Jodi Green
Passionate about evaluating and preventing risk in new and highly-regulated industries
Matt Brockmeier
Focused on the law, business, policy, and sometimes even the politics of drugs.
Karina Bashir
Focused on the intersection of law, business ethics, and psychedelics.
Our core pillars include:
- Less Firm, More Flex: We value flexibility and innovation above all.
- Less Ego, More Empathy: We value client-first working relationships where adaptivity is valued over policy and structural rigidity.
- Less Risk, More Reward: We value long-term relationships over short-term profits with fee structures tailored for mutual growth.
- Less Paper, More Profit: We value sustainability, with a service model structured to protect client assets, not drain them.
Jodi Green founded Antithesis Law to offer high-quality business law services to clients in the psychedelics, hemp, and cannabis ecosystems. Antithesis is the opposite of a traditional law firm, pairing Biglaw training with a visionary spirit, meeting clients where they are from risk-averse to rebellious. Serving entrepreneurs, disrupters, and rebels of every stripe, the asterisk in our logo denotes our mission to empower limitless possibilities and bold ideas that challenge the status quo. With over 30 years of legal experience on all sides of the legal landscape, recognized by Super Lawyers and Top 200 Global Psychedelics Lawyers, we’ve mastered the art of breaking rules without breaking laws.
For more information and to reach out:
- Jodi can be reached by email at [email protected] or on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodigreenlawyer/ or Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/therealjodigreen/
- Our website is located at https://antithesis.law/
- We are on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/company/antithesislaw/
Some of our services include:
- Corporate formation
- Contract drafting and review
- Fractional general counsel services
- Insurance coverage advice and policyholder side claims resolution
- Regulatory advice
- Dispute resolution
- ESG advice