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Kelli Hanley Crabb

42 yrs licensed
Weber, Crabb & Wein, P.A.
44 Pinellas cases since 2020

Background

  • ·Family law shareholder at Weber, Crabb & Wein, PA in St. Petersburg, licensed in Florida since 1984 through the University of South Dakota School of Law and also holds an MBA. Ms. Crabb has focused her practice on dissolution, paternity, custody, and domestic violence matters for more than 20 years, previously serving as co-chair of the St. Petersburg Bar Association Family Law Section and as a Kanakaris Inns of Court Master.

Kelli Hanley Crabb has 44 Pinellas family cases filed 2020-2026. Most frequent bench: Steve D. Berlin (9x). Appears before 12 judges total. Tier: T2.

Martindale-Hubbell Peer Review Rated 4.5/5.0 (23 peer reviews)

J.D., University of South Dakota School of Law

Case Analytics

From 7,853 dissolution cases filed 2020–2026 · Pinellas County clerk portal

Total Cases44Dissolution cases in Pinellas County
Settled at FJ2(6%)Cases where parties agreed before the judge ruled
Reopened9Cases returned to court after final judgment
With Children22Cases involving custody and timesharing
Without Children17Cases with no custody issues
Motions / Case1.4Legal filings per case — higher means more aggressive
Performance by Judge
  • Steve D. Berlin (9x), Jack Helinger (8x), Elizabeth Jack (7x)
Final Judgments10Cases ending with a signed divorce decree

Most Frequent Judges (Pinellas)

Steve D. Berlin (9x), Jack Helinger (8x), Elizabeth Jack (7x)

Bar & Governance Roles

  • ·Empath Health (Suncoast Hospice holding company) — Board Chair
  • ·Suncoast Hospice — Immediate Past Chair
  • ·Suncoast PACE Inc. — Board Member
  • ·Hospice Foundation of FL Suncoast — Past Board Chair
  • ·St. Petersburg Bar Association — Secretary
  • ·SPBA Family Law Section — Co-Chair
  • ·SPBA Executive Committee — Member
  • ·Canakaris American Inn of Court — Master

Links

All data sourced from public court records. Case counts reflect dissolution filings in Pinellas County 2020–2026. This is not legal advice. Past case patterns do not predict outcomes in individual matters.