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GainesvilleFlorida(FL) Vazquez, A. Daniel personal infomation and areas of practice

Florida Gainesville Fine, Farkash & Parlapiano, P.A. attorney Vazquez, A. Daniel
  • Lawyer name:Vazquez, A. Daniel
  • Address:622 Northeast First Street Gainesville,FL
  • Phone:352-562-7809
  • Fax:352-372-0049
  • PostalCode:32601 -5305
  • WebSite:http://www.ffplaw.com/
  • Areas of Practice:Personal Injury and Wrongful Death Environmental Law (Toxic Torts) 75%

Florida GainesvilleFine, Farkash & Parlapiano, P.A. attorney Vazquez, A. Daniel is a Very good lawyer practice area in Personal Injury and Wrongful Death Environmental Law (Toxic Torts) 75% of Practice Devoted to Litigation ,Environmental, Natural Resources, Personal Injury, Toxic Torts, Wrongful Death,Fine, Farkash & Parlapiano, P.A.

if you have any problem in of Practice Devoted to Litigation ,Environmental, Natural Resources, Personal Injury, Toxic Torts, Wrongful Death,please email to Fine, Farkash & Parlapiano, P.A. or call 352-562-7809 or Go to our company directly(addr:622 Northeast First Street Gainesville,FL) ,we will provide free legal advice for you.

  • Mr. Vazquez is a graduate of the University of Florida College of Law and he is licensed to practice in both Florida and Colorado. He is an experienced plaintiffs' attorney and counsels clients on a wide variety of legal matters including serious personal injury claims, wrongful death, bicycle accidents, trucking accidents, fall injury accidents, toxic torts, community environmental contamination, government takings of land (eminent domain), and claims against the government for negligence (sovereign immunity).? Though the firm's home office is in Gainesville, Florida, Mr. Vazquez has travelled extensively to personally meet with clients who are victims of negligent conduct and has litigated cases in multiple jurisdictions.? Mr. Vazquez also counsels on appellate practice and environmental consulting.

    Dan Vazquez is a graduate of the University of Florida College of Law.? In 2010, Mr. Vazquez served as a Florida Supreme Court extern clerk for Justice Jorge Labarga in Tallahassee, Florida.? The Court's clerking program is a highly competitive process in which Supreme Court justices choose only the top applicants to work alongside court staff attorneys and the justices in chambers.? Mr. Vazquez produced numerous legal memos for the Florida Supreme Court, assisted the justice and staff in preparation for oral argument, and worked directly on several last-minute death penalty appeals.? In addition to his work for the Court, Mr. Vazquez has been an active member of several north Florida Inns of Court.? Mr. Vazquez's law school studies focused on trial advocacy and environmental justice for impoverished communities affected by corporate pollution.? Dan Vazquez was a member of UF Law's Environmental Moot Court team, whose brief placed fourth out of 84 teams in a national moot court competition with Dan receiving an award for best oralist for his argument of appellate issues to the semi-final round of competition.? In addition to his Juris Doctor (JD) degree, Mr. Vazquez earned a Certificate in Environmental Law and Land Use Planning. Only a small percentage of law school students are able to complete the rigorous certificate program, which requires students to take a maximum-course credit load to achieve certificate graduation requirements. Dan Vazquez studied international environmental law abroad at the Universidad de Costa Rica, where he learned from renowned international legal scholars, several of whom litigate before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in San Jose, Costa Rica.

    In 2010, Dan Vazquez was selected by former University of Florida College of Law Dean, Jon Mills (Director of the law school's Center for Governmental Responsibility), to serve on the center's Oil Spill Working Group. Mr. Vazquez collaborated with the center's research team to develop legal-response and policy solutions regarding the 2010 BP Deepwater Horizon oil spill disaster and resulting injuries to people, businesses, and the fragile Gulf ecosystem. Mr. Vazquez has presented on legal topics such as "The Top 10 Mistakes People Make in Auto Accident Cases" and "The Personal Injury and Environmental Legacy of the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill."

    Mr. Vazquez received his undergraduate bachelor's degree (BA) in history from the University of Florida, where his senior thesis on pandemics, care of the sick, and hospitals earned high honors (Magna Cum Laude) at graduation. Dan Vazquez has been inducted into several prestigious leadership and academic honoraries including Phi Beta Kappa and Florida Blue Key.

    Mr. Vazquez was born in Warren, Ohio, and raised in the barrier island community of Satellite Beach, Florida. He is an avid outdoor enthusiast and enjoys biking, kayaking, scuba diving, adventure travel, and snow skiing. For several years, Mr. Vazquez has served as the executive board member of the St. Johns-Suwannee County Sierra Club (serving 16 north Florida counties) as well as the Alpha Phi Foundation (a non-profit 501(c)(3) scholarship program to benefit students of the Warrington College of Business at the University of Florida). He is also an Executive Board Member of the Young Lawyers Division (YLD) of the 8th Judicial Circuit Bar Association (8JCBA) and volunteers his time through the bar association to promote professional development between young lawyers and senior lawyers and judges, as well as Pro Bono work to provide legal services for the underprivileged, free of charge. Mr. Vazquez is admitted to practice law in Florida and Colorado.

