エピソード

  • Steve Heninger on $3 Billion in Verdicts, and 50 Years of Fighting for the Little Guy
    2026/04/03
    What happens when a drafted Army lieutenant who prosecuted courts martial before ever setting foot in law school goes on to become a founding partner of one of America's most decorated plaintiff's firms — with over $3 billion recovered and 21 seven-figure verdicts to his name? In this episode of the Trustcast Show, Zane Myers speaks with Steve Heninger, founding partner of Heninger Garrison Davis in Birmingham, Alabama, about five decades of plaintiff's trial work, the $64 million bingo casino fraud verdict that changed his firm's trajectory, and why he believes trial lawyers are in the lighting and heating business. Steve shares what separates cases that settle from those that have to go to a jury, how he approaches medical malpractice when juries instinctively protect doctors, and why the most dangerous mistake any trial lawyer makes is forgetting their humanity. They also discuss what it's like trying 19 jury trials alongside his son Eric, who was just named lawyer of the year alongside him, why great storytellers are interested people not interesting ones, how a phrase from Dolly Parton shaped his philosophy on connecting with juries, and why his wife's advice to turn down a run for Congress was the best she ever gave him. Steve Heninger is a founding partner of Heninger Garrison Davis, a national plaintiff's law firm based in Birmingham, Alabama, with offices in Atlanta. He is a member of the Alabama Law Foundation's top 1%, a Super Lawyer, and a Best Lawyer in America with over 50 years of trial experience. Connect with Steve Heninger: hgdlawfirm.com Email: steve@hgdlawfirm.com Birmingham, Alabama Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Steve Heninger 00:43 Prosecuting courts martial at Fort Benning before law school 01:50 Growing up in Salem, Illinois, hometown of William Jennings Bryan 02:59 How competing as a sprinter and wrestler shaped trial preparation 03:50 Why he chose plaintiff's work over criminal defense 04:45 How Heninger Garrison Davis came together in 2006 05:35 Over $3 billion recovered and the case that changed everything 06:37 The $64 million bingo casino fraud verdict in Montgomery 07:36 How you actually collect after a verdict like that 08:00 What separates a case that settles from one that goes to a jury 09:36 What it's like trying 19 jury trials alongside his son Eric 10:49 Trial lawyers are in the lighting and heating business 12:08 How he opened a fraud trial with cheaters always win 13:36 Where his trial ideas actually come from 14:53 The Trialnasium blog and why Dolly Parton inspired a philosophy 17:24 Teaching at Harvard, Stanford, and Georgetown — the most common mistake 18:41 Make fear a passenger in your car instead of the driver 19:13 Why he launched Trialnasium publicly after decades in the courtroom 20:00 Rapid fire questions 23:08 How he overcomes jury sympathy for doctors in malpractice cases 25:34 Why depositions are trial 26:43 How he decides which cases to take at this stage of his career 28:33 Managing offices in Atlanta and Birmingham with 20 lawyers 29:23 Which recognition means the most and why 31:44 What still gets him fired up to walk into a courtroom after 50 years 35:11 Where Heninger Garrison Davis is headed in the next five years 36:38 Why marketing is still a never-ending problem even after 50 years 38:45 How he and his son navigate disagreements on cases 39:59 Types of cases the firm handles and how to reach Steve Heninger #SteveHeninger #HeningerGarrisonDavis #PlaintiffsLawyer #TrialLawyer #MedicalMalpractice #ProductLiability #BirminghamLawyer #TrustcastShow #Trialnasium #LevelingThePlayingField
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    41 分
  • Matthew Konecky on Criminal Defense, DUI Law, and Fighting for Clients on Their Worst Day
    2026/04/03
    What happens when a wrestler from Illinois ends up surfing before court in Palm Beach County, defending people on the worst days of their lives with over 200 five-star Google reviews and a life felony reduced to a sealed misdemeanor? In this episode of the Trustcast Show, Zane Myers speaks with Matthew Konecky, founder of Konecky Law in Palm Beach County, Florida, about his 20-plus-year criminal defense and personal injury career, the attempted murder case he took from a life felony down to a sealed misdemeanor, and why he refuses to use fear to get clients to hire him. Matthew explains what people get wrong in the first 24 hours after a DUI arrest, why Florida's new license plate cover law led to a wave of wrongful arrests, and how his wrestling background shaped the way he fights in a courtroom. They also discuss his free legal guides for clients, the book he wrote for families of the arrested, why he still practices both criminal defense and personal injury after two decades, how he's using technology to serve clients across multiple counties without overextending, and what he learned from Ben Glass about building client trust before they ever call. Matthew Konecky is the founder of Konecky Law, a criminal defense and personal injury firm based in Palm Beach County, Florida, with