Kaylah J. Alexander

Associate | She/Her/Hers

Overview

Kaylah Alexander represents companies and individuals in a variety of litigation matters, focusing her practice on the technology and consumer products sectors.

Kaylah has handled employment class action and other complex litigation, as well as disputes involving constitutional challenges, contract claims, and commercial landlord-tenant issues. She also advises clients responding to third-party subpoenas and represents businesses in California Proposition 65 regulatory matters. Kaylah represents clients in employment discrimination disputes and in contract matters involving payment for services and other commercial conflicts. Her experience spans both state and federal court.

In her robust pro bono practice, Kaylah focuses on immigration and constitutional issues. She has successfully obtained asylum for a pro bono client.

While in law school, Kaylah served as community engagement chair for the American Constitution Society and was named the Clinical Legal Education Association Outstanding Clinic Student for academic year 2020–2021. During her undergraduate studies, Kaylah was a NCAA Division III Women’s Basketball student-athlete, and she was consistently recognized on the Dean’s List as well as inducted into Pi Sigma Alpha, the National Political Science Honor Society.

Career & Education

    • Howard University School of Law, J.D., 2022
    • Whittier College, B.A., Political Science, 2017
    • Howard University School of Law, J.D., 2022
    • Whittier College, B.A., Political Science, 2017
    • California
    • California

Kaylah's Insights

Firm News | 2 min read | 05.20.26

Crowell Secures $23.3 Million Jury Verdict for C3.ai in Major Trade Secret Case

Washington – May 20, 2026: Crowell & Moring achieved a decisive victory for leading Enterprise AI application software company C3.ai, obtaining a $23.3 million jury verdict following a seven-day trial in Wilmington, Delaware. The jury unanimously found Cummins liable for trade secret misappropriation and breach of contract in a suit brought by C3.ai more than two and a half years ago....