Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...yes so surprised that Kim Glassman was weak...I went off the recs on DCUM and was really disappointed in all respects. In hindsight, I should have interviewed multiple lawyers so that was my bad.
Definitely shop around! I'm the PP who met with Eig and Glassman but chose Shefter. I felt very confident in her after our first meeting and I didn't get the same vibes from the other two. She came highly recommended from a friend who is an SN case manager at a DCPS because she was her least favorite attorney to see in a meeting. Choose the attorney who has an approach and demeanor that you trust, because the process will involve a lot of you doing what they tell you to do and stepping back while they do the talking. You have to trust them to lead you. I'm happy with my choice. We're fortunate to have options, honestly.
Shefter is a crook. She only markets well. As a teacher for Mcps she is not respected by the county or their attorneys.
Anonymous wrote:Im an employment attorney and I used Jaime Seaton at the recommendation of a friend in my case and she got us an extremely favorable result. Michael Eig is heard to be great but overly litigious and expensive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the big deal with Eig? He loses 90% of the time.
How do you know that?
All decisions in Md are public record.
That’s completely misleading. Due process HEARINGS are public record. Those are only cases that go all the way to a hearing - they don’t reflect settlements or cases where the attorney gets what the family wants without proceeding all the way to Due Process, which is the end of the line. Those are the ones MCPS feels they can win. If you look on the MSDE website, there are only 1-3 Due Process hearings per year. Of those, yes, MCPS prevails on most of them because the burden of proof rests with the parents. Eig has won his fair share. I’m an attorney and I’ve won all of the cases I’ve had in my 20+ year career except 2. It’s not because I’m an amazing attorney, it’s the nature of the area of practice I am in, the odds of losing are very very low, and when I have a risky case, I settle it.
Fellow attorney here who would love to know which area of the law has very very low odds of losing. Sounds dreamy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here...yes so surprised that Kim Glassman was weak...I went off the recs on DCUM and was really disappointed in all respects. In hindsight, I should have interviewed multiple lawyers so that was my bad.
Definitely shop around! I'm the PP who met with Eig and Glassman but chose Shefter. I felt very confident in her after our first meeting and I didn't get the same vibes from the other two. She came highly recommended from a friend who is an SN case manager at a DCPS because she was her least favorite attorney to see in a meeting. Choose the attorney who has an approach and demeanor that you trust, because the process will involve a lot of you doing what they tell you to do and stepping back while they do the talking. You have to trust them to lead you. I'm happy with my choice. We're fortunate to have options, honestly.
Shefter is a crook. She only markets well. As a teacher for Mcps she is not respected by the county or their attorneys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's the big deal with Eig? He loses 90% of the time.
How do you know that?
All decisions in Md are public record.
That’s completely misleading. Due process HEARINGS are public record. Those are only cases that go all the way to a hearing - they don’t reflect settlements or cases where the attorney gets what the family wants without proceeding all the way to Due Process, which is the end of the line. Those are the ones MCPS feels they can win. If you look on the MSDE website, there are only 1-3 Due Process hearings per year. Of those, yes, MCPS prevails on most of them because the burden of proof rests with the parents. Eig has won his fair share. I’m an attorney and I’ve won all of the cases I’ve had in my 20+ year career except 2. It’s not because I’m an amazing attorney, it’s the nature of the area of practice I am in, the odds of losing are very very low, and when I have a risky case, I settle it.