- Criminal DefenseBrittney is admitted to practice law in New Hampshire and Massachusetts. She has experience in civil litigation where she has worked on a variety of employment and business law matters. Brittney also worked as a public defender in Concord, New Hampshire focusing on criminal defense and representing indigent defendants.
- Corporate Law
- Mergers and Acquisitions
- Business DisputesGarth received his B.A. in Political Science from Middlebury College and his Juris Doctor and Master of Intellectual Property degrees from the University of New Hampshire's Franklin Pierce School of Law. He teaches MBA students as an Adjunct Professor of Business Law at Southern New Hampshire University. Garth coaches youth soccer and little league baseball in Manchester and serves on the Board of Trustees for The Mill Falls Montessori Public Charter School. Garth resides in Manchester with his wife and four children.
- Business Transactions
- Intellectual Property
- Real Estate LitigationAttorney Garth Corriveau dedicates much of his legal practice to business law, estate planning, and real estate law. He serves as counsel to entrepreneurs and privately-held companies in numerous aspects of business law, including start-ups, corporate governance, mergers and acquisitions, business transactions, as well as the drafting, review, and negotiation of commercial contracts. He also has served as local counsel to businesses needing compliance help with financing, conveyance and zoning laws and regulations.
- Land Use and Zoning
- Personal InjuryAttorney James W. Craig is an officer of the firm who was admitted to the practice of law in the state of New Hampshire in 1983. His practice concentration is litigation, personal injury, labor law and real estate.
- Estate PlanningEstate planning should be thought of as creating a plan for the many possible issues that can arise in the future. An effective estate plan can be so much more than a will. It can take care of issues that will directly affect you and your loved ones while you are still alive, if that is what you want your estate plan to do.
- Power of Attorney
- Probate
- Bankruptcy
- Foreclosure