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Re: What's a Brinks 4000?
I am sending letters to all Thompson Coburn offices in the USA just to
make sure that each office is fully aware what this jerk is up to.
Chicago
Thompson Coburn Fagel Haber
55 East Monroe Street
40th Floor
Chicago, IL, 60603
Phone: 312.346.7500
Fax: 312.580.2201
St. Louis
Thompson Coburn LLP
One US Bank Plaza
St. Louis, MO 63101-1611
Phone: 314.552.6000
Fax: 314.552.7000
Southern Illinois
Thompson Coburn LLP
525 West Main Street
Belleville, IL 62220-1534
Phone: 618.277.4700
Fax: 618.236.3434
Washington, D.C.
Thompson Coburn LLP
1909 K Street, N.W. Suite 600
Washington, D.C. 20006-1167
Phone: 202.585.6900
Fax: 202.585.6969
Jim Rojas
Just Looking wrote:
> I went up against a similar 'win at all costs' group back when. P.I.s
> followed me nearly everywhere. They got every know government agency
to rake
> me over the coals. They brought in everything from the IRS coming in and
> flashing badges, to weird obscure agricultural department immigration
> related stuff. It was a real pain in the ass and waste of time. Funny
those
> agencies ended up with paperwork in their hands that would only been
> available to them from the fruits of the other side's discovery. Imagine
> that? It was nearly impossible to accuse the other side of anything
because
> the lawyers they assigned to the case kept changing. It is clear that
> anything they can do to win, even if you get destroyed in the process, is
> simply okay with them. After all you had the nerve to go up against
one of
> their clients, or their client's interests.
> The only good things to come of all that is that their CPA testifying for
> them went to jail (before he could even testify), the law firm
representing
> them dissolved eventually and the company that I was up against went
> bankrupt within days after the trial and has since gone under too.
When they
> (the lawyers and the firm) get taken down it's all described like the sad
> end of an era, of history gone wrong, and full of lamentations about what
> could have been. I say good riddance to them all.
> Maybe another attorney reading these posts could heed this warning below
> quoted form the article describing their end.
>
> "Founded 56 years ago and once the largest law firm in Dallas, Jenkens is
> closing its doors for good this weekend. What drove it to extinction
was a
> combination of issues, including misjudgments tied to rapid growth and an
> aggressive drive to bring in business."
>
> When I think on the "merits" of your case that all sounds mighty
familiar to
> me. Maybe it all boils down to how many billable hours are really in this
> case? Like I said before, when the cash disappears so will he.
Crash Gordon wrote:
> I will later...right now I'm late for ballet.
>
> It even leaves it up to the buyer to research their own police permit
> application.
>
> It's a cheap sheet chicken scratch proposal. I'll scan it later tonight.
>
> R.
>
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