Fighting for the Oppressed until They’re Made Whole
By Ryan Locke, Criminal Defense Attorney, Locke Law Firm
As a criminal defense lawyer, I often receive frantic calls.
A family member was just hauled away by the cops, or the news just said the
caller has been indicted, or the police are at the door with a search warrant.
But one call gave me pause: “The sheriff is on his way to my house,” sobbed the
woman on the phone, “and he’s going to arrest me unless I pay the debt
collector. What should I do?”
I’ve received similar versions of this call since then, and
they all end the same way. The sheriff never comes and the debt collector—if he
isn’t just an outright fraud—lays low before calling a few days later with more
threats and demands.
I didn’t know about this side of debt collection before
working with the Atlanta Volunteer Lawyers Foundation. But then one Saturday
morning I met Sandra, who had come to AVLF for help. She was being harassed by
debt collectors for a supposedly unpaid store credit card. Sandra thought she
had paid it off but wasn’t sure, so she asked them to send her proof of the
debt. Instead, they filed suit.
AVLF had my back. They sent me their in-house treatise on
debt collection defense and put me in touch with an expert debt-defense attorney.
Pulling together language from their resources and my research, I filed an
answer and counterclaim the day before court and hand-delivered it to the debt
collector’s bewildered attorney on the courthouse steps. She offered a mutual
dismissal of claims with prejudice.
As it turns out, the store that issued Sandra the credit
card went bankrupt, and Sandra’s debt was sold to a holding company that resold
the debt to the collector. But the debt collector only bought Sandra’s name and
phone number; he didn’t buy the paperwork proving that a debt existed. We still
don’t know if Sandra actually owed the store any money. But for Sandra, the
calls stopped and that was a win.
I’ve continued working with AVLF, suing misbehaving
landlords and demanding companies pay their workers. Two things remain constant
for each case. First, you’re a member of the AVLF team. Michael Lucas, who
oversees many of these cases, is an expert co-counsel advising on strategy and
technique. One weekend, he even sent me an excited text about different ways to
serve process on my out-of-state defendant.
Second, resolving the clients’ seemingly minor problems has
a profound effect on their lives. A landlord releasing the security deposit is
the difference between moving out of the moldy and cockroach-infested apartment
or suffering through another month.
In my criminal defense practice, I stand with the accused
and fight for their freedom. With AVLF, I fight for the poor and oppressed
until they’re made whole. Please join me, and the hundreds of other volunteers,
in this critical pursuit.
Ryan Locke is the
founder and managing member of the Locke Law Firm, specializing in criminal
defense.
Hiring an experienced, competent lawyer doesn't necessarily mean that you will get the outcome you want, but it gives you the best chance and few regrets. Just as you don't want an inexperienced plastic surgeon, you don't want an inexperienced criminal lawyer. The stakes are too high.
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