He began his legal career as an attorney at
Susman Godfrey LLP in Houston. In 2000, he founded the Buzbee Law Firm. Buzbee appeared on the cover of
The New York Times magazine in November 2010 regarding his role in the litigation against BP following the
Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the
Gulf of Mexico. The article described him as "one of the most successful trial lawyers in Texas". In 2017, Buzbee represented the family of a victim of an oil-rig explosion. As of April 6, 2021, Buzbee represents at least twenty-one clients alleging sexual misconduct against
NFL quarterback
Deshaun Watson. In 2021, Buzbee filed a $750 million lawsuit against rapper
Travis Scott on behalf of 120 victims who died or were injured during the
Astroworld Festival crowd crush. Buzbee is also a property developer. He owns Buzbee Properties, a real-estate firm focused on various suburbs in the
Greater Houston area. He also owns some properties in Florida. In 2023, the
Texas House of Representatives impeached Texas
Attorney General Ken Paxton and he was suspended from office pending the outcome of the trial in the Senate. Buzbee was brought on to lead the defense team. On September 16, 2023, the Texas Senate acquitted Paxton on all 16 impeachment articles, allowing him to return to office. In 2023, Buzbee and Washington Ho started a line of
THC-infused seltzers named HoBuzz. Buzbee was the lead trial attorney for Rebecca Grossman, who was convicted of second-degree murder in Los Angeles in 2024 after a 2020 hit-and-run that killed two brothers. He argued that former professional baseball pitcher
Scott Erickson had struck the children first while racing Grossman.
Sean Combs and Shawn Carter sexual misconduct lawsuit In 2024, Buzbee began representing more than 50 plaintiffs in lawsuits alleging sexual abuse by
Sean "Diddy" Combs. The same year, a prominent celebrity figure filed a lawsuit against Buzbee and his firm in connection with the Combs lawsuits. The lawsuit claims that Buzbee was "shamelessly attempting to extort exorbitant sums from him," while threatening a lawsuit packed with "entirely fabricated and malicious allegations of sexual assault — including multiple incidents of rape of a minor, both male and female — against Plaintiff if he refuses to comply with their demands." In December 2024, one of the lawsuits originally filed against Combs was refiled to include rapper
Jay-Z, as a defendant. The lawsuit alleged that both Combs and Carter were involved in the rape of a 13-year-old girl in 2000. On December 18, 2024, Buzbee filed a lawsuit against Carter's company
Roc Nation, law firm Quinn Emanuel, which employs Carter's attorneys, and others, claiming that these parties were attempting to sway his clients into suing his firm, The Buzbee Law Firm, and himself. According to Buzbee, Roc Nation paid off some of his former clients to file bogus lawsuits, while Quinn Emanuel orchestrated the scheme. However she still maintains that the allegations are true and that she only filed a motion to dismiss due to intimidation and fear of retribution; after she was allegedly approached by two people who told her they were working as investigators working for Carter's lawyers and tried to get her to sign an
affidavit stating that her rape claims were false, which she refused. In March 2025, Carter sued the woman and Buzbee for defamation. In July 2025, Jay-Z's defamation lawsuit against Buzbee was deemed meritless and dismissed by a
LA Superior Court judge in what Buzbee described as a "well-reasoned opinion" and deemed a legal victory.
Shannon Sharpe sexual assault lawsuit In April 2025, a
Nevada woman represented by Buzbee filed a $50+ million lawsuit against NFL Hall of Fame player and sports media personality
Shannon Sharpe, accusing him of rape, physical abuse, and making violent threats. In reaction to the lawsuit, Sharpe accused Buzbee of orchestrating a "
shakedown" and that Buzbee "targets" Black men. Sharpe eventually reached a private, out of court, settlement with the plaintiff and Buzbee in exchange for dismissing the lawsuit with prejudice. ==Politics==