Whom We Serve

We represent U.S. military veterans and their loved ones in all kinds of claims, including those involving:
  • Combat during military service (anytime, anywhere);
  • Any medical condition (whether physical or psychiatric) that began with an injury suffered or disease contracted during military service (anytime, anywhere);
  • Any medical condition (physical or psychiatric) that you believe began or has been worsened by a service-connected condition, its treatment or VA medical malpractice;
  • Any medical condition that is proximately due to or the result of a service-connected condition or is aggravated by a service-connected condition;
  • Inability to work due to a service-connected condition or a combination of service-connected conditions; and
  • Inability to attend to activities of daily living due to a service connected condition.

Whom We Serve

We represent U.S. military veterans and their loved ones in all kinds of claims, including those involving:
  • Combat during military service (anytime, anywhere);
  • Any medical condition (whether physical or psychiatric) that began with an injury suffered or disease contracted during military service (anytime, anywhere);
  • Any medical condition (physical or psychiatric) that you believe began or has been worsened by a service-connected condition, its treatment or VA medical malpractice;
  • Any medical condition that is proximately due to or the result of a service-connected condition or is aggravated by a service-connected condition;
  • Inability to work due to a service-connected condition or a combination of service-connected conditions; and
  • Inability to attend to activities of daily living due to a service connected condition.
  • Exposure to one or more herbicide agents used in support of U.S. military forces, including Agent Orange, Agent Pink, Agent Green, Agent Purple, Agent White, Agent Blue, and/or their component chemicals 2,4-D; 2,4,5-T and its contaminant TCDD (2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin or “dioxin”); cacodylic acid; and picloram (“herbicide exposure”), whether in:

  • The Republic of Vietnam, to include within 12 nautical miles of shore (“Blue Water Navy Veterans”);
  • Korea, to include in or near the Korean Demilitarized Zone (“Korean DMZ” or “DMZ”);
  • Thailand, to include on one or more of the Royal Thai Air Force Bases at U-Tapao, Ubon, Nakhon Phanom, Udorn, Takhli, Korat, or Don Muang-and irrespective of whether the veteran’s military occupational specialty (“MOS”) was one of the few for which VA concedes herbicide exposure;
  • Okinawa;
  • Panama; or
  • Anywhere else in the world that U.S. military veterans believe that herbicide exposure occurred while serving our country.
  • Exposure to one or more other environmental hazards, to include through military service:
  • in Afghanistan;
  • in the Southwest Asia theater of operations, to include Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates, and Oman- and to include through exposure to fumes from burn pits to other airborne hazards;
  • on any military base that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) has designated as a Superfund site;
  • on any U.S. Navy vessel that U.S. military veterans believe that toxic exposures occurred while serving our country; or 
  • anywhere else in the world that U.S. military veterans believe that toxic exposures occurred while serving our country.

We have decades of experience representing U.S. military veterans and their loved ones in claims for service-connected compensation for psychiatric conditions of all kinds, including:

  • psychosis (to include schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, delusional disorder, and bipolar disorder);
  • post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”) (whether resulting from combat or non-combat trauma and to include same-sex or opposite-sex military sexual trauma (“MST”) or other physical assault);
  • anxiety or neurosis; and
  • depressive disorders (to include as a result of one or more painful or otherwise restrictive service-connected physical conditions).