offices in Palm Beach and Broward counties. He is a purple belt in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and a former competitive wrestler at Indiana University. Connect with Matthew Konecky: 561law.com 561dui.com Phone: 561-671-5995 (24-hour answering service) Palm Beach County, Florida Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Matthew Konecky 00:59 The attempted first degree murder case reduced to a sealed misdemeanor 04:15 How Stand Your Ground worked and then didn't 05:20 What turned the case around after losing the motion 06:33 How sealing and expungement actually work 08:04 From Moline, Illinois to wrestling at Indiana University to South Florida 10:00 The first day at a Miami criminal defense firm that hooked him 11:07 Going solo at 27 with just a cell phone and a computer 12:45 Why he never uses worst case scenarios to sell a client 14:54 The free legal guides and where the idea came from 16:36 Two offices across Palm Beach and Broward County and controlled growth 18:58 Why he won't take cases beyond St. Lucie to Dade County 19:16 Searching for an associate attorney to join the firm 19:23 Rapid fire questions 23:15 Featured in the Sun Sentinel investigative series on Florida criminal law 24:58 The 30,000 DUI arrests a year and what people get wrong in the first 24 hours 26:35 Why criminal defense and personal injury work together at his firm 29:38 How wrestling shapes the courtroom mindset 31:12 The book he wrote for families of people who've been arrested 33:08 The one thing to do right after an arrest or accident 34:11 What the next five years look like for the firm 36:43 How to reach Matthew Konecky #MatthewKonecky #KoneckyLaw #CriminalDefense #DUILawyer #PalmBeachLawyer #StandYourGround #PersonalInjury #FloridaLaw #TrustcastShow #TrialLawyer
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    38 分
  • Octavia Martinez on Defending Doctors, Challenging Licensing Boards
    2026/04/03
    What happens when a former felony prosecutor walks away from law to homestead a ranch and homeschool her kids in the Rio Grande Valley — and then gets pulled back in by a client desperate for someone who would actually fight for them? In this episode of the Trustcast Show, Zane Myers speaks with Octavia Martinez, founder of Octavia Martinez Law, about her unconventional path from UVA undergrad to Ohio State law grad to felony prosecutor to homesteading rancher to solo practice attorney defending doctors, midwives, and patients across Texas and beyond. Octavia explains why she left practice in 2018 after witnessing prosecutorial overreach that disillusioned her, what pulled her back in 2024, and why anonymous complaints to medical licensing boards are one of the most dangerous and underreported threats facing healthcare providers today. They also discuss medical malpractice, defamation cases, disputed probate, the constitutional rights issues she sees running through nearly every case, how she manages a virtual law practice with a newborn, a homestead, a milk cow, homeschooling, and her husband's medical clinic, and why she believes the law is most powerful when applied with nuance rather than ideology. Octavia Martinez is the founder of Octavia Martinez Law, a virtual solo practice based in the Rio Grande Valley, Texas. She is licensed in Texas and handles medical malpractice, licensed defense for doctors and midwives, defamation, probate disputes, and breach of contract cases across Texas and Arizona. Connect with Octavia Martinez: OctaviaMartinezLaw.com Rio Grande Valley, Texas Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Octavia Martinez 01:22 Why she stepped away from law in 2018 and how the homestead started 02:44 Milk cows, hard cheeses, and three kids on a ranch in South Texas 03:18 The urgent call in 2024 that pulled her back to practicing law 04:22 Her path from UVA to Ohio State Law to prosecuting felonies in Arizona 05:29 Taking the Texas bar exam with a five-month-old nursing baby 06:21 The first case back — defending a physician before a licensing board 08:00 How anonymous complaints trigger investigations regardless of merit 09:28 Why anonymous board complaints are fundamentally unjust 10:37 How a disgruntled patient complaint can spiral into defamation 11:14 The criminal defense case that made her distrust the system 13:50 Challenging institutional power with necessary force 15:05 Why disenfranchisement and constitutional overreach pushed her out in 2018 16:06 Running a law firm while milking a cow and homeschooling three kids 18:00 Why she didn't niche down and the types of cases she takes 20:00 Operating with nuance instead of picking a side 22:40 How paid consultations filter new clients before they're taken on 24:12 Plans to scale and bring on a law clerk once he passes the bar 25:51 What a typical day looks like on the homestead and in the practice 27:07 What she would tell a young attorney thinking about stepping away 29:38 Rapid fire questions 31:07 How she serves clients all over Texas and Arizona virtually 31:42 How COVID made virtual practice permanently acceptable 32:09 How to reach Octavia Martinez #OctaviaMartinez #MedicalLicenseDefense #MidwifeDefense #MedicalMalpractice #DefamationLaw #TexasLawyer #VirtualLawFirm #HomeschoolMom #Homestead #TrustcastShow
