Top best L Lawyers in Barnwell | 13 available
13 L lawyers are available in Barnwell, South Carolina. These lawyers are rated between 2.8/5 to 3.2/5 and 54% provide free consultation with fees ranging from $43 to $65 per hour.
7 - 13
$171 - $404
43% - 65%
2.8 - 3.2 ★
13 L Lawyers Found Near You
Terry E. Richardson Jr. is one of the pre-eminent plaintiff attorneys in the southeastern United States.. While many other lawyers operate within a single practice area, Richardson is a consummate litigator who represents individuals, governments and businesses on a wide range of legal matters. His intellectual curiosity has led to much success in his legal career on cases ranging from catastrophic personal injury to products liability, securities fraud and class actions.. From agrarian roots in Barnwell, South Carolina, he built one of the most sophisticated and respected law firms in the region.. As a child, Richardson helped his father grow and harvest crops on the family farm. That hard work and exposure to operating a business, led him to Clemson University, where he graduated with a bachelor’s degree in economics and a master’s degree in management and operations research.. He was a systems engineer for IBM before being directly commissioned into the United States Army during Vietnam to work on computerized logistical systems in Virginia and Thailand. He returned to civilian life and took a job at Wilbur Smith & Associates in Connecticut, where he assisted governments with revenue financing bonds for airports and toll roads.. Richardson entered the University of South Carolina School of Law in the fall of 1971. He was editor-in-chief of the South Carolina Law Review from 1973-74.. Richardson went to work for Blatt & Fales after law school, becoming just the fifth attorney at the firm. He was blessed to work with famed South Carolina attorney and politician Sol Blatt Sr. for 12 years. In the 1970s, Richardson and the firm pioneered asbestos product liability litigation, and the firm pursued thousands of cases throughout the country.. Following the addition of retired S.C. Supreme Court Chief Justice Julius B. Ness in 1988, the firm changed names to Ness, Motley, Loadholt, Richardson & Poole. Richardson managed the firm during a period of dramatic expansion. By the early 2000s, it had grown to employ 75 attorneys and hundreds of support staff throughout the country. After the firm achieved the landmark Tobacco Master Settlement, four of the six shareholders left to create Richardson, Patrick, Westbrook & Brickman.. Richardson has served his state and the legal profession by holding leadership positions on many endeavors, including chairman of the board of directors of the Nature Conservancy. He has won numerous accolades, including the Compleat Lawyer Award from the University of South Carolina School Law School Alumni Council and Advocate of the Year from the S.C. Appleseed Legal Justice Center. His peers recently named him one of the Top 10 attorneys in South Carolina in the 2016 edition of Super Lawyers.. Richardson has been married to his wife, Gail, for more than 46 years. They still live in the Barnwell home they bought at the beginning of Terry’s legal career. The couple enjoys spending time at Edisto Beach with their three children and nine grandchildren. Terry also enjoys ski trips with his friends.. Representative Cases. Graniteville Train Crash. On January 6, 2005, two Norfolk Southern trains collided in Graniteville, South Carolina, setting off a chain of events that led to the deaths of nine people and injuries to at least 250 others. Richardson represented Avondale Mills, the company located at the collision site, in its pursuit of compensation from Norfolk Southern for damages to buildings, equipment and its ongoing business activities. The two parties entered into a confidential settlement in 2008 in what media outlets have described as being the largest single tort settlement in South Carolina history. Additionally, Richardson represented three of the people who died and many who were injured. He was class counsel for 5,000 people who were forced to evacuate from their homes.. The Electrocution of Manuel Salazar. In 2003, 24-year-old construction worker Manuel Salazar was standing next to a crane at the Lake Murray dam in South Carolina when the crane made contact with power lines. Salazar was electrocuted, causing the loss of both of his arms and legs. Richardson represented him, arguing successfully that Salazar could bring a personal injury lawsuit rather than just a worker’s compensation claim. The case was settled for a confidential amount of money, and is thought to be the largest personal injury settlement in South Carolina history. Salazar has shown such incredible determination and spirit in his recovery that Nike to outfitted him with computerized legs. He is married, has three children and started a business. For more about Manuel’s story, click here (?v=VSybUD-5yNM). Exploding Gas Cans & Other Burn Injuries. Richardson has represented many people who were burned by defective products, including gas cans, deep fryers and gas grills. This included more than 50 people who were hurt or killed by exploding gas cans. One group of clients received more than $60 million from Blitz U.S.A, Inc., and Walmart as a part of a settlement in the Blitz U.S.A., Inc. bankruptcy.. Poisoned Family Land. Richardson represented a family who had owned land for generations in Williston, South Carolina who were forced from their home by pollution from a neighboring refrigerator manufacturer. Heavy metals and other substances poisoned the family’s well. The company entered into a confidential settlement with the property owners and the land was eventually cleaned up as part of a Superfund project.
