Former insurance-defense attorney. Now fighting for you.
I spent the early part of my career representing insurance companies. I know how they value claims, where they look to deny them, and how to push back. Now I use all of that to fight for injured people.
Why I left insurance defense
For the first several years of my legal career, I worked for the other side. I represented insurance companies — the billion-dollar corporations that injured people file claims against. My job was to find ways to minimize what those companies had to pay out. I reviewed medical records looking for pre-existing conditions to use against claimants. I drafted motions to delay proceedings. I sat across the table from people who had been rear-ended, hurt on the job, or lost a family member, and my role was to make sure the insurance company kept as much money as possible.
I was good at it. And that’s exactly why I had to stop.
The longer I spent inside the insurance defense world, the more clearly I saw how the system was rigged against regular people. I watched adjusters get trained to use empathy as a tactic — to sound concerned on the phone while running a playbook designed to get injured people to accept lowball settlements before they even talked to a lawyer. I reviewed internal memos that calculated, down to the dollar, how much a company could save by denying a certain percentage of legitimate claims, knowing most people wouldn’t fight back.
I saw a woman with a genuine spinal injury get offered $8,000 because the insurer bet she couldn’t afford to wait for a fair settlement. I watched families grieving a wrongful death get dragged through years of delays because the defense knew that time was on their side, not the family’s. These weren’t abstract case files. They were people who needed help and were being systematically denied it by the very companies they’d been paying premiums to for years.
So I made a decision that changed my career: I switched sides. I left insurance defense and opened my own personal-injury practice. I took everything I’d learned — every tactic, every delay strategy, every trick adjusters use to undervalue claims — and I started using all of it to fight for injured people instead of against them.
When an insurance company tries to lowball one of my clients, I know exactly why they chose that number and how to counter it. I’ve sat in their strategy meetings. I’ve read their internal guidelines. I know how they think because I used to think that way for them.
How I handle your case
Investigate aggressively
Insurance companies start building their defense the moment a claim is filed. I do the same — but for you. I gather evidence, obtain police reports, request medical records, consult with experts, and document everything the insurance company will try to use against you before they can spin it in their favor.
Know what your case is worth
Having spent years evaluating claims from the insurer’s side, I know exactly how they calculate the value of a case. I also know they almost always start low. I use their own valuation methods against them to build a demand that accounts for your medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and long-term impact — not just the number they hope you’ll accept.
Don’t back down
Insurance companies count on claimants running out of patience. They delay, request unnecessary documentation, and make the process as frustrating as possible. I’ve seen this playbook from the inside, and I don’t flinch. If a fair settlement isn’t offered, I’m fully prepared to take your case to trial. The insurance companies know that, and it changes the conversation.
Education & credentials
Education
- J.D., Charlotte School of Law
- B.A., University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Bar admissions & memberships
- North Carolina State Bar — active member
- South Carolina Bar — active member
- Gaston County Bar Association
Dual-licensed in both North Carolina and South Carolina, allowing representation on either side of the state line — an advantage for anyone in the greater Charlotte metro, including Rock Hill, Fort Mill, and other South Carolina communities.
What makes this firm different
Insurance-insider knowledge
Most personal-injury lawyers have only seen the plaintiff’s side. I spent years inside insurance defense — reviewing claims, building defenses, and learning how insurers decide what to pay. I know their valuation formulas, their negotiation tactics, and the internal pressure points that actually move settlements upward. That insider perspective is something no amount of plaintiff-side experience can replicate.
You work with me — period
At big personal-injury firms, you sign up with the name on the billboard and never hear from that attorney again. Your case gets passed to an associate or paralegal, and you spend months chasing updates. That doesn’t happen here. I handle every case personally, and I know every detail of your situation — because I’m the one doing the work.
Zero cost unless you win
I work on a contingency-fee basis. That means you pay nothing upfront — no retainers, no hourly billing, no surprise invoices. I only get paid if I recover money for you. If your case doesn’t result in a settlement or verdict in your favor, you owe nothing. That’s not a marketing gimmick. It’s how the firm operates on every single case.
A father who understands what’s at stake
I’m a father of two young children. I know what it feels like to be responsible for a family — to worry about mortgage payments, childcare, medical bills, and everything that keeps a household running. When a serious injury disrupts all of that, the stress goes beyond physical pain. It’s the fear of not being able to provide.
That personal understanding shapes how I approach every case. I don’t treat clients as file numbers or billable hours. I think about what I’d want if it were my family dealing with an injury caused by someone else’s negligence. I fight for maximum compensation not because it’s a good legal strategy, but because I genuinely understand what my clients stand to lose if I don’t.
When you sit across from me in a consultation, you’re not talking to a lawyer who sees you as another case. You’re talking to a father, a neighbor, and a member of the same community who happens to have spent years learning exactly how to beat insurance companies at their own game.
