About Beth Taylor

Beth Taylor Articles written 173

Beth Taylor was a senior editor for Super Lawyers for more than 20 years, and has won dozens of awards for headline-writing and editing throughout her career. Previously, she was an editor and covered courts for The Orlando Sentinel. She also worked for go2net and KIRO-TV in Seattle, where she wrote for and edited their websites. In addition, Beth edited The Kitsap Business Journal and Media Inc. Beth has written travel books, including Around Seattle With Kids for Fodor’s and Seattle Day By Day for Frommer’s, and online travel guides for Google. Her travel writing has appeared in publications including the Chicago Tribune and the San Francisco Chronicle. Beth has a B.A. in communications/journalism and a master’s degree in political science.

Articles written by Beth Taylor

Complicated Family Dynamics

Gabrielle Vidal is often involved in high-drama estate litigation but won’t name names

A quick Google search reveals that Gabrielle Vidal’s trust and estate clients have included Michael Jackson’s mother, Katherine Jackson, in a dispute over her son’s estate; Michael Crichton’s widow, Sherri, in a clash over his will; Sumner Redstone in a case confirming his ability to execute his estate plan; and Carol Burnett, in a guardianship case. Just don’t ask her to name names.  “They are people who are going through a really hard time, and their privacy is very important,” …

When Should You Settle a Personal Injury Case?

You should settle a personal injury case when you reach maximum medical improvement and know your case value based on the defendant's liability and policy limits. Personal injury victims negotiate a settlement offer with the insurance adjuster to sign a release of liability. Most personal injury lawsuits end in an out-of-court agreement to avoid the time, expenses, and litigation risks of a jury trial. A settlement should cover your medical bills, lost wages, future care costs, pain and …

Washington Cares Act: Benefits To Understand

The good news: Washington is the first state in the country to offer long-term care insurance for its aging residents. The bad news: As with most brand-new ideas, there are a few kinks in the system. The Washington Cares Act provides Washingtonians long-term care benefits—including home care—of up to a lifetime maximum of $36,500 per person. That amount will increase with inflation. However, notes Seattle employment and labor law attorney Tamara Roe, “This is an earned benefit …

Should I Join a Class Action?

You get a letter in your mailbox or an email about a class action claim. You're informed that a product you bought, a pharmaceutical you used, or a company you worked for is being sued as part of a class action lawsuit. A class action lawsuit combines the similar legal claims of a large number of people against the same defendant. The notification gives you a chance to remain in the class or exclude yourself. For most potential class members, their best option is to remain in the class. …

Interstate Divorce

Divorce laws covering child support, custody and other issues can vary greatly from state to state. And if the divorcing spouses live in different states, it is sometimes difficult to even decide which state has jurisdiction. “If there is a dispute, the courts will decide,” says divorce law attorney Dalma C. Grandjean says. “First, the court must find that at least one of the spouses meets the [six-month] residency requirement. As long as the residency requirement is met and the other …

Monument Maker

Charles Foster has seen to it that memories of George H.W. Bush, James Baker and LBJ are set in stone

It was 2015 and Charles Foster thought it was high time President Lyndon Johnson had a monument in Houston. So the immigration attorney spearheaded a project to build a larger-than-life statue, installed next to Houston’s federal courthouse last January. LBJ taught high school in Houston in the 1930s—before Foster was born—but Foster met him in 1960 when Johnson was campaigning for president. And LBJ’s aunt and uncle owned a house behind Foster’s childhood home. The 8-foot bronze …

With a Little Luck

Trial superstitions might or might not help—but they can’t hurt

What is your superstition? John Zavitsanos: I wear a suit made by my father during closing arguments. He had a small tailor shop in Chicago for 40 years. My father worked harder than any person I know. He made many suits for me, but one black suit was his pride and joy. My father could not read or write because he never attended school—due to World War II and the Greek Civil War. He wanted to make sure his son was as well-dressed as the opposing lawyers. He impressed on me that if I wore …

Divorcing in the Military

Getting a divorce is never an easy process for a couple to go through, but for military couples, an entirely new layer of complexity is added to the divorce case. For one thing, the physical location of an active-duty military member can sometimes pose a challenge. “There may be complications in getting service on the service member if he or she is overseas, aboard a naval vessel, or deployed to an unknown location,” says divorce law attorney Dalma C. Grandjean. Even if the whereabouts of …

Rolling Art

Stan Beck has been collecting and racing cars since he was 12

Stan Beck bought his first car before he could drive: a pea-green 1950 Ford sedan, which he bought with $50 he’d earned from his newspaper route. He was 12. It needed work. “I was going to make sure it was running by the time it was legal to drive,” Beck says with a laugh. Thus began a lifetime of collecting, racing and tinkering with cars.  “According my mother, the first word I said was ‘car,’” he says. He started buying “real cars” and racing them at 17, financed by his …

Discrimination Suit Can Proceed Against Contra Costa DA's Office

San Francisco firms Nichols Law and Ratner Molineaux are representing 5 women deputy DAs

A federal court in San Francisco has given the go-ahead to a discrimination suit filed by five female DAs against the Contra Costa County District Attorney’s Office. “The women are alleging, in essence, that they have been discriminated against by the DA’s office because of their sex, and—in the case of the [four] women over 40—because of their age,” says Sarah Nichols, an employment & labor attorney whose firm, Nichols Law in San Francisco, is handling the suit, along with …

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