Speak to an attorney today, and only speak with a licensed attorney. Beware of law firms that never let you talk to the attorney named in their advertisement, but always refer to an "assistant" or "paralegal." Report any of these non-lawyers if they give you legal advice or insist that you go to their bank and deposit your cash into their account before they will let you see the attorney.
Look out for lawyers who can't or won't answer your questions, or who don't have a written contract that describes what services you are getting for your money.
Consider the motive of an attorney who tells you they can win your case unless it just happens to get assigned to one, particular judge, and the next thing that happens after he takes your money is the assignment of the case to that judge. (Attorneys know who the assigned judge is the day the case is filed, so this is just a scam.)
Think twice about the attorney who wants you to give him a motorcycle or car or diamonds, or who insists that you pay only in cash. He's probably about to be arrested by the IRS or disbarred.
Watch out for lawyers who have too many certificates and titles, but can't tell you the case name and docket number of their last 5 jury trials. (They usually don't have 5 trials in their careers.) What difference does training make if your never use it in real life? You don't see too many law professors actually practicing law in a courtroom; they wouldn't have a clue.
If a lawyer seems too flashy, with jewels, rings and expensive watches, you should wonder if he is trying to impress you or get you to make his vacation home payment, instead of working hard for you. A Utah jury won't be impressed with that kind of phony posturing, and neither should you. Think about how that lawyer's credibility is with his peers, prosecutors and judges. If a lawyer tells you they will fight for your constitutional rights of a fair trial before an impartial jury but can't tell you that it is the 6th Amendment to the US Constitution that guarantees that right, then you can assume they are equally incompetent about fighting for your rights.
Never, ever trust an ex-cop who now claims to be a defense attorney. (No prosecutor will hire these least competent or most crooked ex-cop lawyers, otherwise, they would be prosecutors like all the other ex-cops.) And, if the attorney graduated from a no-name, never heard of it, unaccredited law school, or is reluctant to tell you where he went to school, well, you get the picture.
And don't think that by representing yourself you will get any breaks. When you fail to understand how questions are asked or evidence is introduced, the Court won't take time to teach you, and you will fail miserably. You are in a better position to perform heart surgery on yourself than you are to defend yourself in a criminal trial.
Picking the right attorney is more important than selecting the car you are going drive for the next 5 years, or even the house you want to live in. That attorney has to make sure that you are still there to drive that car and live in that house. You choose an attorney like you life depends on it, because your life really does depend on it!
Always insist on a written contract, and always insist on speaking with a licensed attorney every time.
Look at the contract
Does the contract say that it will cost you more to exercise your constitutional right to a jury trial? We include trial as part of the basic contract, at a price that is very competitive. Keep in mind: other law firms typically do not include trial in the contact, and you will have to pay extra to if you go to them.