RPWB member Daniel Scott Haltiwanger helps people who have been harmed in accidents and by dangerous products, work that enables him to fight for positive change on behalf of consumers everywhere.. In one such instance, Haltiwanger examined a stretch of Interstate 20 in South Carolina between Aiken and Columbia. By poring through weather, engineering and traffic data, he determined that a faulty repaving job was to blame for many serious wrecks. The road was then repaired to prevent future injuries.. Similarly, he represented dozens of plaintiffs whose SUVs had rolled over following tire malfunctions amid the Ford/Firestone recall of the early 2000s. Litigation prompted both companies to change the design of their products.. A native of Columbia, South Carolina, Haltiwanger graduated from the University of Virginia in 1995 with a degree in International Relations & Rhetoric in Communications. He then attended the University of South Carolina School of Law where he was on the editorial board of the Law Review and also was a member of the Order of the Coif.. Following law school, Haltiwanger clerked for the Honorable Jean Toal during a pivotal two-year period of her career when she became chief justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court. That experience provided him with well-rounded, practical experience in many areas of the law.. He was hired as an associate for Ness, Motley, Loadholt, Richardson & Poole where he worked under Terry Richardson. In 2002, Haltiwanger followed Richardson to RPWB. A year later, he litigated and maintained much of the Barnwell office’s caseload as other attorneys served the needs of those who were killed, injured or displaced by the Graniteville train crash.. Haltiwanger met his wife at the company holiday party. They have two children and live in Aiken. In his spare time, he enjoys fishing for red drum in the tidal creeks and rivers near Edisto Island.. Representative Cases. The Electrocution of Manuel Salazar. In 2003, 24-year-old construction worker Manuel Salazar was standing next to a crane at the Lake Murray dam in South Carolina when the crane made contact with power lines. Salazar was electrocuted, causing the loss of both of his arms and legs. Haltiwanger represented him, twice arguing successfully that Salazar could bring a personal injury lawsuit rather than just a worker’s compensation claim. The case was settled for a confidential amount of money, and is thought to be the largest personal injury settlement in South Carolina history. Salazar has shown such incredible determination and spirit in his recovery that Nike to outfit him with computerized legs. He is married, has three children and started a business. For more about Manuel’s story, click here (?v=VSybUD-5yNM). Exploding Gas Cans & Other Burn Injuries. Haltiwanger has represented many people who were burned by defective products, including gas cans, deep fryers and gas grills. This includes more than 50 people who were hurt or killed by exploding gas cans. One group of clients received more than $60 million from Blitz U.S.A, Inc., and Walmart as a part of a settlement in the Blitz U.S.A., Inc. bankruptcy.. Poisoned Family Land. Haltiwanger represented a family in Williston, South Carolina who was forced from their home by pollution from a neighboring refrigerator manufacturer. Heavy metals and other substances poisoned the family’s well. The company entered into a confidential settlement with the property owners, whose family had owned the property for generations, and the land was eventually cleaned up as part of a Superfund project.. Truck wrecks. RPWB has a strong reputation for litigating truck wrecks against drivers, vehicle owners, insurance companies and vehicle manufacturers. Haltiwanger has represented individuals who were killed or suffered severe injuries in truck accidents, including vehicle defect cases involving unguarded sidesaddle fuel tanks and those injured by trucks with insufficient roof support.. Medical Device Litigation. Haltiwanger helps patients who have received defective medical devices, most notably hip implants and transvaginal mesh. Defective hip implants include the brands: DePuy ASR, DePuy Pinnacle, Stryker Rejuvenate & ABG II, Biomet MZA Magnum, Zimmer Durom and Wright Conserve. Defective transvaginal mesh products were manufactured by Boston Scientific, Ethicon, American Medical Systems, C.R. Bard, Inc., and Coloplast Corporation.
