Tell us about your case
Tell us about your case
Your Full Name
Your Phone Number
Your E-mail
Select Law Category
Describe your case
Attention Attorneys!
Get Listed in this directory for only
$199/yr
Call 1-800-414-5025 to speak to a web marketing expert
More Info

Fairfield, CT Attorneys, Lawyers and Law Firms

Directory of Fairfield, Connecticut Attorneys, Lawyers, Law Firms, etc.
(148 attorneys currently listed)

Sponsored Links

Standard Listings

Jennifer Hauhuth
883 Black Rock Turnpike
Fairfield, CT 06825
(203) 610-6762
Patrick Henry
130 Eastfield Drive
Fairfield, CT 06825
(203) 371-6911
Harry Hirsch
6 Woody Lane
Fairfield, CT 06825
(203) 336-3584
James Homa
325 Reef Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 259-5251
James Hughes
1432 Post Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 256-1977
Id Tags Co
532 Rowland
Fairfield, CT 06828
(203) 338-0412
William Ingram
1700 Post Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 255-6777
James H Lee
140 Sherman Street
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 259-4665
Charles Jankovsky
134 Round Hill Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 254-0389
Jontos & Lotty
1212 Post Road Floor 2
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 259-7009
Robert Josovitz
400 Stillson Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 334-3149
Wm Bradley Kellogg
One Eliot Place
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 254-1190
Irving Kern
947 Galloping Hill Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 259-3477
Klebanoff & Alfano
1275 Post Road Suite 212
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 256-0683
Frederick Klein
213 Catherine Terrace
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 255-7774
Ernest Lafollette
1432 Post Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 254-1387
Fatse Brian
53 Sherman Street
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 256-5656
Jan A Marcus
55 Walls Drive
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 254-8633
Kevin W Finch
1559 Post Road Suite 4
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 255-8799
Lax & Truax
1275 Post Road Suite 200 C
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 254-9877
Thomas Lee
765 Post Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 259-0435
Steven Levy
1 Eliot Place
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 255-9754
Steven Levy
402 Rowland Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 255-9853
Lieto & Greenberg
40 Reef Road
Fairfield, CT 06824
(203) 255-0000

Sponsored Links

United States Attorney News

Ex-cab driver agrees to plea deal in murder charges

A plea deal agreement has Broderick Kenyo Smith admitting to manslaughter instead of capital murder in the death of Arlando Maurice Pritchett in 2012.

The plea agreement will have Smith serving just a year in jail for a split sentence of 10 years.

His jail stay will be followed with probation for three years.

Should Smith violate his probation, he could be made to serve the rest of his 10-year sentence.

According to the police, Pritchett had an argument with a cab driver prior to his shooting while Smith admitted that he had been driving a cab during the time of the incident.

Birmingham defense attorney Charles Salvagio said Smith had shot Pritchett because the latter had robbed him.

Philadelphia Church official granted bail after his conviction was reversed

After 18 months in prison, Monsignor William Lynn, may be released when he was granted bail following the reversal of his conviction.

Lynn, who served as a secretary for clergy at the Philadelphia archdiocese, will have to give up his passport. He will also be made to wear an electronic device for monitoring.

The Roman Catholic official was sentenced to between three to six years after he was convicted for endangering an abuse victim of a priest.

However, appeal judges reversed Lynn's conviction because the child-endangerment law which he was accused of violating did not apply to him.

Following the reversal, Lynn's defense lawyers asked for his release which the prosecution opposed during the bail hearing claiming that the priest is a flight risk.

However, Philadelphia defense attorney Thomas Bergstrom said that Lynn would never run away from conviction.

20 years in prison for murder conviction in nightclub shooting

A murder conviction will have Mark Anthony Garcia spending 20 years in prison for the death of Michael Angelo Morales.

Morales was shot to death outside a nightclub in 2008.

Garcia's first murder trial ended in a mistrial but he was not so lucky in the second trial.

Albert Acevedo, a defense attorney in San Antonio, said that his client, Garcia, was not the killer.

Instead he was the one who tried to stop another man, Hector Lozano, from shooting Morales.

Lozano is still awaiting for his own trial.

Former deputy gets five years for punching teenager

David Morrow, who used to be the deputy of the Adams County, has been handed a five-year prison sentence for punching a teenager who was strapped to a gurney.

Morrow said he was sorry that the teenager was hurt because of what he did.

The teenager was causing a disturbance to which Morrow and other police officers have responded.

The police decided to take the teenager to the hospital because he was intoxicated and was being belligerent.

However, while he was strapped to a gurney, Morrow had hit the teenager in the face with his fist.

The sentence may still change as the judge had agreed to schedule another hearing to re-assess Morrow's sentence.

Donald Sisson, a defense attorney in Denver, said the case was not a usual one and thus Morrow's sentence should be re-evaluated.

Jury clears King of Pop's concert promoter of negligence

A jury rejected a negligence lawsuit brought by Katherine Jackson, the mother of Michael Jackson, against AEG Live LLC, the This is It concerts promoter of the King of Pop.

Katherine Jackson's lawyers claimed that the promoter erred when it failed to verify if Dr. Conrad Murray was qualified when it hired him as the singer's doctor.

AEG denied the allegation but said that Murray was hired by Michael Jackson himself.

Murray is already serving a jail sentence for the death of the popstar.

Los Angeles lawyer Marvin S. Putnam, AEG's lead defense counsel, said the jury made the right decision.

The Jackson lawyers had pointed out that the promoter was only after its own profits thus it did not bother to make sure that Murray was a qualified physician.

Putnam and his defence team claimed Murray's hiring was the singer's choice and that if their client had known about what Murray and Jackson were up to they would not have gone on with the series of concerts.