November 5, 2018
Marietta, GA (November 5, 2018)— Gregory, Doyle, Calhoun & Rogers is pleased to announce the recent addition of three attorneys to the Marietta-based law firm.
Blake Hungerford has joined the firm’s Real Estate and Government group where he is representing individuals, local governments, non-profit entities, developers and financial institutions in real estate matters in courts across Georgia at both the trial and appellate level. He received his Juris Doctor, cum laude, from the Cumberland School of Law at Samford University. Prior to law school, Hungerford earned his undergraduate degree in economics at Auburn University.
Brandon White has joined the Litigation practice, where he is representing clients in securities arbitrations, commercial litigation, contract disputes, including those involving restrictive covenants, and other employment and commercial litigation. He routinely represents financial advisors and financial services firms. He represents clients ranging from individuals to Fortune 500 companies and financial services in a broad range of matters and jurisdictions. White received Juris Doctor from Georgetown University Law Center and his undergraduate degree from Georgia State University.
Arun Gupta has joined the Trusts & Estates division where he is assisting clients with tax planning wills, advance health care directives, durable powers of attorney, guardianship and a variety of trusts configurations. He earned his Juris Doctor from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law.Gupta received a Bachelor of Arts from Emory University.
Gregory, Doyle, Calhoun & Rogers, LLC is a full-service law firm based outside Atlanta in Marietta, Georgia. Founded in 1980, the firm serves clients in the family-owned business, construction, education, energy, financial services, healthcare, manufacturing, retail, real estate and government industries. attorneys with real-world experience advising individuals, families, businesses and governmental entities on a wide range of complex business and legal issues.