Monday 15 July 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Biogarphy

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Nothing is more important to me than protecting the well-being of my clients. When you’ve been charged with a misdemeanor or felony and it seems like the deck is stacked against you, my more than a decade of successful experience as a defense lawyer in Nashville can be your greatest resource and most effective tool.
In any criminal case I handle at the Law Offices of William H. Stover, whether DUI, domestic violence, white collar crime or another offense, I understand how to develop effective and creative legal defense strategies that use the law and the rules in your favor. While avoiding a conviction altogether is always the ultimate goal, I know how to evaluate your options and achieve that best-case scenario, a downgraded charge, reduced penalties or other compromises that minimize the impact on your life both immediately and in the long term.
When we first meet, I’ll begin to evaluate your criminal case and do my best to help you set realistic expectations regarding the outcome.
Strategic decisions
As I build your defense, I’ll consider factors and use tools such as the following:
Why you were arrested, expect to be arrested or have a warrant out for your arrest
Any public or personal documents that relate to your case or its history, such as police reports, tickets, warrants or charging documents
The evidence in and against your favor
Confessions, interviews or depositions that you signed or in which you were recorded
Evidence of procedural compliance or noncompliance by authorities
Advice from outside experts
Information that could raise a reasonable doubt about your guilt
Additional relevant data and material
At a certain point, it will be time to make decisions about how to proceed most effectively and in your best interest. It may be most beneficial to try to settle out of court or consider a plea bargain option. But as a seasoned defense attorney, I’m never afraid to fight for you in court when appropriate. Whatever your decision, I’m here to advise, support and protect you.
One of the top criminal defense attorneys in Nashville ready to advocate on your behalf
At the Law Offices of William H. Stover, I offer all the capabilities of a large defense law firm while maintaining my commitment to providing personal service to every client. Since no two cases are identical, you deserve a lawyer who is adaptable and effective. For more information on the services I offer, call me at 615.338.7894 or contact me online so we can discuss your case in a free initial phone consultation. I represent clients in Nashville and throughout Middle Tennessee, including Murfreesboro, Clarksville, Gallatin, Shelbyville and Lebanon.
- See more at: http://www.wstoverlaw.com/services/criminal-defense/#sthash.6ZmNeeAQ.dpuf
In an effort to get to the truth about the arrest, incarceration and withholding of bond for Nashville attorney Leo Haffey, I have explored the facts and major players surrounding this troubling case. Since one of the players is Gloria Dumas, a Nashville judge, and Leo Haffey requested that she be recused for biased behaviour and we have been at the mercy of so many bad judges, exposing the truth about Judge Dumas became more important.
Someone else investigating this case indicated that Judge Gloria Dumas may have a feminist agenda. Since that is hearsay, I wanted more tangible evidence. First examine the charges filed against Leo Haffey.
Details of Leo Haffey arrest
The consistent theme in this surreal case is that Leo Haffey has openly spoken out about and questioned Barack Obama. I believe that Haffey wrote the first motion for Orly Taitz. The Haffey family has emphatically stated they were pressured and Harrassed by Obama supporters. Some of these people are involved in the legal profession. When one considers that a very high percentage of attorneys  and law firms voted for and supported Obama, this is more believable. Leo Haffey also spoke out about corruption in Nashville
Attorney Leo Haffey, arrested based on suspicious affidavits and held without bond and benefit of witnesses and records, prepared this motion in jail and filed it.
Samson "Sammy" March was not a happy camper on his first day of kindergarten at the University School in Nashville, Tennessee, on August 22, 1996. The other children in his class were predictably nervous and teary-eyed on their first day of school, but Sammy, whose sixth birthday was just days away, was particularly upset because his mother, Janet March, had been gone for a week.
Sammy's teacher, Kim Scott, remembered that the little boy was "very sad because he had not seen his mom and he missed her. He did not get to say goodbye to her before she left."
