Hi and welcome.

Two words sum up my practice of family law: empathy and excellence. Let’s talk about the importance of those two qualities.

Hi and welcome.

Two words sum up my practice of family law:
Empathy and Excellence.

  • Empathy

    I’m a listener, and I want to hear your story. I want to know what life challenge has brought you here and how it is affecting you, your loved ones, and your life. Experience has taught me that the first, best step toward solution is always—always—correctly defining the problem. But, more than that, equally essential is understanding the impact that the problem is having. Whatever your circumstance, you know it’s more than just some “legal problem” that requires a lawyer. I know that, too. And I want to learn all I can in order to answer what I believe to be the two most important questions:

What do you need?

What can I do to help you?

Hi and welcome.

Two words sum up my practice of family law:
Empathy and Excellence.

  • Empathy

    I’m a listener, and I want to hear your story. I want to know what life challenge has brought you here and how it is affecting you, your loved ones, and your life. Experience has taught me that the first, best step toward solution is always—always—correctly defining the problem. But, more than that, equally essential is understanding the impact that the problem is having. Whatever your circumstance, you know it’s more than just some “legal problem” that requires a lawyer. I know that, too. And I want to learn all I can in order to answer what I believe to be the two most important questions:

What do you need?

What can I do to help you?

  • Excellence

    We’re a small firm, and that’s by design. Because when it comes to quality service, less is absolutely more. A clear understanding of your legal challenge is useless without an equally clear commitment to providing you the very best in not only representation, but presentation. That commitment is one I make sincerely and take seriously. From the moment we first start talking through the official outcome of your case, you’re not a customer. You’re a client—a client who has entrusted me and my staff with providing you the most professional and personalized service available. That’s not some lofty goal in this office; it’s what we do.

We return phone calls.
We answer emails.
We answer questions.
We make sure you get copies of case documents.
We make sure you get detailed monthly billing statements.

What do you need?

What can I do to help you?