Another Lawyer’s Trial Record vs. David’s

If you ask the attorney, “Will you give me your trial record in writing?” and that attorney says to you, “Don’t worry about this, don’t worry about this, your case is going to settle.”

That’s when you should worry about it. You should worry and go wait a minute. You don’t know that your case is going to settle. What happens when the insurance company, for the injury that you’ve had, offers you 10 cents on the dollar, 20 cents on the dollar, but you know, “My case is worth more than that.” But you’ve got an attorney that won’t fight.

It’s the simplest thing in the whole world. What you do is ask the lawyer to provide to you a record of his trial victories, his trial wins and he should say here, here it is. And so what you have in front of you is a record. A lawyer gets in trouble if he lies to you. The fact is that record is everything, that record with show you that he’s won this case, this case, case after case. If he can’t produce that record, then you know probably, one that that attorney has not gone to court, not fought for people and that he’s not prepared to do that because the only way you become prepared to go to court and try these cases is to do it and do it time after time.

What I’ve done on the website is just provide a compendium of trial records, of cases that I’ve tried for instance, I started in the south, down in San Luis Valley/Pueblo, the Springs, certainly Denver, including Adams, Jefferson, Douglas County, downtown federal court and going up to Fort Morgan and Fort Collins.

What I did was I tried to show a compendium of cases I have tried.

Another Lawyer’s Trial Record vs. David’s was last modified: March 26th, 2014 by David S. Hoover
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