Sammy's father, attorney Perry March, told people that his wife was away on vacation. Naturally Perry did not share the details with his son or his two-year-old daughter, Tzipora, but he told others that on August 15, 1996, he and his wife had had an argument after which Janet had packed her bags and informed him that she was taking a 12-day vacation. March acknowledged that it was a bitter fight, and it might have started when Janet learned that her husband had been paying a $24,000 out-of-court settlement to a paralegal he had sexually harassed at Bass Berry & Sims, the law firm where he had worked until 1991. According to the Associated Press, he had been caught on videotape "leaving sexually explicit notes" for the woman. So far he had paid only half of the settlement and had informed the woman in a letter that he couldn't pay her the balance.
Bass Berry & Sims Logo
Bass Berry & Sims Logo
March said that during the argument, Janet had written up a "to-do list," which she expected him to complete before she returned. The list included balancing the checkbook, changing light bulbs, and cleaning the basement. "Things that I had seemed to have dropped the ball on in the course of my 10 years with her," March said on the television program 48 Hours Investigates. She made him sign the list, which she'd titled "Janet's 12-Day Vacation," as if it were a contract, then put her bags into the family's 1996 gray Volvo 850.
Carolyn Levine
Carolyn Levine
That night March told Janet's parents, Lawrence and Carolyn Levine, that Janet had promised to be back in 12 days, in time for Sammy's birthday party on August 27. It would later prove to be an odd statement because Janet had sent out invitations saying that the party would be held on the 25th.
Larry Levine
Larry Levine
Days passed, and Janet did not show up for her son's birthday party or his first day of school. March covered for her, telling the parents of Sammy's kindergarten friends that she was in California visiting her brother and that an ear infection had prevented her from flying. But Janet March never returned home.
So... it is all over the news of late. Lowering the "legal limit" from .08% to .05%. But is it a good idea?
Will the new trend sweep the nation? More specifically, will Tennessee lower the Blood Alcohol Limit to .05% for suspected DUI drivers?
The answer may just likely be... "yes". In any event... the answer should be just around the corner.
I would expect a Bill to be introduced on the floor of the Tennessee House and/or Senate addressing just that issue... and I expect it very soon.
Now, what is the likelihood that it will pass? And, what is the likely "effect" it will have on the community (good and/or bad).
I have been in this business since the late 1980's, and I have been on every side. I have almost a decade of experience as a police officer and made hundreds if not thousands of arrests (many of which were for DUI). Followed by a short stay at the District Attorney's Office prosecuting cases, including DUI. And, I have been practicing law for almost 15 years at this point, and my primary focus is DUI Defense law. But, as "jaded" as some think I may be, I think personally I am well "rounded" on my opinion. I have seen the negative effects first-hand as a police officer. I have watched as someone literally died in front of me as a result of drinking and driving. But the "legal limit" in my humble opinion would not have changed that death.
When I started the police force making DUI arrests, the Blood Alcohol Limit that created a "legal presumption" of intoxication was 0.10%.
Not long ago, the Tennessee legislature voted in a law that "lowered" that legal limit to .08%. When they did that... did it "really" lower the number of deaths caused by intoxicated drivers?
There are arguments on both sides of that issue. But, personally, I do not think that it did.
I also do not think that lowering the limit to .05% will make a difference in the number of related deaths, although I can see the argument.
What it WILL do is this... It will lead to MANY more arrests. And, I think it will lead to arrests of persons that do not even "appear" intoxicated, based solely on the "smell" of an intoxicant. (Even though the smell of an intoxicant is in no way attributable to the level of intoxication).
While I certainly do not advocate for drinking and driving... I do advocate for the constitutional rights of citizens of this great country.
And, when that happens, the justice system that prosecutes DUI offenses could nearly grind to a hault. It will most certainly bog the system down considerably.


r. Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

Lawyers nashville tn Wallpaper Photos Pictures Pics Images 2013

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