Our Attorneys
Notable Case Results
Case results reflect publicly available information reported by the listed law firms. They are not results obtained by ThatCarHitMe.com. Every case is unique and must be evaluated on its own facts. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. The results shown are not necessarily representative of all results obtained by these firms. No representation is made that the quality of legal services to be performed is greater than the quality of legal services performed by other lawyers.
Criminal Defense
NOPD officer Roger Jones resigned after confessing to a hit-and-run and falsifying a police report. He was arrested and booked with Hit-and-Run and Filing or Maintaining False Public Records.
Criminal Defense (Drug Charges, Gun Charges)
Timothy O’Neil III and Margie Anderson were arrested after a raid found 56 pot plants (valued over $360,000), 21 firearms, and $5,000 cash. They faced charges including cultivation, possession with intent to distribute, operation of a clandestine laboratory, conspiracy, possession of drug paraphernalia, and possession of firearms in presence of controlled dangerous substance.
Criminal Defense (Theft)
Kenneth Ferdinand, former executive director of the French Market Corp., was acquitted of a theft charge after a two-day trial. He was accused of over $10,000 in improper purchases, but the judge found insufficient evidence of personal use.
Criminal Defense (Murder, Conspiracy, Witness Intimidation)
Harold E. Weiser and Cameron Landry represented Quentin McClure in a triple defendant double murder trial. McClure was charged with the murder of Thomas Pierce and conspiracy in the murder of witness Charles Smith.
Criminal Defense (Aggravated Rape, Second-Degree Kidnapping)
Harold E. Weiser and Cameron Landry represented Preston Porter, charged with aggravated rape and second-degree kidnapping. Weiser argued for a mistrial after co-counsel Landry was injured in a car accident.
Criminal Defense
Judge Hans Liljeberg barred prosecutors from using ballistics evidence linking client Byron Ross to a murder and attempted murder, and a separate shooting of a detective, in a case where Ross pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity.




