
(Carlisle, Pa.) - Sullivan, of Hampden Township, has over twenty-five years of civil litigation experience throughout Central Pennsylvania. Mr. Sullivan has litigated cases in federal court and in over a dozen Pennsylvania counties. He also is an experienced appellate attorney, handling cases in Pennsylvania´s Commonwealth Court, Superior Court and Supreme Court, as well as the United States Third Circuit Court of Appeals. [more]
(Carlisle, Pa.) - Robert C. Saidis, Esq., a founding Shareholder of Saidis Sullivan Law, has been appointed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to a three year term on the Pennsylvania Board of Law Examiners. Saidis previously served for six years as a Member of the Pennsylvania Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court and was the Chairperson of the Communications Committee.. [more]
(Carlisle, Pa.) - John B. Lampi, Esq., of Saidis Sullivan Law, has been elected the Chairperson of the Business Law Section of the Pennsylvania Bar Association. The Business Law Section is one of the largest sections of the Pennsylvania Bar. Prior to being elected Chairperson of the Section, Lampi was involved in various offices within the Business Law Section. [more]
(Carlisle, Pa.) - Saidis Sullivan Law, a law firm representing individual and business clients in Central Pennsylvania, announces that Dean E. Reynosa has joined the firm. His previous legal experience will help lead the firm into the white-collar criminal defense practice area. [more]
(Carlisle, Pa.) - Saidis Sullivan Law, a law firm representing individual and business clients in Central Pennsylvania, announces that attorney John B. Lampi has joined the firm. His experience will help lead the firm into areas of banking, securities regulation and insurance. Lampi recently earned recognition for his performance in banking law. He was named to "The Best Lawyers in America" list in 2005 and designated a "Pennsylvania Super Lawyer" by Philadelphia Magazine and Law and Politics magazine from 2005-2006. [more]
(Carlisle, Pa.) - Robert C. Saidis, a founding partner of the firm of Saidis Sullivan Law has been reappointed to a second, three-year term on the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. He has also been reappointed as Chair of the Board's Communications Committee. The 16-member Disciplinary Board, an independent agency created by the Supreme Court and funded through an assessment of attorneys practicing in Pennsylvania, comprises 14 attorneys and two non-attorneys from across the Commonwealth. The Board meets regularly to decide cases, policy and board administrative matters. [more]
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In order to provide greater protection to consumers who will be investing in home improvements, the Pennsylvania Legislature enacted the Pennsylvania Home Improvement Consumer Act.[more]
Many times a criminal record may prevent a friend or family member from obtaining a job or gaining entrance to their school of choice. [more]
Rite Aid is now selling DNA paternity test kits from their shelves, so everyone at home can determine privately who is the father of their child. [more]
Pennsylvania's had a Living Will statute for 20 years. So has Florida--but it didn't help Teri Schiavo, who never made a Living Will or appointed a health care agent. [more]

In 1990, Stu Webb, a family lawyer in Minneapolis, got sick of the ugliness and deceit which characterized his worst divorce cases. He vowed to offer a way for people whose marriages had ended to negotiate a fair, civil and constructive divorce. [more]
Drunken Bike Ride Can Lead To Jail In Pennsylvania, the Legislature has enacted a tier classification for driving under the influence offenses. Essentially, the greater one’s blood alcohol concentration (BAC), the greater the penalty one could expect to receive. The penalty also increases in relation to the number of prior offenses one has accumulated. [more]
It's been nearly a year since Sherman Smith's 33-year marriage ended in a divorce that, he said, his ex-wife wanted after she realized she didn't love him in the same way any more.
"A divorce is kind of like a death but she's still there and I can't have her," Smith, 55, of Elliottsburg, said. "I was really looking forward to retiring someday and spending more time with her." [more]