David Meyer & AssociatesRepresenting Individual Investors and Consumers Against Corporate Misconduct
Matthew R. Wilson, Esq
614.384.7031 Direct
614.224.6000 Main
866.827.6537 Toll Free
614.224.6066 Fax

mwilson@dmlaws.com

Matthew R. Wilson is an attorney with the firm.

Mr. Wilson graduated magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa, in Philosophy from Denison University in Granville, Ohio. He received his law degree from the University of Virginia Law School in Charlottesville, Virginia.

Before joining Meyer & Associates, Mr. Wilson spent four years with the international law firm Jones Day, and two years prior to that with Vorys, Sater, Seymour & Pease LLP. During those six years, he defended many of the world's largest corporations in class actions, wage and hour collective actions, and a wide variety of other types of complex civil litigation. While at Jones Day, he acted as lead counsel in a contract dispute that resulted in a $1.6 million settlement for his client. Bunge North America (East) L.L.C. v. Ohio Fresh Eggs, L.L.C., No. C2-05-905 (S.D. Ohio). In a case involving the electric power industry, Mr. Wilson led the massive discovery effort in a case in which his client received a trial verdict of $123 million. Tractebel Energy Marketing, Inc. v. AEP Power Marketing, Inc., and Ohio Power Co. v. Tractebel Energy Marketing, Inc., 2005 WL 1863853 (S.D.N.Y. 2005).

At Meyer and Associates, Mr. Wilson focuses on prosecuting the firm's class action cases and securities arbitrations. He serves as counsel for certified and putative classes in cases pending throughout the country involving defective products, privacy of medical information, securities fraud, and deceptive advertising. Most recently, he was appointed by the Court as class counsel in Steele v. Pergo, Inc. Case No. CV07-1493 (D. Oregon), a case which resulted in a nationwide settlement.

In addition to Mr. Wilson's complex civil litigation practice, his pro bono services have included the representation of indigent criminal defendants in Sixth Circuit appeals in Criminal Justice Act cases, including a case in which the Sixth Circuit vacated the criminal sentence of Mr. Wilson's indigent client on appeal. United States v. Boards, 202 Fed. Appx. 869 (6th Cir. 2006). He has also been an Interfaith Legal Services volunteer, where he has assisted low-income clients with all manner of legal difficulties. Since 2007, he has served as co-chair of the Class Action committee of the Central Ohio Association for Justice.

Mr. Wilson is admitted to the Sixth and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals, the Northern and Southern Districts of Ohio, the Central and Northern Districts of Illinois, as well as the Supreme Court of Ohio and all lower Ohio courts.