’s Leaders in Law Award (2022)

  • The Maryland Pro Bono Resource Center‘s Alex Fee Maryland Pro Bono Service Award (2022)

  • The National Trial Lawyers Top 40 Under 40 – Civil Plaintiff (2022)

Additional Information

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Case History

Cases
  • James Owens v. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore
Part of team that obtained a $9 million settlement on behalf of a man who was wrongfully convicted and incarcerated for 21 years after Baltimore homicide detectives concealed exculpatory evidence (2018).
  • In re Emergency Request to Unseal Special Master’s Report
Successfully represented American Oversight, a watchdog group focused on the executive branch, to obtain the expedited unsealing of a confidential 1999 report on alleged improper leaks from the Office of Independent Counsel (Ken Starr’s investigation of President Clinton), where Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh worked as a prosecutor (2018).
  • Rivera v. Mo’s Fisherman Exchange, Inc.
Part of team that obtained a $1 million settlement on behalf of restaurant workers against the Mo’s Seafood chain for wage and hour violations (2018).
  • Petitions on behalf of Clarence Shipley and Jerome Johnson
Obtained $4.4 million in state compensation from the Board of Public Works on behalf of two men who were wrongfully convicted and imprisoned in Maryland for 27 and 30 years, respectively (2019).
  • Petitions on behalf of Ransom Watkins and Andrew Stewart
Obtained $5.8 million in state compensation from the Board of Public Works (consisting of the highest per-year amount in Maryland history) on behalf of two men who were each wrongfully convicted and imprisoned in Maryland prisons for 36 years (2020).
  • Umar Burley and Brent Matthews v. Baltimore Police Department
Obtained nearly $8 million for two men who were wrongfully convicted and imprisoned after plainclothes Baltimore Police Department officers (some of whom were later members of the Gun Trace Task Force) planted drugs in their car (2020).

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