LegalSense represents buyers, sellers, investors, builders, and commercial real estate developers. Our attorneys have experience in all aspects of structuring, facilitating, and closing commercial real estate transactions.
LegalSense represents buyers, sellers, investors, builders, and commercial real estate developers. Our attorneys have experience in all aspects of structuring, facilitating, and closing commercial real estate transactions.
LegalSense represents buyers, sellers, investors, builders, and commercial real estate developers. Our attorneys have experience in all aspects of structuring, facilitating, and closing commercial real estate transactions.
Staying true to our model enables a consistent approach: we seek out exceptional talent and we do not hesitate to go beyond the conventional in order to find it, wherever it exists. We then overlay this with our knowledge of the market and the candidate pool, honing our search process over many years so that the right people end up in the right environments.
We understand not just the hiring needs of our clients, but their culture and environment as well. Developing deep, meaningful and ultimately long-term relationships with our clients allows us to be more effective in terms of refining who we put in front of them, in our ability to be an extension of them in the market, and most importantly, as a partner in how we work together in order to uncover the best talent.


Donald Powell is a Kentucky asset protection and estate planning attorney who works with wealthy clients, often in the international context. We recently collaborated, and we invited him to write a brief blog post about taxation, cryptocurrency, and reporting requirements for U.S. expats.

Successful defenses are comprised of three “walls.” While we don’t use bricks and mortar but the concept is the same. We build the defense first by tearing apart as much of the prosecution case as we can be based on the disclosure that is provided and by the information our client gives us.

When a person commits an offence but cannot understand the difference between right and wrong, then the immoral act is in question. This comes from the mens rea, the mental intent. The law has developed so that people who commit criminal acts in these circumstances .



