Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is a "high conflict" attorney?
Come on, now. Use context clues. He's looking for a lawyer who can effectively manage a contentious divorce, i.e. a box case. Only about 5% of divorces go to court -- usually because the parties can't resolve things between themselves. These are the six-figure divorce cases. OP wants a lawyer who'll fight for him. Maybe his wife has a personality disorder or something and is deluded in thinking she is entitled to more than the law provides. That's pretty common -- a lot of wives think they'll get more in divorces than they actually will, and so they become difficult.
Or maybe OP is the wife needing a strong attorney well-versed in high conflict because the husband is the one with the personality disorder, which is more commonly the case.
Or, maybe the wife had an affair, leaving to be with the AP and wants a huge amount of child support, allimony and to maximize child support full custody.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is a "high conflict" attorney?
Come on, now. Use context clues. He's looking for a lawyer who can effectively manage a contentious divorce, i.e. a box case. Only about 5% of divorces go to court -- usually because the parties can't resolve things between themselves. These are the six-figure divorce cases. OP wants a lawyer who'll fight for him. Maybe his wife has a personality disorder or something and is deluded in thinking she is entitled to more than the law provides. That's pretty common -- a lot of wives think they'll get more in divorces than they actually will, and so they become difficult.
Or maybe OP is the wife needing a strong attorney well-versed in high conflict because the husband is the one with the personality disorder, which is more commonly the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is a "high conflict" attorney?
Come on, now. Use context clues. He's looking for a lawyer who can effectively manage a contentious divorce, i.e. a box case. Only about 5% of divorces go to court -- usually because the parties can't resolve things between themselves. These are the six-figure divorce cases. OP wants a lawyer who'll fight for him. Maybe his wife has a personality disorder or something and is deluded in thinking she is entitled to more than the law provides. That's pretty common -- a lot of wives think they'll get more in divorces than they actually will, and so they become difficult.
Or maybe OP is the wife needing a strong attorney well-versed in high conflict because the husband is the one with the personality disorder, which is more commonly the case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is a "high conflict" attorney?
Come on, now. Use context clues. He's looking for a lawyer who can effectively manage a contentious divorce, i.e. a box case. Only about 5% of divorces go to court -- usually because the parties can't resolve things between themselves. These are the six-figure divorce cases. OP wants a lawyer who'll fight for him. Maybe his wife has a personality disorder or something and is deluded in thinking she is entitled to more than the law provides. That's pretty common -- a lot of wives think they'll get more in divorces than they actually will, and so they become difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is a "high conflict" attorney?
Come on, now. Use context clues. He's looking for a lawyer who can effectively manage a contentious divorce, i.e. a box case. Only about 5% of divorces go to court -- usually because the parties can't resolve things between themselves. These are the six-figure divorce cases. OP wants a lawyer who'll fight for him. Maybe his wife has a personality disorder or something and is deluded in thinking she is entitled to more than the law provides. That's pretty common -- a lot of wives think they'll get more in divorces than they actually will, and so they become difficult.
Anonymous wrote:What is a "high conflict" attorney?