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I am a sole practitioner with my practice in downtown Charleston, South Carolina. I opened this office in 1993. I graduated from Haverford College in 1984 and from Temple University School of Law,
Cum Laude, in 1991. I have been a member of the
South Carolina Bar since 1992 and practicing family
law since 1993. I am also licensed to practice in
the Federal District of South Carolina, the Fourth
Circuit Court of Appeals and the United States
Supreme Court. I am the Treasurer for the Charleston
County Family Court Liaison Committee and the
Past-President of the South Carolina Bar Trial and
Appellate Advocacy Council.
My
practice's
emphasis is in family law‑‑especially divorce, child
custody and child support‑‑though I also handle
personal injury, criminal law and appeals. Among
the published opinions from family law appeals I
have handled are the cases of
Upchurch v. Upchurch, Emery v. Smith,
Moore v. Moore and
Abate v. Abate.
My goal is to provide clients
with competent and reasonably priced legal services.
Through the use of computer technology, I have been
able to streamline procedures, allowing me to handle
legal problems efficiently while enabling me to
focus on the unique aspects of each case. Through
use of e‑mail, forms and other modern communication
devices, I can often provide clients better
representation at a lower cost by allowing the
client to do much of the basic fact gathering under
my guidance.
My belief is that clients are
best served when I provide dual roles as their
lawyer: counselor and advocate. In the counselor
role (which is always private), I try to guide
clients to engage in ethically and legally correct
behavior and develop and pursue realistic legal
goals. In the advocate role, I zealously pursue
client goals in my dealings with other parties,
attorneys and the court. I practice family law
because I believe it is important to help parents
develop and maintain relationships with their
children and to help spouses preserve their
lifestyle when their marriage is no longer working.
In providing both counsel and advocacy to my
clients, I believe I can help them achieve these
important goals.
A sizable portion of my practice is dedicated to
research and development of lecture materials and
articles on family law topics. Most of this research
and written material can be classified into two
general areas. The first area is an attempt to
categorize discrete topics of law. Such topics
include materials on getting a spouse out of the house, common procedural problems in domestic abuse or contempt proceedings and low cost methods of litigating custody cases. I find the development of such lecture and written materials forces me to turn generalized knowledge into a systematic and easily usable form.
My other area of legal research and writing is on predicted or suggested development of cutting-edge legal topics. Such topics include privacy rights, limitations on family court authority to override parental decision-making, economic analysis of relocation cases
and
fighting the morality police in family court custody
cases. My goal in these lectures and articles is to educate and hopefully guide lawyers and judges in developing areas of the law.
Some of these materials have been published in the
American Journal of Family Law, South Carolina Lawyer
and The
Bulletin (the
South Carolina Trial Lawyers Association magazine) . Among my published articles are “Creating or Defeating South Carolina Jurisdiction in Multi-State Custody or Support Actions,” “A Dozen Grade `A' Strategies: Winning Custody Cases Without Bankrupting Your Client,” “Representing the (Innocent) Wage-earner in Child Custody and Divorce,” “Joint Legal Custody: What Is It? Why Have It?,” “Obtaining Relief From Family Court Temporary Orders” and “Four Rule to Show Cause Pitfalls to Avoid.”
I have lectured for the South Carolina Bar, the National Business Institute
and the Charleston County Family Court Bar. I have
been a repeat presenter at the South Carolina Bar=s
Family Law "Hot Tips" and "Cool Tips" seminars and
the Family Court=s
Bench/Bar, an annual continuing legal education
program for Family Court Judges. I have also
organized and moderated legal education seminars for
the South Carolina Bar. Since 2001, I have
co-sponsored and moderated an annual Charleston
County Family Court Bar legal education seminar. I
developed, moderated and presented state-wide legal
seminars devoted to appeal issues for the South
Carolina Bar’s annual convention in January 2006 and
on representing parents in abuse and neglect
proceedings for the South Carolina Bar in August
2007.
My extensive lecturing,
publishing and appellate practice enhances my
ability to litigate family law cases at the trial
level. Such work keeps me abreast of the latest
trends in family law practice and leads to a greater
appreciation of the factual and legal issues that
need to be addressed in a typical family court
trial.
The Frequently Asked questions section contains
answers to many common questions.
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