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    32 分
  • Brett Tishler on Workers' Comp Subrogation, Industrial Disasters, and Building a 50-State Practice
    2026/04/03
    What happens when an insurance attorney spends two decades flying across the country to investigate crane collapses, smelting explosions, and forklift accidents — and then bets everything on building the largest dedicated workers' comp subrogation practice in the country? In this episode of the Trustcast Show, Zane Myers speaks with Brett Tishler, a Philadelphia-based attorney at Derrevere Law, about the niche world of workers' compensation subrogation — recovering millions of dollars that insurers are owed after workplace disasters. Brett explains how subrogation works, why early intervention at an accident scene can make or break a case, and how his team goes far beyond just sending a lien letter. They also discuss a $17 million trucking verdict in North Carolina, a million-dollar recovery on 40-year-old potato-cutting equipment that amputated a worker's arm, why Pennsylvania's lack of a product liability statute of repose opens doors most states close, and what it took to leave White and Williams after 15 years to build something new. Brett Tishler is an attorney at Derrevere Law, where he and Rob Kaplan lead what they are building into the largest dedicated workers' comp subrogation practice in the country. Their team of eight attorneys handles work comp subrogation across all 50 states. Brett can be reached at bnt@derreverelaw.com. Connect with Brett Tishler: Derrevere Law bnt@derreverelaw.com LinkedIn: Brett Tishler Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Brett Tishler 00:28 What is workers' comp subrogation and how does it work 02:16 The car insurance analogy that explains it simply 03:39 What types of defendants get targeted in these cases 04:30 How Brett's team investigates industrial accidents 05:38 The Duluth forklift paper roll case 06:43 How insurance companies bring Brett in at the start 07:34 Why early intervention changes everything 08:03 How 50-state statutory differences affect every case 09:50 Why plaintiff attorneys want to work with Brett 11:02 Inside the $17 million North Carolina trucking verdict 14:16 What strict contributory negligence means for plaintiffs 15:22 How the lien and attorney fees get divided after a verdict 17:47 Why Brett and Rob Kaplan left White and Williams 19:31 Building an eight-attorney 50-state subrogation team 21:25 How they market to insurance companies nationally 22:25 Rapid fire questions 25:26 Recovering a million dollars on 40-year-old farm equipment 27:38 Product liability and making workplaces safer 28:46 How to contact Brett Tishler #BrettTishler #WorkersComp #Subrogation #WorkplaceInjury #ProductLiability #InsuranceLaw #PhiladelphiaLawyer #TrustcastShow #IndustrialAccident #TrialLawyer
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    30 分
  • Dr. Alison Kole on Sleep Apnea, Insomnia, and Why Sleep Is Your Most Underrated Superpower
    2026/04/03
    What happens when a triple board certified sleep medicine physician who spent years keeping the sickest ICU patients alive finally admits she was a chronic insomniac the entire time — and then COVID breaks her sleep so completely that she rebuilds her entire career around fixing it? In this episode of the Trustcast Show, Zane Myers speaks with Dr. Alison Kole, founder of Oak Health Center and medical director at Agnomi Sleep, about the science of sleep, why 80% of Americans with moderate to severe sleep apnea are completely undiagnosed, and what cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia actually looks like in practice. Dr. Kole breaks down the difference between a home sleep test and an in-lab polysomnogram, explains why you don't need to be a snorer to have sleep apnea, and walks through exactly how modern CPAP machines work — and why they're quieter than you think. They also discuss the witching hour wake-up at 2 to 4 a.m., what a morning headache might really mean, why melatonin is not the answer for most insomniacs, how the COVID pandemic in New Jersey pushed Dr. Kole past her breaking point, and the text message that saved a young man from cardiac arrest. Dr. Alison Kole is a triple board certified sleep medicine physician, founder of Oak Health Center concierge sleep practice, and medical director at Agnomi Sleep. She hosts the Sleep Is My Waking Passion podcast, now over 107 episodes. Connect with Dr. Alison Kole: askthesleepmd.com/work-with-me Podcast: Sleep Is My Waking Passion on Apple, Spotify, and YouTube Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Dr. Alison Kole 01:02 How long she lived with insomnia before doing something about it 02:27 The year of sleep fellowship that changed everything 03:39 What cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia actually is 04:44 The Kindle in bed question and what it really means 06:51 The 2 to 4 a.m. witching hour wake-up explained 07:33 Morning headaches and what they might signal 09:10 Why you don't need to snore to have sleep apnea 10:25 How to get a sleep study