obtaining legal assistance while in school
Posted: Tue Jul 12, 2011 10:25 pm
sorry if this is already somewhere, but searching for "legal assistance" and the like are all obviously pulling up things about offering legal assistance while in school. i need to receive it.
due to a health care problem that has occurred since i've been a law student, i have been fighting for over a year with a medical facility where i live. the problem is not with my student insurance, though obviously the insurance is somewhat related. at this point, i need to seek recourse through legal avenues, but i 1) know nothing beyond common knowledge about legal elements of the problem, and 2) have not graduated, am not barred, and absolutely don't want to go near the line of falsely holding myself out as a lawyer.
i have no money and am going into public interest work, so can't afford normal legal representation. those financial constraints make it difficult to find any random lawyer or something to help me, but does anyone know whether it's common for law schools to offer legal support for their students' personal matters? what do students typically do in situations like these? i have no family in the field, although i have a very small number of attorney friends i could ask, if needed.
basically, i want help resolving my problem but don't want to go broke and don't want to violate any weird ethical boundaries law students aren't supposed to cross. does anyone have any advice? i would really appreciate it!!
due to a health care problem that has occurred since i've been a law student, i have been fighting for over a year with a medical facility where i live. the problem is not with my student insurance, though obviously the insurance is somewhat related. at this point, i need to seek recourse through legal avenues, but i 1) know nothing beyond common knowledge about legal elements of the problem, and 2) have not graduated, am not barred, and absolutely don't want to go near the line of falsely holding myself out as a lawyer.
i have no money and am going into public interest work, so can't afford normal legal representation. those financial constraints make it difficult to find any random lawyer or something to help me, but does anyone know whether it's common for law schools to offer legal support for their students' personal matters? what do students typically do in situations like these? i have no family in the field, although i have a very small number of attorney friends i could ask, if needed.
basically, i want help resolving my problem but don't want to go broke and don't want to violate any weird ethical boundaries law students aren't supposed to cross. does anyone have any advice? i would really appreciate it!!