Schedule a Strategy Session Today:

(918) 879-1681

OFFICES IN BARTLESVILLE, MUSKOGEE, OKMULGEE, WAGONER, TAHLEQUAH, STILLWATER AND OKLAHOMA CITY
Oklahoma workers compensation atttorney

Dissenting Justices See Flaws in New Oklahoma Workers Compensation Law

When the Oklahoma Supreme Court on Dec. 16, 2014, upheld a bill that on Feb. 1, 2014, will replace the state’s 35-year-old Workers Compensation Court with a new administrative workers compensation system , three justices expressed some reservations. The justices’ dissent foreshadows challenges that could be leveled against the new workers compensation system. In upholding the new

Dissenting Justices See Flaws in New Oklahoma Workers Compensation Law Read Post »

Oklahoma workers compensation attorney

Supreme Court Could Halt Demise of Oklahoma Workers Compensation Court

The Oklahoma Supreme Court has agreed to hear arguments that could save injured workers’ rights to legal representation. Oklahoma lawmakers earlier this year passed a bill that replaces the state’s judicial Workers Compensation system with an administrative system By assuming original jurisdiction to set a Dec. 10, 2013 hearing, the Supreme Court allowed attorneys to

Supreme Court Could Halt Demise of Oklahoma Workers Compensation Court Read Post »

Tulsa Attorney

Synthetic Marijuana Case Dismissed

A judge this week dismissed charges against an Okmulgee County retailer accused of selling synthetic marijuana after an attorney for Wirth Law Office pointed out that particular substances sold as potpourri or incense were not illegal at the time police raided the retail location. Legislators had earmarked a chemical in the blend to be added

Synthetic Marijuana Case Dismissed Read Post »

Tulsa Attorney

Foster Parents Exhonerated

Wirth Law Office prevailed in an administrative review on behalf of foster parents who had been accused of child neglect. The matter involved appeal of a Child Welfare Services staff report to the District Attorney. An Oklahoma Department of Human Services representative reviewed appellate material provided by Wirth Law Office along with Child Protective Services

Foster Parents Exhonerated Read Post »

Cavity Search

Was New Mexico Man's 15-hour Ordeal a Cavity Search or Rape?

It’s the epitome of invasive law enforcement. Police seek warrants for body cavity searches when they claim to suspect someone has secreted illegal drugs in their private parts. On other occasions, police have conducted invasive searches without warrants. Sometimes so-called cavity searches involve probing inside a driver’s undergarments during traffic stops. Recent lawsuits allege officers

Was New Mexico Man's 15-hour Ordeal a Cavity Search or Rape? Read Post »

Rogers County DA Pays Newspaper Publisher to Write Press Releases

Asks Sheriff to Investigate Police Chief’s Courthouse Visit Ongoing conflict among law enforcement officials and the Rogers County District Attorney just keeps getting more tangled. It’s a story fiction editors might reject as implausible or too complex – unless it were written with the flair of Shakespeare whose witch in MacBeth chants “fair is foul

Rogers County DA Pays Newspaper Publisher to Write Press Releases Read Post »

Everybody is Guilty Under Oklahoma's Zero-tolerance Metabolite DUI-D Law

Oklahoma’s new metabolite DUI law sets the strictest standard possible for evidence of forbidden drugs potentially found in drivers’ blood. The standard is so strict that, technically speaking, everyone who gets behind the wheel is guilty of violating the law. Those who are in pain, even more so. Sound unbelievable? Here’s how it works. Instead

Everybody is Guilty Under Oklahoma's Zero-tolerance Metabolite DUI-D Law Read Post »

Do Parts of the Oklahoma Violent Offender Registry Law Deny Equal Protection?

The reasoning behind a September 2013 Oklahoma Supreme Court decision striking down a portion of the Oklahoma sex offender registry law appears to call into question portions of the Oklahoma violent offender registry law. In Hendricks v Jones, 2013 OK 71 the court stated: “We hold applying SORA’s requirements to sex offenders now residing in

Do Parts of the Oklahoma Violent Offender Registry Law Deny Equal Protection? Read Post »

Scroll to Top