and what your options are 12:53 Telemedicine sleep medicine and insurance versus concierge 14:30 Home sleep apnea testing versus in-lab polysomnogram 17:09 Is sleep apnea genetic or familial 18:18 How CPAP machines actually work and how quiet they really are 22:11 How a psych major at Barnard got into pulmonary critical care 26:37 The transition from ICU medicine to sleep medicine 28:59 What COVID in New Jersey actually looked like from inside the ICU 31:20 Two toddlers, two pulmonary critical care doctors, and overnight call 33:17 How Dr. Kole chose herself and rebuilt her identity 34:45 Rapid fire questions 38:02 Sleep Is My Waking Passion podcast highlights 39:10 The text message that saved a young man's life 40:35 How to reach Dr. Alison Kole #AlisonKole #SleepMedicine #SleepApnea #Insomnia #CPAP #SleepDoctor #TrustcastShow #SleepIsMyWakingPassion #SleepHealth #CBTInsomnia
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    41 分
  • Carolyn Daly: Family Law Attorney Who Trademarked "Divorce Without Drama" (NJ Supreme Court)
    2026/04/01
    In this episode of the Trustcast Show, host Zane Myers talks with Carolyn Daly - partner and chair of the Family Law Group at Cohen Seglias who trademarked "Divorce Without Drama" after nearly 30 years in New Jersey family law. She ran her own firm (Daly & Associates) for 13 years before merging to build something bigger, handles everything from high conflict custody battles to dividing cryptocurrency and art collections in divorce, and holds Supreme Court certification that only 2% of New Jersey attorneys carry. After thinking she'd be a prosecutor, a judge moved her to family court one month before her clerkship started and she never left. Now she's transitioning from trial lawyer to ADR specialist (mediation and arbitration), arguing that fighting in court for years costs more money, more time, and produces worse outcomes than settling outside the courtroom where parties control the process and the outcome. What You'll Learn: Thought she'd be prosecutor - judge moved her to family court month before clerkship started "Family law picked me, I didn't pick it" First job: did family, civil litigation, criminal, all types of litigation Thought family seemed hard, high conflict - maybe should do something else Approached to become partner at family-only firm - decided this is where I should be Trademarked "Divorce Without Drama" - not just marketing slogan 10 years into practicing: realized people spend too much time in high conflict Emotion translates into drama, lengthy process, less money, children in middle "We have to do this differently" Colleagues view her as litigator - transitioning to ADR (Alternative Dispute Resolution) Mediation and arbitration: can have better divorce if handled outside courtroom Mediation: you control the outcome | Arbitration: you control the process (pick your judge) In New Jersey: takes years (not a year, years) to get divorced in court Just finished a trial - still does some courtroom work If you're broke: very difficult - end up pro se, waiting in line for judge New Jersey has Early Settlement Panel (ESP): meet with 2 lawyers for settlement thoughts Not binding, voluntary process by lawyers - she does that work Can hire mediator: 3-4-5 sessions, get divorced Ran Daly & Associates for 13 years Looking in mirror one day: exhausted, working nights and weekends all the time When you run your own: don't have sense of when you need more help "Go west young man" - needed to make change Had hired associate (now partner with her at Cohen Seglias) At some point: can't work every minute of day Not just practice of law - running a practice Loves business of law - did it well, put her where she is personally and professionally Needed bigger platform, team supporting her in building it Went from herself + associate to herself + partner + 2 associates (still hiring) Mid-size firm now, shares responsibility of business side Lawyers and doctors often not best business people When so busy practicing, not paying attention to business - not as successful as can be Most draining non-legal part: tech (cloud vs. server, someone can't get into computer) Infrastructure: billing programs, collections, follow up - tedious Merger with Cohen Seglias: headhunters reach out at certain level in profession Had conversations over years - wasn't ready until "looked in mirror and said go West" Reached out to headhunter friend, another headhunter beginning her career "Are you looking for associate?" "No, I'm looking for you to find me a home" People floored - didn't think she'd do what she did Introduced to couple firms by headhunters Picked Cohen Seglias: most business oriented, growth minded Didn't have family law department - "You come in and build it" Don't lose autonomy - if join firm with existing department, become somebody on team If build department from scratch: get to be autonomous "They don't know what a family law department is, never had one" Loves good challenge - interesting puzzle How do you build department? Staffing, right technology More support on back end - doing less business part, more putting together, solving actual problems Not sending out bills, doing marketing, hiring people, paying people anymore Space to think: how do I want to build this department? What type? Strategic, not acquiring bodies Right department for family law within larger firm - interesting, good work for clients Most people think divorce = court = fight Wanted to focus more on ADR when built department Been doing it for years but also trying cases, arguing motions, going to court all time Built team around her: people who go to court, trial lawyers with that skill set
