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re: Would the highest paid lawyer in Baton Rouge be a corporate lawyer or billboard lawyer?
Posted on 12/27/23 at 9:23 am to LaSalle
Posted on 12/27/23 at 9:23 am to LaSalle
I’m not sure of the answer to your question. But, this got me thinking and wondering has anyone ever seen a female billboard lawyer? I don’t think I’ve ever seen one.
Posted on 12/27/23 at 9:30 am to GPayne
I heard a woman who is deaf and blind just graduated lsu law
I don’t know how she’s ever gonna practice law, I mean who would hire a woman lawyer?
I don’t know how she’s ever gonna practice law, I mean who would hire a woman lawyer?
Posted on 12/27/23 at 9:31 am to GPayne
quote:
But, this got me thinking and wondering has anyone ever seen a female billboard lawyer? I don’t think I’ve ever seen one.
How about a former stuntwoman PI/billboard lawyer, who may or may not have been implicated in allegations of criminal fraud?
LINK
quote:
Whatever the motive, Garrison’s killing could have an effect on a case that presumably was being built against his attorney, Vanessa Motta. The charges filed against him allege that Motta, who features her work as an on-screen stuntwoman in television commercials billing her as “a bad a— attorney,” helped secure a fraudulent $650,000 settlement in an accident that Garrison staged and for which he was paid a share of the settlement.
The court records don’t name Motta or her fiancé, Sean Alfortish, but they strongly suggest that Alfortish was paying Garrison to stage the accidents and referring the resulting legal work to Motta. Justice Department policy generally calls for using pseudonyms for people accused in documents of breaking the law but not charged with a crime. The indictment calls Alfortish “Co-conspirator A” and Motta “Attorney B.”
This post was edited on 12/27/23 at 9:33 am
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