
Retired Judge Zuberi “Judge Zu” Williams transforms conflict into clarity. As Chair of Bayard’s Business Alternative Dispute Resolution practice, he brings judicial insight, practical strategy, and a people centered approach to high stakes disputes. His philosophy is simple: the most durable outcomes occur when parties actively participate in and take ownership of their resolution.
Judge Zu leads an innovative ADR platform designed to resolve complex matters with speed, dignity, and lasting impact. Over the course of his career, he has conducted hundreds of mediations and settlement conferences across commercial, civil, employment, and government disputes. Clients and counsel consistently praise his even keeled demeanor and his ability to make complex cases manageable.
Before joining Bayard, Judge Zu served for a decade on the Maryland bench, first as an Administrative Law Judge and then as a Maryland District Court Judge in Montgomery County. Appointed at age 36, one of the youngest judicial appointments in Maryland history, he served from 2015 until retiring in 2025. While on the bench, he chaired the District Court’s ADR Sub Committee, modernizing programs and training judges statewide. He is widely respected for guiding high conflict disputes with neutrality, clarity, and momentum. His leadership has been recognized with honors including the Peacemaker Award from the Conflict Resolution Center of Montgomery County.
Prior to his judicial service, Judge Zu was an Administrative Law Judge at the Maryland Office of Administrative Hearings and an Assistant Attorney General for the District of Columbia. Earlier in private practice, he worked in Washington, D.C., at an AmLaw 100 firm in its White Collar Crime and Investigations group and at a prominent Baltimore intellectual property boutique firm.
Judge Zu clerked for Chief Judge Robert M. Bell of Maryland’s highest court, then the Court of Appeals and now the Supreme Court of Maryland, and for the Honorable Gerald Bruce Lee of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, widely known as the Rocket Docket for its swift timelines and complex civil caseload.
A dedicated educator, Judge Zu serves on the faculty at Georgetown University Law Center and American University Washington College of Law, where he has taught trial advocacy, torts, and his popular Law and Popular Culture course. He also teaches nationally through the National Institute for Trial Advocacy, the National Association of Attorneys General, and the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges. He regularly speaks at judicial roundtables and conferences across the country and internationally.
