The family of a Catholic school student at the center of a confrontation with a Native American elder in Washington, DC, has hired a high-profile attorney, according to a report.

L. Lin Wood, who is known for aggressively pursuing libel and slander lawsuits against media outlets, “is committed to bringing justice to 16-year-old Nick Sandmann and his family,” the family’s other lawyer, Todd McMurtry, said in a statement, according to WCPO.

Sandmann’s family has already hired the Louisville-based public relations firm RunSwitch PR.

The Atlanta-based Wood represented JonBenet Ramsey’s brother in a $750 million defamation suit that accused CBS of ruining Burke Ramsey’s reputation after a TV series suggested he killed his 6-year-old sister.

The terms of the settlement reached this month were not disclosed.

Wood also represented the family of Richard Jewell — who was wrongly accused after the 1996 Olympic park bombing — in a libel case against the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, according to the Cincinnati Enquirer.

In 2011, the Washington Post described Wood as a trial attorney who has “carved out a successful career representing the high-profile and falsely accused, often seeking eye-popping damages for those he believes have been libeled or slandered in the press.”

At the time, Wood defended Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain, who had been facing accusations of sexual harassment by four women that torpedoed his campaign.

Former CBS news anchor Dan Rather once dubbed Wood the “attorney for the damned.”

When asked if Sandmann’s family is considering suing media outlets, McMurtry told the Enquirer by email: “The Sandmann family has no further comment this evening other than to say all options are on the table.”

Sandmann traveled with his classmates from Covington Catholic High School in Kentucky to DC to take part in an anti-abortion rally on Saturday.

Later that day, they were caught on video at the steps of the Lincoln Memorial, where members of a fringe religious movement called the Black Hebrew Israelites hurled insults at them.

Native American activists who had participated in an Indigenous Peoples March, including Nathan Phillips, then entered the crowd in what the Omaha Nation elder described as an effort to defuse the situation.

Phillips played a traditional drum and sang as he walked through the Covington group.

At one point, Sandmann, wearing a “Make American Great Again” cap, was recorded smiling while standing toe to toe with Phillips.

The boy wrote in a later statement that he “believed that by remaining motionless and calm, I was helping to diffuse [sic] the situation” — and said he meant no disrespect.

Phillips, however, said he felt blocked and intimidated.

In an interview on NBC’s “Today” show, Sandmann said he’d like a sitdown with Phillips, who has offered to visit the Kentucky school to lead a dialogue about cultural understanding.