Mark is the son of two Cuban immigrants who fled Castro’s Cuba in the early 1960s. He graduated from the University of Florida where he was named the outstanding Male Graduate of his class of more than 2,000 seniors.
From college, Mark attended Cumberland Law School in Birmingham, Alabama.
Mark is a leader. He is Past President of the Southern Trial Lawyers Association, a thirteen state lawyer group. He has been named as a Top 100 Lawyer in the USA by the National Trial Lawyers Association.
Mark is an innovator and champion of the rights of consumers. He serves as chair of the Ride Share Litigation Group nationally.
Mark is a leader in national litigation. In addition to serving as lead counsel in IN RE: TOTAL BODY FORMULA LITIGATION, where he served as trial counsel in a case with a $2 Million dollar jury verdict, he has served as a member of the Plaintiffs’ Steering Committee in the following matters: IN RE: Hydroxycut and IN RE: NECC Meningitis Litigation. He is a leader in the MIRENA case, based in NYC.
Mr. Zamora is active in his community, serving as Chairman of the Board of Directors at PATH Academy Charter School in Atlanta, GA, and he is President of the OLA Youth Athletic Association. He is a frequent speaker in trial lawyer continuing legal education events and is widely considered the preeminent attorney on the topic of social media discovery and its use at trial. He has been invited to speak at Mass Torts Made Perfect, the Southern Trial Lawyers Association, the New Jersey Association for Justice, the American Association for Justice, the Georgia Trial Lawyers Association, and the Radius of Influence seminar by Claris Law.
Mark has appeared on NBC's Dateline, Fox, and in newspapers.
Mr. Link has narrowed his practice to cases involving wrongful death and catastrophic injury claims. Mr. Link has successfully litigated personal injury and wrongful death claims involving products liability and automobile safety claims and municipal liability.
" I have not made a whole lot of friends in the legal community" says Mark. Why? "Citizens don't always need a lawyer. Common sense advice should not have a price or premium. We talk to folks, and if there isn't a way to take care of a problem without a lawyer, then we are able to help."