Yes, that will often work. In divorce court, you can also interview all the best attorneys in your city, and if your ex hires someone you interviewed you can almost certainly get them thrown off by claiming a conflict of interest. And vice versa. Don't ask how I learned this. Works for a lot of corporate law too, to frustrate the other side.
Shakespeare had wise sayings. We have teachers that don't teach, doctors that don't heal, judges that don't judge, and a house of representatives full of misrepresentation, along with lawyers that pervert and break the laws. We have a lot to fix. Bless those that wade through the swamp to drain it.
So, if I don't like a judge, I can hire a lawyer that interned for him?
Yes, that will often work. In divorce court, you can also interview all the best attorneys in your city, and if your ex hires someone you interviewed you can almost certainly get them thrown off by claiming a conflict of interest. And vice versa. Don't ask how I learned this. Works for a lot of corporate law too, to frustrate the other side.
Shakespeare had wise sayings. We have teachers that don't teach, doctors that don't heal, judges that don't judge, and a house of representatives full of misrepresentation, along with lawyers that pervert and break the laws. We have a lot to fix. Bless those that wade through the swamp to drain it.
I hope someone is keeping a list