
Erin Mireles
Erin is one of the top young whistleblower attorneys in the country. She excels not only at litigation but also at investigating and understanding complex organizations and transactions. His extensive knowledge of tech issues stems from his computer science degree and work as a software engineer at several startups and in Silicon Valley. He is widely praised as a "bulldog with an Ivy League mind" - a formidable combination for a litigator.
Erin served as Assistant Attorney General in the New York State Attorney General's Office until 2017. While in government, Erin handled a variety of civil and criminal cases, with a particular focus on investigating and litigating public interest litigation and recovering cases where the state was defrauded using the False Claims Act. Erin was responsible for all aspects of enforcement and prosecution, including investigations, discovery, and representing the state in court.
Prior to joining the Attorney General's Office, Erin worked as a criminal and civil litigation attorney at the law firm of Morvillo Abramowitz Grand Iason & Anello P.C. He has represented individuals throughout the United States and abroad in state and federal criminal cases, including health care fraud, tax, and antitrust litigation. As New York is the home of disputes in the global business sector, Erin also represents individuals and companies in all stages of civil litigation, from prosecution to trial, in areas of law ranging from common law fraud to consumer protection. Erin has been named a rising star in litigation by Super Lawyers.
Erin attended the University of Michigan, majoring in computer science, and spent a year at Tel Aviv University taking courses in Middle Eastern politics. After a stint in Silicon Valley working in cloud computing, he attended the University of Pennsylvania Law School, where he was named a Levy Scholar in Law and Public Governance. He graduated cum laude from the University of Pennsylvania and clerked for Judge Gabriel Gorenstein at the District Court for the Southern District of New York before spending six months at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.