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Staunton, VA Attorneys, Lawyers and Law Firms

Directory of Staunton, Virginia Attorneys, Lawyers, Law Firms, etc.
(25 attorneys currently listed)

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Standard Listings

John Appleford
1 Lawyers Row
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-7654
Rebecca Belew
9 South Augusta Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-8004
Thomas Bell Jr
1224 Windsor Lane
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-6048
Vencill Relenee Cook
1600 North Coalter Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 213-0270
Dana Cormier
1 Lawyers Row
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-3600
Thomas Dixon Jr
1327 North Augusta Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 885-4714
Thomas Dixon Jr
12 N New St
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 949-0346
Victoria Dullaghan
Echols Building
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 885-1205
Richard Erickson
101 West Frederick Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-4139
Taylor Forester
11 South New Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-3463
Charles Garner
9 South Augusta Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 885-7412
Alan Garrison
1 South Market Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-9346
Deborah Gartzke
11 East Beverley Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 885-3500
Glendon Gill
110 West Johnson Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 213-2121
John Hooe III
11 East Beverley Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 885-7278
James M Dungan
11 East Beverley Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-4876
Susan Johnson
9 South Augusta Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 887-2221
David Ludwig
1600 North Coalter Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-2331
David McCaskey
24 West Beverley Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 885-3076
Stephan Milo
125 South Augusta Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 885-0199
Simon Painter Jr
2505 North Augusta Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-1779
Susan Read
One Barristers Row
Staunton, VA 24402
(540) 885-0888
Robert Rhea
9 South Augusta Street
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 885-8146
Ritchie Law Firm
704 Richmond Avenue
Staunton, VA 24401
(540) 886-6124

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United States Attorney News

$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.

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.

Famous dealer of wine convicted for fraud

The jury returned a guilty verdict against Rudy Kurniawan, a star wine collector, for faking vintage wines, which he apparently just manufactured from his home.

Kurniawan was convicted for fraud and is looking at a massive 40-year sentence.

Kurniawan was once known as among the top five collectors of wine in the world.

Prosecutors accused Kurniawan of earning millions from selling and auctioning fake vintage wines.

Found in the home that Kurniawan shared with his mother were unlabeled bottles and labels of Burgundy and Bordeaux wines.

Suspicions against Kurniawan started during an auction in 2008 wherein he offered to sell Domaine Ponsot wines.

But it wasn't until a 2012 wine auction in London that Kurniawan was arrested.

Los Angeles criminal lawyer Jerome Mooney, defending for Kurniawan, said his client was not trying to defraud people. Instead, all he wanted was to belong.

Former prosecutor sentenced to 10 days for wrongful conviction

Ken Anderson, the former District Attorney of Williamson County, was meted with a 10-day jail term after the judge accepted his no-contest plea for the charge of contempt of court.

The charge steamed from the wrongful conviction of Michael Morton who was found guilty for the murder of his wife in 1986 and was sentenced to life imprisonment.

However, in 2011, Morton's conviction was overturned using DNA as proof that he did not kill his wife.

In the light of that development, Anderson, who had prosecuted Morton's case, was scrutinized and was determined to have erred when he withheld evidence which would have been beneficial for Morton's defense.

Aside from the short jail stay, Anderson will also have to give up his license as a lawyer and as part of the plea bargain, he will also be disbarred for five years.

Austin attorney Eric Nichols, however, pointed out that there will be no conviction for Anderson on any criminal charge.

Morton, for his part, said he is more than happy with the result because all he wanted was for Anderson not to practice law anymore to prevent what happened to him from happening to anyone else again.

Anderson was also fined and made to do community service.

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.