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    36 分
  • Joe Jones: Marine JAG Attorney Built Legal Tech That Settles Cases Before Trial (StreamSettle)
    2026/04/01
    In this episode of the Trustcast Show, host Zane Myers talks with Joe Jones - co-founder and CEO of StreamSettle, a legal tech platform using triple blind encryption to settle insurance claims before either side knows what the other submitted. He went from defending Marines in military courtrooms to board certified trial lawyer (distinction held by less than 6% of Texas attorneys) to bootstrapping a startup that argues the best use of his courtroom skills is making sure clients never see one. After a shower idea while working a trucking case he couldn't ignore, Joe and his wife Krissa (former public school teacher, now co-founder) built a nationwide platform that's settling cases faster, cheaper, and with less stress - while both sides think it's better for them than their opponent. What You'll Learn: Shower idea while working trucking case - kids playing in cul-de-sac, neighbors over, typing motions Knew case would settle but going through all the motions anyway Idea: put true numbers in (not postured numbers) to see if overlap without revealing First thought: maybe something like this exists - nothing out there Ran idea by wife Krissa (co-founder) - "curator of ideas" usually rejects them, but liked this one Became their purpose/mission - make it industry standard Saves parties time, money, stress - everything they want to avoid Over 90% of civil cases settle eventually Tens of billions wasted annually just because of posturing Triple blind encryption: no one sees opponent's number, software blind to actual numbers Computations done on user's machines, pass through server encrypted Different from competitors where one side hires them - trust issues remain StreamSettle maintains neutral party status One number only: true settlement threshold (ranges still involve posturing) Plaintiff: bottom line willing to accept | Defense: top number willing to pay If overlap exists: split right down the middle of threshold Example: defense pays $1M, plaintiff accepts $950K = settlement at $975K Plaintiff gets $25K more than willing to accept, defense pays $25K less If no overlap: parties can try again immediately (zero charge to test numbers) Only charge fee once settlement reached on platform Emphasize putting true threshold - shouldn't need second round until case facts change New deposition, new facts typically bring parties closer together Founded late 2022 Finished build end of 2023 Went live with first customer beginning 2023: Plymouth Rock Assurance (New Jersey) Still most active customer - helped refine product through growing pains Brought on ~50 law firms in New Jersey first year and a half Grateful to early customers for helping refine product Partnered with London-based development company for big enterprise development Pay them by the hour (no equity stake) - worth every penny Constantly improving with updated features Nationwide - available all 50 states Plan to go global once industry standard (maybe before) Looking for other verticals/use cases beyond litigation Started as Marine Corps legal assistance attorney (first billet) Most active duty time: criminal defense lawyer Legal assistance: Marines/sailors came with all problems (divorce, scammer contracts, deceptive businesses, landlord evictions) No power of courts behind them - couldn't file suit Negotiation became huge part of success Learned to be creative without threat of lawsuit Criminal defense: negotiating deals when evidence overwhelming, client guilty Focused on mitigating factors: combat record, PTSD untreated for years (Marine Corps fault) Best job ever for new lawyer - incredible job Board certified trial lawyer - less than 6% of Texas attorneys hold this distinction Wife Krissa: former public school teacher, firm administrator for law firm Already working together before StreamSettle Scaled down firm, Krissa helped more with StreamSettle Had to be co-founder - talk about it constantly Call it "fourth child" (have 3 real kids: Ellie, Everett, Juliet) Blessing to have journey together Starting law firm vs. startup with no proven demand Go to pitch competitions, conferences together Posturing example: buying car listed at $60K, offer $45K claiming budget Sticker price is posturing too In litigation: years of very expensive delay (not minutes/weeks like car buying) ABA model rules: lawyers can't deceive, but exception for puffering in negotiations Ingrained behavior - can't make rule against it Accepted form of deceit Initial reaction from lawyers: "I get why it's good for us, but how will you get other side?"
