Kansas Real Estate Lawyer List
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Real Estate
Attorney Keith Wellman has devoted his legal career to providing clients with debt relief assistance. Since 2006, he has helped more than 2,500 people find the relief they need, whether through Chapter 13 or Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, or non-bankruptcy options such as mortgage modification. Mr. Wellman received a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration from the University of Kansas, then earned his Juris Doctor from Southern Methodist University. He is admitted to practice in Kansas State courts, as well as the Federal District of Kansas.
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If you need an attorney that will always protect your best interests, call the Oleen Law Firm today. The Oleen Law Firm is committed to defending our clients and ensuring their fundamental rights are always protected. Whether you need a criminal lawyer, a divorce attorney, an estate attorney, or a personal injury lawyer, we offer aggressive and experienced representation.
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Ted E. Knopp has forty yearsโ experience in the practice of law, the counseling of clients and the resolution of disputes. Ted previously has represented a Sedgwick County township board in connection with a dispute among the Township board, the Township trustee, and the County attorney; has represented a rural water district in its efforts to protect its territory from City encroachment; and a professional association of surveyors. Ted has a real estate background and is familiar with the critical role of the County Clerks in maintaining property tax rolls and the assessment of property taxes. Ted has a real estate lawyerโs interest in keeping real estate productive and marketable. Ted has a personal interest in legislation that will facilitate the transfer of property of limited value without probate. Too many properties in small towns fall into disrepair and off the tax rolls because the property is not valuable enough to justify probate. There must be a way to pass these properties to a subsequent owner without waiting three years for tax foreclosure. Ted also is thoroughly familiar with the Constitutional due process requirements and the inadequacies in the property tax foreclosure process throughout the state. The procedure used in most counties to find and notify defendant owners that their property will be sold for unpaid taxes does not satisfy the โdue processโ requirements of the United States Constitution. Purchasers at tax sales are unable to resell the property due to these deficiencies and pay less at tax sale. This results in smaller recoveries on unpaid taxes and serves as a disservice to the citizen owners whose property is being sold for taxes. Ted has an interest in improving the tax foreclosure process in the counties in the state.
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