Butler Snow attorney Todd P. Photopulos has been selected to speak on a panel at the Tennessee Bar Association’s 2025 Immigration Law Forum on April 18 at the Tennessee Bankers Association in Nashville, Tennessee. His panel is titled “Hot Topics & Policies in Immigration Law.”
Click here to learn more and register for the forum.
The Tennessee Bar Association is dedicated to fostering legal education, maintaining the honor, dignity and well-being of the members of the legal profession, enhancing the performance of the legal profession, cultivating professional ethics and fellowship among its members and promoting responsible relationships between the legal profession and the public.
Photopulos is a member of Butler Snow’s Labor and Employment group. He focuses his practice on labor, employment and immigration cases and has extensive experience consulting on trial and arbitration matters. He regularly represents U.S. and international employers in business immigration matters, including Specialty Occupations (H-1B), Intra-Company Transfers (L-1), NAFTA Occupations (TN), Extraordinary Ability (O), Investor Visas (E-2), and physician J-1 Waiver and National Interest Waiver visa cases, as well as permanent residency, compliance training and audits. He is a frequent speaker and writer on the latest immigration and employment policies and regulations of the United States.
Photopulos has been recognized by many different legal organizations, including Chambers USA, BL Rankings, The Best Lawyers in America®, Thomson Reuters Super Lawyers®, Who’s Who Legal and the Memphis Business Journal’s Top 40 Under 40. In 2021, he was recognized as a Labor and Employment Star by Benchmark Litigation and named to Law360’s Immigration Editorial Advisory Board. He is also a member of the American, Memphis and Tennessee Bar Associations, as well as the American Immigration Lawyers Association.
Photopulos earned his bachelor’s degree from the University of Iowa and his Juris Doctor, with honors, from the University of Tennessee College of Law where he served as an editor of the Tennessee Law Review.