Areas of Practice
- Litigation
- Personnel
Randall Moore has practiced law in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, north Texas and west Texas since 1985. Upon graduation from Southern Methodist University in 1985, he served as an assistant district attorney in Tarrant County.
Randy then spent the next several years representing doctors, hospitals, nursing homes, trucking companies, construction companies and other businesses. As an insurance defense lawyer, he handled litigation involving breast implants, dangerous drugs such as fen-phen, and defective medical and surgical devices. Today he uses the experience he gained representing insurance companies to protect the rights of injured people and police officers.
Randy is board certified in personal injury trial law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization and in civil trial law by the National Board of Trial Advocacy. He is a member of the Tarrant County Bar Association, the Tarrant County Trial Lawyers Association, the State Bar College, and the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA). He has been selected multiple times as one of Fort Worth’s best attorneys, as published in Fort Worth, Texas Magazine, in the area of medical malpractice and personal injury and is a frequent lecturer for the State Bar of Texas and a past lecturer for insurance defense organizations. Randy has achieved an AV rating*, which shows that a lawyer is recognized by his peers for the highest levels of skill and integrity. Randy has been selected for inclusion in the Texas Super Lawyers, as published in Texas Monthly magazine, since 2005. In 2011, he became a member of the National Trial Lawyers Top 100 Trial Lawyers.
BBA, University of Texas at Arlington, with honors, 1982
JD, Southern Methodist University Law School, 1985
State Bar of Texas
State Bar of Oklahoma
United States District Court, Northern, Eastern, Southern, Western Districts of Texas
United States Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals
On January 21, 2025, Acting Department of Homeland Security Benjamine Huffman issued a directive rescinding the Biden Administration’s guidelines that designated schools and other community services as “sensitive areas”. Those guidelines had stated that to the extent possible, ICE agents should not carry out immigration enforcement activities in these locations. It is now unclear whether […]
Read More