Kiley's Biography
Kiley Deain is passionate about standing up to the insurance companies and protecting the rights of injured people; Kiley is a zealous advocate who relies on her previous career with an insurance company to better advocate for injury victims in Kansas.
The daughter of a retired United States Marine, Kiley spent much of her childhood travelling the country and making connections wherever she went. Kiley received her Bachelor’s degrees in Political Science and Sociology, with a minor in Spanish Language and certificates in American Constitutional Democracy and Multicultural Studies from the University of Missouri – Columbia, where she ran cross country and track & field. Kiley remains an avid Mizzou fan despite making her home in Kansas (M-I-Z!).
Kiley received her Juris Doctor from Washburn University School of Law in 2024. During her time at Washburn, Kiley served as the Washburn Student Bar Association Vice President. As a member of the Moot Court Council, Kiley served as the Lester M. Goodell Intramural Moot Court Competition Chair and competed on Washburn’s Jessup International Law and Manfred Lachs Space Law Moot Court teams. Kiley and her fiancé/moot court partner, Dylan, were the 2024 Lachs Space Law Moot Court North American Region runner-up and the highest ranked American team at competition. As a result of her moot court achievements, Kiley was inducted into the Order of the Barristers, an honor society for law students and practicing lawyers who demonstrate exceptional skill in trial advocacy, oral advocacy, and brief writing. Now, Kiley is ready to apply those advocacy skills in her fight for injury victims.
Kiley is licensed to practice law in the State of Kansas and the United States District Court for the District of Kansas. She is also a member of the Topeka Bar Association, Wichita Bar Association, Kansas Bar Association, Kansas Trial Lawyers Association, and American Bar Association.
* Prior results in an earlier case do not guarantee or suggest a similar outcome in future matters the lawyer may undertake.