Bradley Partner Christy W. Hancock Elected Fellow of the American College of Consumer Financial Services Lawyers

Accolade, Firm News

Bradley’s Christy W. Hancock has been elected as a Fellow of the American College of Consumer Financial Services Lawyers (ACCFSL). The new class of fellows will be recognized in Atlanta at the ACCFSL’s annual dinner on April 18, 2026, held in conjunction with the American Bar Association’s Consumer Financial Services Committee Spring Meeting.

Ms. Hancock is a partner in the firm’s Charlotte office where she regularly works with mortgage servicing and financial institution clients. She has a deep understanding of laws affecting the mortgage servicing business and her experience includes advising large financial institutions on compliance management systems, government settlements and consent order implementation, bankruptcy-related regulatory matters, and large-scale remediation projects.

She is one of the co-leaders of the Banking & Financial Services Practice Group at Bradley and is also the co-chair of the Home Equity Lending team and the Bankruptcy Compliance & Consumer Bankruptcy Litigation team. A frequent speaker and presenter at industry conferences, Ms. Hancock is also a regular instructor for the Mortgage Bankers Association’s School of Mortgage Banking I and II, teaching on topics including regulatory compliance, laws affecting the mortgagee’s interest in property, legal updates, and ethics. She also organizes and hosts the Bradley Compliance Roundtable, a monthly virtual meeting for the firm’s financial services clients discussing a variety of issues, including secured lending and servicing, as well as new trends and nuances of consumer laws.

Founded in 1996, the ACCFSL is an invitation only professional association reserved for lawyers whose principal practice is in the field of consumer financial services law, who have achieved preeminence in the field, and who have made substantial contributions to the promotion of learning and scholarship in consumer financial services law.