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Choosing Your Attorney
Throughout the course of your legal problems, you will have to make some
difficult decisions. For example, if you were involved in an auto
accident then you would have to pick between bringing criminal charges
or pressing charges with a plaintiff case. Or say you have a small
business that was involved in a deal, then you'd have to decide whether
to let it pass or sign it. There is no easy answer in many of these
cases, and getting the right lawyer is study the perks of choosing a
lawyer in a pre-paid legal plan as opposed to hiring your own lawyer, as
well as some simple steps you can take to choose a good attorney.
The number one criterion has to do with a lawyer’s legal ability. A good
lawyer lays the law down for you, presents you with options, explains
the consequences of each decision you make and gives you recommendations
on the best course of action. In this day and age of complicated legal
matters, many lawyers are becoming more specialized and you stand to get
better information from someone with a practice focused in a particular
area of the law than a generalist who deals with a vast spectrum of
legal issues. Buildingunderstanding is also very important: Your
relationship with your lawyer can make or break your case. You need a
lawyer who gives you frank advice and guidance you can trust, someone
with enough perspective to step back from an issue and look at it from
all views.
Pre-paid legal plans greatly limit client-lawyer relationships. Because
of the “preventive” nature of most plans, your contact with your lawyer
will be restricted on many occasions. You seldom get to talk to your
lawyer face-to-face, as most of the consultation is done over the phone-
and even when you get to talk to them, it’s not easy to build a bond
when your office consultations are limited to a dozen hours a year.
Hence, I advise you only to get an attorney when necessary.
If you find your attorney from referrals or on the on the plan
interviews with them. Most don’t mind receiving inquiries about what
they do and how able there are. Ask tough questions: How many years have
they been in practice? How content are their other clients? How many
legal problems of interest to you have they taken recently?
Additionally, verify their State Bar Association standing. It's
important to find an attorney who is knowledgable in the specific legal
field you need assistance with. But, it is also critical to find an
attorney you feel confortable working with and one who will be easy to
stay in communication with.
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