Bradon is a native of Midland, Michigan. After graduating in 2006 from the University of Michigan with a B.A. double major in History (with honors) and Political Science (with distinction), he attended the University of Iowa College of Law. He graduated with distinction in 2013. His note, “Changing Signals, a New Approach to the Enforcement of Rail Passenger Traffic Preference in Response to the Passenger Investment and Improvement Act of 2008” was published in the Journal of Corporation Law (38 J. Corp. L. 441) (2013)) and has been cited in further scholarship.
He is admitted to practice in Illinois, Michigan, and Maryland; before the United States District Courts for the Northern District of Illinois, the Western District of Michigan, and the Western District of Tennessee; the Federal Court of Claims; and the United States Courts of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, the Tenth Circuit, and the District of Columbia Circuit.
Bradon is also a member of the Association of Transportation Law Professionals; he was its President from 2024-25. He has made presentations on trade and tariffs to the Southwest Association of Rail Shippers and on federal preemption related to state regulation on safety and employment matters to the American Short Line and Regional Railroad Association. He has also served on the Board of the National Association of Rail Shippers and is active in the Michigan Railroad Association.