1001 West Fourth Street, Winston-Salem, NC USA 27101
Lynn Charbonneau is a paralegal on Kilpatrick’s Complex Commercial Litigation (CCL) Team. She has been with Kilpatrick for 37 years. She has managed hundreds of complex cases from complaint through trial in every major U.S. hotbed of litigation, including the Northern District of California, Southern District of New York and Eastern District of Texas, numerous state, federal, appellate, and business courts, as well as arbitration (AAA, JAMS, FINRA, NASD) and mediation forums. She assists the firm’s attorneys with drafting and e-filing pleadings, drafting discovery, deposition preparation, hearing and trial preparation, and trial evidence presentation.
Lynn also served four years as a member of Kilpatrick’s LitSmart® E-Discovery Team giving her in-depth expertise in collection, review, and preparation of documents for production as well as subpoena response and preservation compliance. Lynn’s extensive background in litigation makes her an invaluable resource for attorneys and clients on all aspects of litigation and compliance with federal, state, and local rules.
Lynn has experience with numerous software platforms including Relativity, the industry-leading e-discovery management system used in-house at Kilpatrick, IPro, West Case Notebook, Concordance, and Summation.
In 2014, she was a recipient of the Kilpatrick Pro Bono Collaboration Award. In 2024, she was the recipient of the Kilpatrick Pro Bono Justice Award.
Guilford College B.S. (1988) Justice and Policy Studies
The National Center for Paralegal Training ABA approved Certificate Program (1988)
University of North Carolina, Joseph M. Bryan School of Business and Economics Undergraduate Courses (1993-1994)
Junior League of High Point, Inc., Sustainer
North Carolina Bar Association, Legal Assistant Division
Disclaimer
While we are pleased to have you contact us by telephone, surface mail, electronic mail, or by facsimile transmission, contacting Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP or any of its attorneys does not create an attorney-client relationship. The formation of an attorney-client relationship requires consideration of multiple factors, including possible conflicts of interest. An attorney-client relationship is formed only when both you and the Firm have agreed to proceed with a defined engagement.
DO NOT CONVEY TO US ANY INFORMATION YOU REGARD AS CONFIDENTIAL UNTIL A FORMAL CLIENT-ATTORNEY RELATIONSHIP HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED.
If you do convey information, you recognize that we may review and disclose the information, and you agree that even if you regard the information as highly confidential and even if it is transmitted in a good faith effort to retain us, such a review does not preclude us from representing another client directly adverse to you, even in a matter where that information could be used against you.
