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Going to law school to practice Personal Injury--worth it?

Posted: Sun Aug 14, 2011 10:41 pm
by ComatoseClown
Given these troubled economic times as well as the alleged "glut of lawyers", how is the area of Personal Injury doing? Are there already enough of these lawyers? This legal area is what I'm interested in...I don't at all enjoy the corporate stuff like tax/bankruptcy/mergers & acquisitions. With this, would it be unwise to go to law school for this purpose? Would appreciate anything else you have to say regarding Personal Injury and its temporal stability/predicted need.

Re: Going to law school to practice Personal Injury--worth it?

Posted: Sun Aug 14, 2011 10:50 pm
by Aqualibrium
the "glut of lawyers" is not "alleged," it's a fact. As for your question, do what you want, but you better go to a school that has ridiculously low tuition or that gives you a large scholarship. Personal Injury attorneys make money via volume, reputation and experience. You'll have a hell of a time taking business away from the established guys out there, so the only way to really prosper as a new grad in that field is to a) get on with one of the established guys and work like a slave until you build up the reputation and connections to do your own thing or get a decent percentage from the established guy OR b) have connections with an established guy (dad, uncle, mentor type situation).

Re: Going to law school to practice Personal Injury--worth it?

Posted: Sun Aug 14, 2011 10:55 pm
by Anonymous User
the "alleged" glut of lawyers????

i wish that students loans were dischargeable in bankruptcy, and that the government gave individualized interest rates to borrowers that reflected gpa, lsat score, law school quality, and other stuff. that way, people like the op would have to pay 342322452365236% on an annualized basis, or otherwise be denied for loans outright. we'd all be spared from threads like this because law school wouldnt even be a viable option for 99% of the people that start them. just keepin' it real yo.

Re: Going to law school to practice Personal Injury--worth it?

Posted: Sun Aug 14, 2011 11:18 pm
by timbs4339
Do a forum search for areyouinsane. Read all his posts. Then decide if PI law is for you.

Re: Going to law school to practice Personal Injury--worth it?

Posted: Mon Aug 15, 2011 12:34 am
by Gecko of Doom
timbs4339 wrote:Do a forum search for areyouinsane. Read all his posts. Then decide if PI law is for you.
I thought areyouinsane did temp doc review.

Re: Going to law school to practice Personal Injury--worth it?

Posted: Mon Aug 15, 2011 12:46 am
by fanmingrui
Gecko of Doom wrote:
timbs4339 wrote:Do a forum search for areyouinsane. Read all his posts. Then decide if PI law is for you.
I thought areyouinsane did temp doc review.
That was after he washed out of PI.

Re: Going to law school to practice Personal Injury--worth it?

Posted: Mon Aug 15, 2011 1:35 am
by Gecko of Doom
fanmingrui wrote:
Gecko of Doom wrote:
timbs4339 wrote:Do a forum search for areyouinsane. Read all his posts. Then decide if PI law is for you.
I thought areyouinsane did temp doc review.
That was after he washed out of PI.
Ah, my bad.

Re: Going to law school to practice Personal Injury--worth it?

Posted: Mon Aug 15, 2011 2:46 pm
by NotMyRealName09
Gecko of Doom wrote:
fanmingrui wrote:
Gecko of Doom wrote:
timbs4339 wrote:Do a forum search for areyouinsane. Read all his posts. Then decide if PI law is for you.
I thought areyouinsane did temp doc review.
That was after he washed out of PI.
Ah, my bad.
And there is all you need to know.

Re: Going to law school to practice Personal Injury--worth it?

Posted: Mon Aug 15, 2011 3:51 pm
by TheFactor
Anonymous User wrote:the "alleged" glut of lawyers????

i wish that students loans were dischargeable in bankruptcy, and that the government gave individualized interest rates to borrowers that reflected gpa, lsat score, law school quality, and other stuff. that way, people like the op would have to pay 342322452365236% on an annualized basis, or otherwise be denied for loans outright. we'd all be spared from threads like this because law school wouldnt even be a viable option for 99% of the people that start them. just keepin' it real yo.
sweet use of the anonymous function bro