  • Florida, 2010 Colorado, 2012

  • Board of Directors, The Eighth Judicial Circuit Bar Association - Young Lawyers Division, 2010 - Present (Member) The James C. Adkins, Jr. Chapter, American Inns of Court (Former Member) The Chester Bedell Chapter, American Inns of Court (Former Member)

  • University of Florida College of Law, Gainesville, Florida, 2010J.D.Honors: Certificate in Environmental Law and Land Use Planning - 2010 University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, 2006B.A.Honors: magna cum laudeHonors: Phi Beta KappaMajor: History

  • Our Philosophy and History

    In 1980, Jack J. Fine founded the firm, which is now known as Fine, Farkash & Parlapiano, P.A. Our firm is a medium sized plaintiff's law firm providing individualized service to people injured by the negligence of others. We believe our smaller size ensures our clients will receive personal care. We have focused our practice on civil litigation representing injured folks. We strive to offer the best representation within that area of the law.

    Our attorneys' profiles are contained on separate pages of this website. Please look them over and feel free to contact us with any additional questions you may have regarding our qualifications. We are proud of our attorneys and staff. The attorneys are caring and understanding at a time when you need the most critical help you may ever require in your life.

    Our firm includes four lawyers, three legal assistants, two supporting assistants, six to eight legal clerks and administrative personnel and investigators. All of our lawyers have considerable courtroom experience. We don't have to retain separate litigation attorneys. We have up to date litigation support equipment that includes legal research tools through Westlaw online. Being in Gainesville, Florida we have easy access to the University of Florida Levin College of Law, should your case present a particularly obscure legal issue.

    Our support staff is just that: a support staff. There is no bureaucracy in our firm. The lawyers in the firm personally handle all the cases in the office. Although we provide individualized hands-on representation, we nonetheless work with attorneys and clients throughout the state. We never represent insurance companies ? only injured people and their families. We often must sue insurance companies and want to avoid any possible conflict of interest.

    A personal visit either in our Gainesville law offices, or at a location more convenient to you, can be arranged at no cost to you. Please call or email us with any questions or to schedule an appointment.

Fine, Farkash & Parlapiano, P.A. & Joy Attorneys

Gainesville Florida lawyer Farkash, Thomas Joel Gainesville Florida lawyer Fine, Cherie Hoch Gainesville Florida lawyer Fine, Jack Joshua Gainesville Florida lawyer Parlapiano, Alan R. Gainesville Florida lawyer Vazquez, A. Daniel

lawyer Vazquez, A. Daniel Reviews

Litigation

Litigation

A revocable living trust does NOT protect the assets from taxes or creditors, since you are still in control of it (the revocable part). Anything you do with the money that would be taxable in your personal account would be taxable in the living trust. For example, if you sell stocks at a gain in a living trust, the gains would still be taxable the year you sold them.. . The primary reason for a living trust is to dictate who controls those assets if you become incapacitated or die, and who benefits from it after you die (without going through probate). However, it still is not protected from debt or taxes for your estate, beneficiaries only get what is left after obligations of your estate are covered.. . An irrevocable trust is something else. That you have no control over and you cannot undo that.. . As far as investment real estate, sale and acquisition has to be properly handled as a 1031 exchange to avoid a taxable event, whether you own it personally or in a living trust. 1035 exchange has to do with exchanging life insurance policies, annuities, etc. so not sure how that plays into this (maybe transferring stocks "in kind" to another broker without actually selling them).

"need not to be LIVING ALONE". verses another "need not to be LEFT alone".

it is a good thing to know... you could survive here in the USA without knowing how to write in cursive, but sometimes you will see it in handwritten notes. I tend to use cursive when I hand write notes.. . I will be happy to help you with correction on short passages. I will send you an email.

Yes,. This is something you need a lawyer for.. . My father & mother had a trust set up for their property. When mom passed I took over as co trustee with dad. In our family's case we needed to keep my sister OUT of any ability to get her hands on the property or any assets within the trust.. . There are a lot of ways to set this up depending on your family's needs. To help avoid probate, and many other issues.. . Speak to a lawyer who can set this up.. . Caution, we had one lawyer (we didn't go with) who wanted to be retained to handle the proceedings (not as executer) but as the only attorney we could use. This was not good as he could have tied up the whole process, easily eating away at the small amount of money my parents had.. . Make sure you have a will, living will, and health care proxy, and power of attorney.. . These are very valueable at your age.(really at any age). . Luckily my father had these when he became sick 2 years ago and was unconsious for 3 months.. . A trust like this is the best way to protect your assets.. . Don't take this the wrong way, but make sure yur kids are going to be able to handle this correctly.. If this arem't set up right, many people become greedy when it comes to money.. . This is why we had to make sure my sister was NOT involved or couldn't get anything.. . We had this happen with my grand parents house and assets. My mom passed before her parents, that left just my uncle. When they passed.. My sister and I got nothing, while my uncle and cousins got it all. As soon as they became ill my uncle was there getting them to change their will and give him the house before they died, so when they did he had the house. I don't want to seem bitter about my grandparents assets, to me it's only money, it's more of the principle of the thing than the money. Don't get me wrong I would have loved to get something. But what am I going to do. It's not worth it. At least I can go to sleep at night with a clean conceince.

Have your grandmother sign a bill of sale for whatever amount you two deem fit, and have it notarized. THEN... go down to the DMV and file for a "lost title". It'll cost you maybe $200 or so, but it'll be worth it to make a legal transfer of ownership.

Who owns the telephone polls and does anyone make money off them?.

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