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Washington(DC) Fiedler, Marc personal infomation and areas of practice

 Washington Koonz, McKenney, Johnson, DePaolis & Lightfoot, LLP attorney Fiedler, Marc
  • Lawyer name:Fiedler, Marc
  • Address:2001 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Suite 450Washington,DC
  • Phone:202-599-9004
  • Fax:202-785-3719
  • PostalCode:20006
  • WebSite:http://www.workplaceinjuryinfo.com/
  • Areas of Practice:Class Actions Personal-Injury Wrongful-Death Workers'-Compensation Claims 100% of Practice Devoted

WashingtonKoonz, McKenney, Johnson, DePaolis & Lightfoot, LLP attorney Fiedler, Marc is a Very good lawyer practice area in Class Actions Personal-Injury Wrongful-Death Workers'-Compensation Claims 100% of Practice Devoted to Litigation ,Class Actions, Personal Injury -- Plaintiff, Workers' Compensation Law,Koonz, McKenney, Johnson, DePaolis & Lightfoot, LLP

if you have any problem in to Litigation ,Class Actions, Personal Injury -- Plaintiff, Workers' Compensation Law,please email to Koonz, McKenney, Johnson, DePaolis & Lightfoot, LLP or call 202-599-9004 or Go to our company directly(addr:2001 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Suite 450Washington,DC) ,we will provide free legal advice for you.

  • Marc Fiedler is one of the preeminent appellate lawyers in the metropolitan Washington, D.C. area. He handles a wide range of personal-injury and wrongful-death cases, including medical malpractice, product liability, premises liability, governmental negligence, workplace accidents, and toxic torts. A graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School, Mr. Fiedler served as a law clerk to the Honorable James A. Belson of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals before joining our firm in 1985. He has been a partner with the firm since 1994.

    Mr. Fiedler has won several important cases that have resulted in not only substantial monetary recovery for our clients but also the establishment of legal principles favorable to other personal-injury victims. For example, in one landmark case Mr. Fiedler successfully persuaded the District of Columbia Court of Appeals to recognize the right of workers to recover the full measure of their damages, including pain and suffering, for their work-related injuries caused by someone other than their direct employer. Recently, Mr. Fiedler has prevailed on appeal in cases involving:

    a youngster whose legs had to be amputated below the knee because his doctor negligently failed to diagnose his serious illness;a motorist who incurred permanent neurological injury after crashing his van while avoiding a collision witha negligently operated Metrobus;an office worker who suffered sick-building syndrome due to carelessly performed building renovations that exposed her to contaminants at her workplace;a patient who permanently lost sensation and control of bodily functions because his neurosurgeon negligently severed some of his nerves during back surgery;a patient who died from a blood clot because the orthopedic surgeon who treated him for a ruptured Achilles tendon neglected to prescribe necessary blood-thinning medication;a blind man who fell from the platform at a Metro subway station and was run over by a train driven by a careless operator;a painter who fell and was seriously injured while working atop an unsafe scaffold at the direction of a negligent general contractor; anda worker who was severely burned while removing asbestos from a high-voltage underground electrical cable that the utility company neglected to de-energize.

    Read a summary of Mr. Fiedler’s appellate victories.

    In appreciation of his numerous successes at the appellate level, the Trial Lawyers’ Association of Metropolitan Washington, D.C. in 1989 honored Mr. Fiedler as Lawyer of the Year. He has been recognized repeatedly as a leading practitioner of personal-injury litigation and appellate law by The Best Lawyers in America, Super Lawyers, and Washingtonian Magazine. He has garnered an AV rating from Martindale-Hubbell Peer Review Ratings, which signifies the highest level of professional excellence.

    From 2001 to 2002, Mr. Fiedler served as President of the Trial Lawyers’ Association of Metropolitan Washington, D.C. For many years he has chaired that organization’s appellate-advocacy committee. He has also served as Co-Chairman of the prestigious appellate-advocacy committee of the American Association for Justice.

