Free On-Line Legal Advice That You Can Trust…In Plain English, Too
Many law-related Web sites offer little guidance beyond “call a lawyer”—often because they actually are marketing tools for law firms. Others are written in hard-to-understand legalese. But a few sites do provide reliable, understandable legal information for laypeople. Top sites now…
GENERAL LEGAL TOPICS
Lawyers.com. From the publishers of the Martindale-Hubbell Law Directory, this site offers solid legal guidance on a wide range of topics, including civil rights, consumer protection, criminal law, employment, family law, immigration, malpractice, personal injury, real estate and Social Security. You can post specific legal questions on the site’s message board, and they will be answered by practicing lawyers. You also can search for a lawyer in your area.
Other sites that provide solid information in plain English on a wide range of legal topics…
Public.FindLaw.com. The most heavily visited legal-information Web site, FindLaw covers matters ranging from accidents and divorce to real estate and taxes.
Nolo.com. Nolo is the nation’s leading publisher of plain-English law books, and it offers information on-line for free.
STATE LAWS
If you need to learn about a law specific to your state, check your state government’s Web site. Most can be found at “www.” followed by the state’s postal abbreviation, then “.gov.” Example: www.ny.gov for New York. Or type your state’s name followed by “government Web site” into an Internet search engine, such as Google.
Most state sites have a section related to law, the courts or the judiciary.
If you can’t find what you need, try typing your state’s name and “laws” or “attorney general” into a search engine—many attorneys general provide information for consumers on-line.
You also can enter the state’s name plus key words related to the specific topic, such as “small-claims court” or “consumer protection.”
DEBTOR’S RIGHTS AND BANKRUPTCY LAW
Bankruptcy in Brief. This Web site, developed by Moran Law Group based in Mountain View, California, provides a road map for the bankruptcy process. www.moranlaw.net
LegalConsumer.com. My site offers information on bankruptcy—how to file, links to federal forms, state bankruptcy exemption laws and a free “means-test” calculator to determine eligibility.
Elder Law And Estate Planning
The American Bar Association site has a section on wills, probate and trusts that offers a good, if somewhat lawyerly, outline of estate-planning law. www.abanet.org/rppt/public/home.html
ElderLawAnswers.com. Information about legal issues facing seniors, including Medicare, long-term-care insurance, Social Security, disability planning and more, provided by a nationwide network of elder-law attorneys.
The Estate Planning Links Web site has links to articles and Web sites related to estate planning. www.estateplanninglinks.com
MSN MoneyCentral’s Retirement and Wills page offers hundreds of articles related to estate planning. moneycentral.msn.com/retire/home.asp (click on “Estate Planning” under “Quick Search” on the left side).
Bottom Line/Personal interviewed Albin Renauer, JD, editor of Law on the Net and coauthor of How to File for Chapter 7 Bankruptcy, 14th Edition (both from Nolo, a publisher of self-help legal information). Based in Berkeley, California, he helped create Nolo.com and has worked at several public interest law firms.
(Article originally published July 1, 2007)
Reprinted with the permission of:
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