Wednesday, June 22, 2011

10 Reasons you will need a Denver Process Server For your Lawsuit

There are numerous reasons why someone should work with process server to manage their legal disputes. Process servers properly and successfully present the legal documents required for all types of lawsuits, such as, complaints, summons to court, an order to show cause, a writ, and other papers that may be relevant to a suit and also the legal proceedings.

A process server is specifically qualified to handle presenting files for any type of legal claim. This means that a process server does all that they are able to, to have your documents served on time, this will certainly give you ease from the worry associated with your case, while also saving you money and time. And on top of that, a great number of states will have regulations that are connected to serving documents, employing a process server guarantees that the documents are supplied legally, that will guarantee your lawsuit does not hit any kind of hurdles from incorrectly served documents. You are going to be reassured and informed once your papers have been served, a process server is required to supply you with an Affidavit of Service / Proof of service, this will inform you of as soon as your papers have been given, keeping you on top of the information on your serve. A process server will additionally provide other services, which include submitting your papers to a courtroom, to help you in your legal case. A process server will correctly and efficiently serve your paperwork providing you with ease regarding your case.

Listed below are 10 reasons that you will have to find a Denver professional process server on your lawsuit.


1. Small claims lawsuits

2. Divorces - lawful termination of marriage.

3. Subpoena - paperwork that comes from the court for someone to show in the court and testify.

4. Surveillance - observation of a person to uncover illegal activity.

5. Complaint - paperwork from a person stating legal rights against the individual

6. Summons - a paper from the courtroom for a suit, which includes all information.

7. Eviction - when a tenant is removed from a property.

8. Insurance fraud - untrue claims towards an insurance company.

9. Order to show cause - a courtroom order to appear in the court.

10. Court Services- Family court, Criminal Court, Court of Appeals, Supreme Court. etc.


Find a Denver Process Server

Front Range Legal Process Service

303 S. Broadway, Suite 200-215 Denver, Co 80209

(303) 578-3851

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Friday, April 08, 2011

Process Servers in Colorado Uniting Against Industry Threats

Steve Glenn has fun serving process, and it has proved lucrative for him. Getting paid to serve hard-to-locate people, and serving people whom others couldn’t … he says it’s a puzzle for him and he doesn’t like to lose. So, when he hears about things which could separate him from his fun and income, he doesn’t take it lightly.

Sensing the need for someone to protect the interests of process servers in Colorado and keep their livelihoods safe, Glenn recently founded the Process Servers Association of Colorado (PSACO). Glenn took the time to explain to ServeNow.com his motivations for building a state association from the ground up.


Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Process Servers Attracting More Clients Through Local Search

You may have heard the term “local search” recently and wondered what it is and how it can help your process server business. Local search basically ensures that people can find your business online when searching for local terms such as “Process Server Denver” or wherever your business may be located. This is accomplished through optimizing your Google Places, Yahoo! Local and Bing Local profiles, and then submitting your business to Superpages, YellowPages, DexKnows, 411.com, WhitePages and more than 100 other sites. So when people search for your key terms, your business shows up.

In this article, we’ll take a closer look at how local search benefits your business and how the submission process works.


Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Canadian Process Server Enjoying the Fast Track to Success

Jim Carr knows what it takes to succeed. The 67-year-old family man has built a successful Canadian process serving company in Hamilton, Ontario, from the ground up, and more recently has began to experience success in an entirely different industry – horse racing.

Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Friday, March 11, 2011

Illinois Association of Professional Process Servers Opposes Proposed Bill

The Illinois Association of Professional Process Servers (IAPPS) was recently formed to provide education and training to the profession of process servers in Illinois. Our Association has established a Code of Ethics and Best Practices. Our members are committed to practicing the highest professional standards.

ILAPPS opposes as currently drafted two identical bills filed in both chambers: SB2069 and HB1450. These bills would create the offense of false impersonation and make it illegal for agents to be armed for personal protection.

Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

How To Identify Someone Who May Be Evading Service

Not only do process servers have a number of duties and responsibilities when service of process goes as planned, but when service becomes difficult these responsibilities increase exponentially. It is of utmost importance that process servers ensure that their service adheres to both state law and their clients’ instructions so as to be valid. Failure to do so can result in a number of problems such as increased costs and time for both the client and the server. Accordingly, ensuring that the party who is to be served actually is the person served oftentimes requires thinking outside of the box when faced with a difficult target.

Click here to read our 10 Tips for Verifying the Identity of a Difficult Subject.


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Proposed Bill Aimed at Protecting Illinois Process Servers

The Illinois Association of Professional Process Servers (ILAPPS) is pleased to announce its first legislative initiative of the year. SB2004 was introduced by Senator Mike Jacobs (D Moline). It elevates from a misdemeanor to a felony any assault or battery to a process server. Recent attacks prompted the formation of the Association. The bill will go to the Senate Judiciary Committee, where testimony will be presented.

Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Six Tips to Help Process Servers Get Paid on Time

As a process server, you likely pride yourself on quick and timely deliverance of your client’s papers. Sometimes you don’t receive the same courtesy when it comes to clients quickly delivering your payment. It is never enjoyable when process servers, or investigators for that matter, have to take on the money-chasing duties of the collection agencies they sometimes have as clients.

Click here to read on and discover six important steps you should take with your business to make sure you are paid on time.


AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

U.S. Twitter Subpoena Is Harassment, Lawyer Says

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

U.S. prosecutors’ demand that the microblogging service Twitter Inc. hand over data about users with ties to WikiLeaks amounts to harassment, said a lawyer for Julian Assange, the website’s founder.

The Justice Department subpoena, approved last month in federal court and later unsealed, also violates the U.S. Constitution’s Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonable government searches, Assange’s lawyer Mark Stephens said today in a telephone interview in London. WikiLeaks is an organization that publishes leaked documents on its website.

“The Department of Justice is turning into an agent of harassment rather than an agent of law,” Stephens, of the firm Finers Stephens Innocent LLP, said. “They’re shaking the tree to see if anything drops out, but more important they are shaking down people who are supporters of WikiLeaks.”

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Nov. 29 that the Justice Department is investigating the posting by WikiLeaks of thousands of classified U.S. diplomatic communications and military documents. Lawyers have said the U.S. will likely charge Assange with espionage.

“To help users protect their rights, it’s our policy to notify users about law enforcement and governmental requests for their information, unless we are prevented by law from doing so,” Twitter spokeswoman Carolyn Penner said in an e-mail.


Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Why Twitter Was the Only Company to Challenge the Secret WikiLeaks Subpoena

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Secret subpoenas of the kind the Department of Justice sent Twitter are apparently not unusual. In fact, other tech companies may also have received similar WikiLeaks-related requests. But what is unusual in this story is that Twitter resisted. Which raises an interesting question: Assuming that Twitter was not the only company to have been served a secret subpoena, why was it the only company that fought back? The answer might lie in the figure leading Twitter’s legal efforts, Alexander Macgillivray (right), an incredibly mild mannered (really) but sharp-as-a-tack cyber law expert.

Twitter’s general counsel comes out of Harvard’s prestigious Berkman Center for Internet and Society, the cyber law powerhouse that has churned out some of the leading Internet legal thinkers. The center was founded a little over a decade ago by none other than Charles Nesson, the famous defender of Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg. While at Harvard, Macgillivray helped teach a course on the law of cyberspace, along with Wendy Seltzer, a fellow at Princeton’s Center for Information Technology Policy. Today Seltzer leads the Chilling Effects clearinghouse, a collaboration between several law schools and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which tracks legal challenges to lawful online activity.


Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Some people think that Seth Rogen is making his crime-fighting debut this week in The Green Hornet. Those people are mistaken.