    Mr. Fiedler is a long-time advocate for the rights of people with disabilities. Mr. Fiedler himself is quadriplegic and uses a wheelchair. Nationally recognized as an expert in disability law, Mr. Fiedler has successfully sued several major businesses in the District of Columbia for discrimination against individuals with disabilities. His efforts have been written up in the Washington Post, Washington Times, Wall Street Journal, and USA Today. He has appeared on the Today show, CNN, CBS and Evening News, all the local television stations, many local radio stations, as well as National Public Radio and Voice of America. Mr. Fiedler is Chairman of the Disability Rights Council of the Equal Rights Center, an organization that educates about and presses vigorously for enforcement of the civil rights of persons with disabilities. In 2002, the Washington Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights and Urban Affairs bestowed on him its distinguished Alfred McKenzie Award in honor of his outstanding contribution to the cause

    of disability rights. That same year, the District of Columbia Courts honored him with its inaugural Trailblazer Award for his efforts to improve courthouse access.

    Mr. Fiedler works in our D.C. office and resides in the District.

  • Massachusetts, 1985 District of Columbia, 1988 U.S. Court of Appeals District of Columbia Circuit, 1987 U.S. Court of Appeals 4th Circuit U.S. Federal Court, 1988 U.S. Supreme Court, 1988

  • District of Columbia Bar (Member) American Bar Association (Member) Association of Trial Lawyers of America (Member) Trial Lawyers Association of Metropolitan Washington, D.C. (Member)

  • Harvard University Law School, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1984J.D. Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1978B.A.

  • The law firm of Koonz, McKenney, Johnson, DePaolis and Lightfoot represents clients from Virginia, Maryland, and the District of Columbia in all aspects of personal injury litigation. For over 20 years Koonz, McKenney has protected the rights of workers and has spoken for the victims harmed by substandard medical care, defective products, and unsafe work places. We represent people who have been injured in auto accidents, construction site accidents, as a result of medical negligence, and through exposure to harmful substances such as asbestos, silica, lead paint, or defective products.

    The founding partners, Joseph H. Koonz, Jr., Carolyn McKenney, and Roger C. Johnson began this firm in 1979 with a shared goal of aggressively defending the rights of individuals. Koonz, McKenney is a law firm dedicated to representing injured people, one client at a time. In keeping with this goal, the firm does not represent insurance companies or corporate clients. Rather, the firm exclusively represents individuals who have been injured through no fault of their own, including those entitled to workers' compensation or Social Security Disability benefits.

    Koonz, McKenney provides our clients with the highest level of competent, personalized legal representation available in the Washington, DC area. Koonz, McKenney is a law firm that has developed the knowledge, resources, and contacts to handle large, complex cases without losing the personalized commitment of a small, hometown law firm.

    Koonz, McKenney, Johnson, DePaolis & Lightfoot has offices in Falls Church, Virginia, Greenbelt, MD, and the District of Columbia. Our work in the courts of all three jurisdictions has established our attorneys as aggressive representatives of our injured clients. We are, first and foremost, a firm of trial lawyers who vigorously pursue claims of injured people in the local and federal courts in all three jurisdictions.

    The lawyers of Koonz, McKenney, Johnson, DePaolis & Lightfoot pride themselves on making our community a safer place to live and raise our children through our aggressive representation of injured people. Through our efforts, we have protected consumers from future injuries by forcing corporations to change the design of defective products and to alter harmful conduct. As a result, we believe we have made our community a better place for everyone.

