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

Louisa, KY Attorneys, Lawyers and Law Firms

Directory of Louisa, Kentucky Attorneys, Lawyers, Law Firms, etc.
(12 attorneys currently listed)

Sponsored Links

Standard Listings

Adams & Adams
110 E Street
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-4890
Don Bailey
101 West Madison Street
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-9601
Mark Clevenger
202 South Main Crossing Street
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-9010
Mark Wheeler Clevenger
202 South Main Crossing Street
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-4423
Kimberly Compton
114 North Main Crossing Street
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-0081
Hogan & Robinson PLLC
314 East Madison Street
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-9900
Nelson Sparks
114 South Vinson Avenue
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-4204
Stan A Pedestal
403 North Lock Avenue
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-9022
Stan A Pedestal
355 East Public Way
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-9250
Stan A Pedestal
US Highway 23 South
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 638-9822
Stand A Pedestal
Yatesville Lake Mari
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 686-1050
Stand A Pedestal
RR 3
Louisa, KY 41230
(606) 686-9595

Sponsored Links

United States Attorney News

Austin man convicted in shooting death of motorist

A sentence of life imprisonment looms for Darius Lovings after the jury found him liable for the death of William Ervin in 2012.

Court heard that Lovings had shot Ervin when the latter stopped to help him while he was pretending to have car trouble.

Austin criminal lawyer Jon Evans had asked the jury to consider that mental health issues have been at play during the incident.

Lovings had told the police after his arrest that he had heard voices.

Aside from Ervin's death, Lovings is also facing charges of robbery and attempted murder.

$600,000 bail set for man who threatened Seattle mayor

Neither the prosecution nor the defense got what they wanted when the judge ordered Mitchell Munro Taylor to remain in jail and set the bail at $600,000.

Eric Lindell, the Seattle criminal lawyer defending for Taylor, had asked for a $10,000 bail saying that his client has not been taking his medicines for Asperger's Syndrome.

This was countered by the prosecution, who sought a $1 million bail.

Lindell was jailed when he posted several threatening messages on Seattle Mayor Ed Murray's Facebook page.

He also posted a threat which authorities believed targeted Kshama Sawant, the first socialist to have become a member of the City Council.

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.

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.