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A Rider Who Rides Long Journey

In the legal corridors of Delhi, few names resonate quite like Roopesh Sharma. For more than two decades, he’s moved seamlessly between high-stakes litigation and high-speed rides.

Already by the late 1990s, after completing his law degree and interning under senior counsel, Sharma began developing a reputation in criminal and corporate law. His work in the landmark dowry case of Nisha Sharma and the Ludhiana City Centre scam established him as a lawyer comfortable with complexity and public scrutiny.

He has long been a member of the Harley Owners Group (H.O.G.), a close-knit community of riders bound by their love for the open road. For him, riding isn’t just leisure — it’s a discipline, a way to disconnect from the courtroom’s intensity and reconnect with himself. Those early morning rides with fellow H.O.G. members became more than routine; they were moments of freedom, fraternity, and reflection — a reminder that balance, much like justice, is something you keep in motion.

Despite his busy schedule Mr. Sharma also finds time to indulge in social work, he is actively involved with many projects for social upliftment of poor and he also does many cases pro bono for the poor. He is also the President of the old boys association of his school – St.Joseph’s College, Nainital.

Colleagues say that in court Sharma is deliberate: he listens first, speaks second, and when he does speak, it’s with precision. But they say what makes him stand out is how he carries that same calm into his off-hours—balancing intensity with composure.

Sharma’s practice spans criminal defence, corporate litigation, cyber law, and real-estate matters. He’s been retained by major firms in sectors ranging from FMCG to solar power, underlining both his legal range and his client trust.

For a lawyer in one of the most demanding cities in India, Sharma’s daily rhythm is unusual: legal briefs, clients, motions—and sometimes the rumble of a Harley at dawn. It’s not spectacle. It’s habit. And for him, riding isn’t escape—it’s clarity.

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