Koonz, McKenney, Johnson, DePaolis & Lightfoot, LLP & Joy Attorneys

Washington lawyer Beall, Justin M. Washington lawyer Davenport, Joshua A. Washington lawyer DePaolis, Peter C. Washington lawyer Fiedler, Marc Washington lawyer Fisher, Kelly J. Washington lawyer Heiden, Julie H. Washington lawyer Johnson, Roger C. Washington lawyer Lightfoot, William P.

lawyer Fiedler, Marc Reviews

Litigation

Litigation

(This is a long question but I needed to give the details for clarification. Thank you!). . I am getting married April of next year. I was raised Presbyterian and joined the church after my confirmation when I was 12 years old. However as I got older and began doing more research and soul searching, I discovered that I am not a "Christian" anymore. I do not believe in the the divinity of Jesus Christ. This was very difficult for me to realize and adjust to because my grandmother who raised me is very Christian. I have recently talked to her about my religious feelings and have been interested in the Unitarian Universalist church for a few years now. My grandmother did not take my news the best way. She was very upset and I don't think that she processed what I said to her. She was unable to explain back to ME what my religious beliefs were even though I told her in great detail for quite a lengthy period. She is almost 90 years old and Christianity is all that she knows.. . Now that my marriage is coming she has pushed me to have my wedding at the Presbyterian church that I grew up in. I would also like to have it there due to sentimental feelings. However my grandmother has always been very concerned with appearances. She would not like for anyone to know that I'm not a Christian anymore. She didn't want me to have a Unitarian Universalist ceremony because "No one is stupid. Everyone will see from the funny ceremony that it's not Christian. You can't invite anyone from the church to it. And you can't have the wedding at the church if you want that ceremony." If I tell her that I will have a UU ceremony she will be resistant to the rest of the wedding planning and stop helping me contact relatives and friends. She has most of the information so I NEED her help if I invite them. She would not want them to "see my funny wedding". Also in my heart I feel that I must invite many church memebers who supported me as a child and young woman.. . This is adding stress to an already stressful time. My fiance has a Christian hertigage but he is more of a "holiday Christian" if anything. He will go with his family to service if he visits them and on Easter and Christmas. His family doesn't seem to pressure him to be very religious but I have a sneaky feeling that they hope that I will. I don't think that they know that I'm not a Christian though. He would not have told them and I did not. My fiance has agreed to attend the Unitarian Universalist church with me after we are married and has gone to a few services on his own already and this makes me happy.. I am sure that through marriage counseling we will sort out the final details about how we will practice our faiths, if HE even has a faith, and how we will raise the children.. . As for me, can I still have my wedding at the Presbyterian church? Can the Presbyterian minister do an "interfaith" ceremony? Does the Presbyterian minister do the wedding counseling?. . I don't want my grandmother to be embarrassed because of my wedding. I'm the only child and if I do something "different" people will talk about it after I have moved away and it will make her miserable. Sadly, this is the kind of community we live in. However I want to have my wedding be meaningful and I don't want to go to the Justice of the Peace then have a "show wedding". All eyes will be on me at this time and I am my grandmother's joy. I also live with her so I do not want to cause conflict before I move in with my husband.. . How can I have the ceremony that I want and make her happy at the same time?.

I'm not going to say AW THATS CRUEL. I'm going for AW THATS STUPID. Or, more accurately "You'll put your eye out!". What sort of a delivery system were you planning? What on earth sort of gun were you thinking would handle your home-made nonsense?. How were you thinking the tranquillizer will get through the skin, and then into the bloodstream? ie, it will rub off the outside of the 'sewing needle' before it gets through the skin, and stick to the inside of a hollow needle ('hypodermic' means under the skin, you still have to force it out of the needle). Yeah, use sleeping pills, they take hours to work. If taken properly. . Drug actions, speed, strength etc, is a SCIENCE. And if you fall afoul of the College of Pharmacists for practicing without a license, you will be in bigger trouble than when the cops catch you.

Owner is going abroad and wants to give the power to rent out the property and collecting the rent of his property to his brother. can anyone send the format of power of attorney for this purpose..

Dear Miss,

Should the FEC have the power to prevent Citizens United Corporation from releasing film criticizing Hillary?

How important is a cover letter when applying for a job?

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