Photo of Douglas Gansler

Former Maryland Attorney General and president of the National Association of Attorneys General, Douglas Gansler, co-chair of the State Attorneys General Practice, brings 36 years of public advocacy experience to his representation of businesses and individuals facing federal and state investigations, enforcement actions, and civil and criminal matters involving state attorneys general, the Department of Justice, and other government agencies.

Doug represents clients responding to and defending against attorney general inquiries from across the country, whether in civil lawsuits, regulatory investigations, or both. His practice encompasses matters involving financial services, health care, pharmaceutical, insurance, telecommunications, and other consumer-facing industries. He handles complex litigation cases involving procurement, Title IX, and state and federal criminal matters, as well as multistate matters, and provides regulatory compliance advice.

During his 23 years in government service, Doug served as Maryland Attorney General, Montgomery County State’s Attorney from 1999 to 2007, and an assistant United States Attorney for the District of Columbia from 1992 to 1998. He has acted as first chair in more than 50 jury trials and 100 bench trials, and has argued more than 50 cases in state and federal appellate courts. Doug argued and won a unanimous decision before the U.S. Supreme Court in Maryland v. Shatzer. Following his government service, he was appointed by the Pennsylvania attorney general as special deputy attorney general to investigate the improper use of email by Pennsylvania judges and state employees, and has conducted internal investigations for numerous national corporations.

On April 28, 2026, Maryland Gov. Wes Moore signed HB 895, the Protection from Predatory Pricing Act, into law. The Act makes Maryland the first state to enact a sector-specific restriction on certain personalized, or “surveillance,” pricing practices in the food retail context. Though this legislation is unprecedented, legislators limited its scope to prevent