My practice focuses on representing plaintiffs in personal injury litigation. For over 25 years, I have proudly represented individuals who have been harmed by asbestos or injured by defective products. It is only through hard work, diligence and perserverance that the the injustice done to these individuals can be undone.
Linda Farron grew up in the Finger Lakes area of the rolling hills of New York State. She graduated as a Regents Scholar. She is married to Dennis C. Knapp, an engineer at SRS and a former US Navy submariner. They moved 22 times before settling in the Thoroughbred Country of South Carolina. Linda was the first USC Law School intern with the SC Supreme Court. She clerked for Chief Justice Jean Hoefer Toal. She was on the Dean's Honor Roll. She graduated and was admitted to the SC Bar in 1991. She was an associate attorney with a general practice firm for 9 years, before moving to SC Legal Services, and then opened her own firm in 2003. She now focuses on estate planning, elder law, and probate.
Brady R. Thomas has experience in an array of practice areas, including: class-action lawsuits; business litigation; personal injury; products and premises liability; Eminent Domain litigation; truck accidents and vehicle defect cases.. Thomas joined RPWB in 2010 after being a partner at Lewis & Babcock in Columbia. In 2012, he was named one of the top 40 trial lawyers under 40-years-old by the National Trial Lawyers, an invitation-only association that recognizes top talent in the legal profession. In 2014, Super Lawyers – a national legal ranking service – recognized Thomas as a rising star in South Carolina.. Thomas is a 2004 graduate of the University of South Carolina School of Law where he graduated in the top ten percent of his class and holds an undergraduate degree in political science from Florida State University, where he ran varsity cross country and track.. He is married and has two children.. Representative Cases. Freeman vs. Hendrick Honda of Easley. A car dealership in South Carolina was charging consumers closing fees that were not for the purpose of reimbursing closing costs. In 2013, Thomas and fellow RPWB attorney Dave Butler won a $4 million judgment in a jury trial against a dealership in Pickens County. After the judgment, numerous other dealerships settled similar claims brought by Mr. Thomas’ clients.. Exploding gas cans and other burn injuries. Thomas has represented many people who were burned by defective products, including gas cans, deep fryers and gas grills. This included more than 50 people who were hurt or killed by exploding gas cans. One group of Mr. Thomas’s clients received more than $60 million from Blitz U.S.A, Inc., and Walmart as a part of a settlement in the Blitz U.S.A., Inc. bankruptcy.. Truck wrecks. RPWB has a strong reputation for litigating truck wrecks against drivers, vehicle owners, insurance companies and vehicle manufacturers. Thomas has represented individuals who were killed or suffered severe injuries in truck accidents, including vehicle defect cases involving unguarded sidesaddle fuel tanks and those injured by truck’s with insufficient roof support.. Areas of Practice. Admissions. Education. Professional Memberships. Prior Experience
Experienced L attorney serving clients in Barnwell and surrounding areas.
Experienced L attorney serving clients in Barnwell and surrounding areas.
Experienced L attorney serving clients in Barnwell and surrounding areas.
Experienced L attorney serving clients in Barnwell and surrounding areas.
Experienced L attorney serving clients in Barnwell and surrounding areas.
Experienced L attorney serving clients in Barnwell and surrounding areas.