Veterans Services

JALA helps Navy veteran with custody issue to enable her to reenlist

Navy veteran Brianna Rebecca Brown sought to reenlist in the U.S. Navy, but due to a Department of Defense policy for single parents, she was required to have a parenting plan and guardian for minor children while on deployment or mobilization. Specifically, the U.S. Navy Recruiter told Brown she was going to need a Single Parent Waiver to reenter the military. Her daughter’s father was listed on the child’s birth certificate, so the Navy required her to have an official document indicating she had the sole authority to make decisions for daughter, even though the father had not been involved in the child’s life.

2022-01-27T16:09:01-05:00January 27th, 2022|Client Stories, Family Law, Veterans Services|

JALA helps veteran with service-related disabilities remain housed

“Antonio” is a veteran with service-related disabilities who lives in low-income housing in Jacksonville and receives a monthly voucher payment from the Jacksonville Housing Authority that enables him to stay stably housed. In 2018 JALA attorney Adam Thoresen helped Antonio obtain a reasonable accommodation request to increase his housing voucher payment to enable him to afford his housing.

2022-01-27T15:30:50-05:00January 7th, 2022|Client Stories, Fair Housing, Veterans Services|

JALA helps veteran retrieve belongings from his late son’s apartment

When their son died, “Myra Smith” and “Gus Turner” wanted to recover his belongings from his apartment. Unfortunately, the landlord was not in a position to allow removal of their late son’s personal property until after the statutory 60-day waiting period, or until there was an order from a probate court for the personal representative of the estate to remove it.

2021-08-23T15:11:20-04:00August 23rd, 2021|Client Stories, Veterans Services|

Veterans Services Unit helps father keep majority time-sharing of his daughter

In 2010, Troy Bragg, a post-9/11 veteran of the 82nd Airborne Division, discovered he was the biological father of a daughter and immediately filed a petition for paternity on his own. His petition was granted, and he and his daughter’s mother reached a mutually agreeable parenting plan and time-share agreement. The judge’s order provided Bragg with majority time-share, which was successful for 10 years. But in August 2019, the girl’s mother began to take from Bragg’s time with their daughter and tried to alienate her from Bragg.

2022-09-23T11:15:06-04:00July 9th, 2021|Client Stories, Family Law, Veterans Services|

Veterans achieves legal ownership of inherited property with help from JALA

Rodney came to JALA’s Clay County office seeking help with probate on an estate he had inherited. Since he was a veteran, he was referred to JALA’s Veterans Services Unit. Declan Duffy, who leads the unit, drafted two separate petitions and three corresponding orders and filed each of them with the Clay County Clerk of Courts. These included an order to admit the will and one for homestead status on the family home.

2021-05-21T10:47:22-04:00May 21st, 2021|Client Stories, Fair Housing, Veterans Services|

JALA attorneys work together to help Army veteran retain custody of her baby

“Julia,” 26, a U.S. Army veteran and mother of three, became pregnant and moved to Jacksonville to begin a new life with children, her partner and their soon-to-be-born child. But with the stress of the pandemic, cracks appeared in their relationship. After being with her for their baby’s birth, the father told Julia that he was going to take the baby to see his parents, who were visiting from out of town. Julia agreed. But it turned out that the baby’s father was in fact headed out of state with the baby. When she begged him to return, he refused.

2021-05-14T11:54:55-04:00May 14th, 2021|Client Stories, Family Law, Veterans Services|

JALA helps veteran become legal guardian and keep teenager out of foster care

“James,” 70, had helped raise “Cole” since he was born in 2007. A veteran living primarily off his Social Security income, he had known Cole’s mother for almost two decades and had allowed her and Cole to live in his home even though they were not related. She and Cole had been abandoned by Cole’s father, and James had become a role model and source of stability in the young boy’s life.

2021-05-04T12:41:41-04:00March 31st, 2021|Client Stories, Veterans Services|

Susannah Collins serves veterans, domestic violence survivors and others pro bono

Susannah Collins is a family law attorney, social investigator, attorney ad litem, and Florida Supreme Court certified family law mediator whose law office is located in Jacksonville’s historic district of Riverside. Her practice focuses on all areas of family law, including divorce, paternity, domestic violence, child time sharing, alimony, enforcement, civil parental kidnapping, and extended family adoptions. Since her practice began nearly 20 years ago, Collins has also offered many legal services pro bono.

2020-10-24T17:16:00-04:00October 22nd, 2020|Family Law, News, Pro Bono, Veterans Services|

Susan E. Mack’s pro bono service provides life-changing benefits to her clients

Susan E.Mack has practiced law for 37 years as a senior corporate counsel and general counsel in the area of insurance and reinsurance transactions. Currently partner and pro bono coordinator at the firm Adams and Reese, Mack has demonstrated a strong commitment to pro bono service.

2020-10-24T17:25:13-04:00October 19th, 2020|Client Stories, News, Pro Bono, Veterans Services|
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