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What's wrong with this lawyer?!

Lawyer Tang Fangjing had finally made it through time-travel, only to discover that he was terminally ill, thank goodness for the system But he needed to achieve more than two hundred percent completion in order to ensure his own survival And so, an extremely unorthodox lawyer emerged Thinking you can just cut off an employee and provide severance pay? Come on, let's calculate the exorbitant overtime pay, including mobile communication after hours as overtime! Property management that does nothing but collect money, thinking about pulling out just like that? Gradually establish a resident's committee, backtrack twenty years of accounts, secure a huge compensation from property management without saying, and also send the property boss to jail Who's shirking responsibility for the unfinished building? Come at it with both administrative and civil lawsuits, make clear whose responsibility it is, whoever needs to go in must go in Beyond that, there are salary disputes, labour service scams... 'When you encounter a problem, sending people to jail will naturally solve the problem' — Tang Fangjing

Sword Immortal of Wine · Urban
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539 Chs

Chapter 45: Educating Lawyers with Law? Sounds Interesting!

Across from Tang Fangjing, Ju Haiqing continued, dropping his pained expression, "Mr. Tang, there was of course a reason for that. At that time, many of us neighbors were thinking about protecting our rights, but we had no idea how to go about it. That's when lawyers started approaching us."

"However, we later discovered that the people contacting us weren't actually lawyers; they were legal consultants from their law firm. They told us they could help sue and get our money back."

"Their fees were very expensive, and the other neighbors didn't want to get involved. Only I and one other person went through with the lawsuit. I remember they charged us more than one hundred and sixty thousand in legal fees..."

Today's law firms aren't what many people think, that lawyers spend their days welcoming guests. The big firms employ their own sales teams—externally known as legal consultants, who never claim to be lawyers.