Yes, Rogen’s adaptation of the classic pulp character is fighting its way into theaters this weekend, but his turn as Britt Reid is hardly the first time that he’s played a gun-toting hero. Rogen already covered that territory as pothead process server Dale Denton in 2008′s Pineapple Express, and based on comments from Rogen’s screenwriting partner and pal Evan Goldberg, he could be headed back into the wacky world of weed-infused misadventures before much longer.

Speaking with Screen Rant, Goldberg revealed:

“I’m even hesitant to make Pineapple 2, but I’m loosening up to it as of like the last few weeks. Recently we were at Danny Mcbride’s wedding, and we were all there, well David couldn’t make it (David Gordon Green, the director of Pineapple Express); but me, (James) Franco, Seth and Danny were all there and I thought; ‘this is fun, I have fun with these guys.’ … Everyone has always wanted to do it, me and Seth were very hesitant, but frankly I was the driving force behind that hesitancy. I just kept thinking, you know not to say we’re the Coen Brothers, because we’re super not – they’re my idols in a lot of ways – but those guys never make a sequel. Like, great, great films don’t have sequels. … hopefully, there will be a sequel.”

Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

Thursday, January 06, 2011

Casey Anthony Team Denied Subpoena for Blogger's Photos

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Casey Anthony's defense attorneys suffered another blow today when they were denied a subpoena to collect what they suspect are a blogger's photos of the vacant, wooded area where her daughter's remains were found in 2008.

Judge Belvin Perry this afternoon denied a defense motion to subpoena searcher Joe Jordan's blog and internet photos, finding no factual basis to compel those items that may have appeared online.

Perry was not satisfied they would reveal meaningful "tangible" evidence and he expressed concerns that the defense was going on a "fishing expedition."

"I cannot give you a license to fish," Perry said soon before issuing his ruling today.
Perry did, however, deny the motion without prejudice, meaning the defense attorneys could revisit the issue if they can make a more compelling argument for the obtaining the information they seek.

Anthony, 24, is charged with first-degree murder in the 2008 death of her 2-year-old daughter, Caylee Marie, whose body was found in a lot off Suburban Drive near the Anthony home months after she was reported missing.

Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

Louisville Police to get Electronic Subpoenas in January

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

A decades-old problem of making sure Louisville Metro Police officers know when they need to be in court may be fixed, thanks to a new electronic subpoena system that will start next month.

Outgoing Mayor Jerry Abramson stood with Police Chief Robert White and other city officials Monday to announce the end of the county's cumbersome system of hand-delivering subpoenas to officers, an antiquated process that has helped cause thousands of felony and misdemeanor cases to be dismissed when police failed to appear.

“It will improve by leaps and bounds everything that we have been able to do in terms of subpoenaing,” said Abramson, noting the city is funding the new system through $480,000 in federal stimulus funds. “It will become a model for other communities statewide.”

In recent years, an estimated 10 percent of the approximately 100,000 paper subpoenas issued annually to Louisville police never reached officers, according to department officials.

Read more here and follow us on Twitter!

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

A Day in the Life of a Process Server — Business is Good

AddThis Social Bookmark Button
TAMPA, Florida — Michael G. Murray pulls his Honda Civic up to the gatehouse at Cheval Golf and Country Club, one of Hillsborough County's priciest residential neighborhoods. The guard inside smiles as she takes Murray's laminated photo ID, which identifies him as a certified process server.

"You again," Cheval's gatekeeper says with a grin. "How many you got this time?"

Murray, 45, pulls the top papers from a stack of recently filed foreclosure complaints piled on the armrest. "Just one stop today," he says as the guard returns his ID.

"All right then," she says. "Good luck!"

From the front seat of Murray's car, which racks up about 50,000 miles a year zigzagging around northwest Hillsborough County, one thing is clear: Florida's foreclosure wave has washed away class distinctions. On this day in late November, he'll try to deliver foreclosure papers to owners of a double-wide as well as a $1.6 million lakeside mansion. He'll ring doorbells at a small pink-shuttered block home with grass gone to sand, a condo with a U.S. Marine emblem on the door and a sprawling corner-lot estate with a well-tended lawn.

Read more here and follow us on Twitter!