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    34 分
  • Anthony McLaren: LA Trial Attorney Who Climbed Everest for His Dad (Seven Summits on $120K)
    2026/04/01
    In this episode of the Trustcast Show, host Zane Myers talks with Anthony McLaren - an LA trial attorney who collects the money other lawyers can't, climbed the highest mountain on every continent in just over two years (including Everest) with almost no support and on a $120,000 shoestring budget. After his father died of Parkinson's at age 59, Anthony summited Kilimanjaro 11 months later, then completed all Seven Summits to honor his dad's 20-year military service. Now 48 years old, he's an income partner at Ronald P. Slates law firm specializing in judgment enforcement, wrote "Seven Summits for Dad" (rewrote it from first person to third person), raised $40,000 for Parkinson's research, and gave up his social life to focus on his young son and possibly another child on the way. What You'll Learn: Father died December 1, 2016 from Parkinson's disease at age 59 Summited Kilimanjaro November 24, 2017 (11 months later) - LA to LA in 9 days 53 hours car-to-car off the mountain Primary caregiver for father last 3 years of life - cut nails, gave haircuts, shaved him Father showed Parkinson's signs at 50, diagnosed at 52 Father served US military 20 years (grandfather too) Seven Summits total cost: $120,000 (cashed out 401k, borrowed money, fundraising) Kilimanjaro (Africa): $3,500 vs. $10,000 traditional services Aconcagua (South America): $2,000 soloed vs. $10-15,000 guided Denali/McKinley (Alaska): $1,500 vs. $10-20,000 guided Elbrus (Russia/Europe): $3,000 soloed, climbed with Russian guys Carstensz Pyramid (Australia/Oceania, Indonesia): helicopter to base, sourced locally Everest (Asia): $40,000 (as cheap as it gets) - used one Sherpa, logistical support only On Everest in 2019 when famous queue photo went viral - 15 people died Already off mountain and safe in Kathmandu because he made the decisions Antarctica: expensive, fly over Drake Passage Technical climber for 14+ years before Seven Summits Already owned all gear - cold weather equipment, tents, technical climbing gear "Seven Summits or it didn't matter" - never reflected on individual mountains until all done Founded Climb Above Parkinson's nonprofit - raised $40,000 Funded Keck School of Medicine at USC for Parkinson's research Concluded nonprofit - folded into national organization Wrote "Seven Summits for Dad" during COVID (4-6 months locked down) Didn't like how he sounded in first person - rewrote to third person (took 1 year) Submitted to company for punctuation/grammar check last month Looking to publish or self-publish Age 48, will be 50 soon Judgment enforcement attorney at Ronald P. Slates law firm (income partner) Joined Ron's firm about 1 year ago Wound down own practice - business litigation and employment law (20 years) Employment law in California: not level playing field for employers Economic decision to pay "blood money" or fight with no remedy against plaintiff Made career change when son was born - wanted financial security Ron Slates: name populates in ChatGPT for judgment enforcement California Firm doing judgment enforcement almost 50 years Collects judgments other lawyers can't collect Serves companies, law firms, banks Standard process: obtain judgment, conduct asset search, reveal accounts/property/trusts Asset search through outside vendor (decades-long relationship, top notch) Low cost commitment to peek at what exists Judgments enforceable in perpetuity - can revisit in 6 months or 2 years Tools: levy bank/brokerage accounts, abstract of judgment on real property, sheriff seizures (boats/cars), assignment orders (redirect revenue) Debtor exams at courthouse (not courtroom - lunchroom or common area) Judge on attorney's side vs. private deposition Bench warrant issued if debtor fails to show - police can arrest Demand 50+ document requests Can take as many debtor exams as needed (not duplicative questions) Business litigation: file lawsuit, cross-complaints, depositions, arbitrations, trials Usually business people compromise rather than incur legal fees Email: amclaren@rslateslaw.com Search: "Anthony McLaren lawyer climber" Niche market - not saturated like employment law Cordial community - lawyers not adverse to each other, not cutthroat Word of mouth referrals, repeat customers, search queries "We are reputed to be the best in the business because we are" Assignment orders make customers aware debtor isn't paying - optics pressure "A real man honors his debts" Gave up social life - no restaurants, parties, socializing Wife and him used to go out a lot when dating/newly married Now has time for family, work, writing because social life gone Values sleep, time with children and wife
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    33 分