Kasia Bunofsky serves as Legal Secretary at Kasen Law Group, P.C., providing administrative and operational support to the firm’s bankruptcy practice before the bankruptcy courts in the District of New Jersey, the District of Delaware, the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, and the Southern District of Florida. In her role, Kasia assists with the day-to-day functions that keep a busy boutique bankruptcy law firm running smoothly — managing communications, organizing case files, coordinating with clients and courts, and supporting the legal team on matters spanning Chapter 7 liquidations, Chapter 11 reorganizations, Subchapter V small business cases, and preference adversary proceedings.
Kasia brings a strong academic foundation and a demonstrated record of organizational excellence to her work at the firm. She holds dual bachelor’s degrees from Drexel University — a B.A. in Art History and a B.S. in Entertainment and Arts Management — and graduated as an A.J. Drexel Scholar. Her prior experience managing complex projects, coordinating with institutional stakeholders, and handling financial and administrative responsibilities in fast-paced professional environments has translated seamlessly to the demands of a bankruptcy law practice.
At Kasen Law Group, Kasia has developed a working familiarity with bankruptcy procedure and federal court practice in the District of New Jersey, the District of Delaware, the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, and the Southern District of Florida. She works alongside the firm’s attorneys on active litigation matters, creditor representation, and business reorganization cases, gaining hands-on exposure to the full spectrum of insolvency law across all types of bankruptcy court matters in New Jersey, Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Florida.
Kasia is currently preparing to take the LSAT with the goal of pursuing a legal education and a career in law. Her day-to-day work at a high-volume bankruptcy litigation firm provides her with practical legal experience that few prospective law students have the opportunity to develop before entering law school.