I fired a client yesterday. It wasn't an easy thing to do but it was necessary. I wish that I could make everything all right in these cases for my clients but this is real life, real issues, real drama, and therefore I "keep it real" with all my clients.
If you are looking for an attorney to just tell you what you want to hear, then don't call LaTonia Denise Wright, RN, BSN, JD. For some of us that's hard. I must admit when I have legal issues (yes attorneys have legal issues that arise) it hard for me to absorb the legal advice provided to me by own legal counsel. Years ago I planned to fight a fine "all the way to the Supreme Court" because I knew I was right. I called my personal attorney. She laughed at me. We are friends so she laughed at me a little more over the phone. She took me out to dinner, laughed at me some more, listened to me, and then gave me legal advice. I paid the fine.
What I have found in 12 years of law practice and 8 years in nurse license defense is its even harder to absorb for some nurses who have been representing themselves over an extended period of time in a State Nursing Board matter(s). I am going to add these types of cases to my red flag list going forward because as I was driving home from Louisville (I also attended part of the Kentucky Nursing Board meeting) yesterday, I kept thinking you should have seen this one coming. Actually I only recently started representing the nurse this month so damn, I guess I did see it coming. But that's what 12 years of law practice and 8 of those years on the legal battlefield performing triage teaches you, baby!
A nurse with a long standing State Nursing Board case may say I know my case, the facts, and the issues better than some attorney who I just retained, right?
I wish we lived in a perfect world. In a perfect world, I wouldn't have a law practice representing nurses before the State Nursing Board because in a perfect world, nurses would not be reported to the State Nursing Board. In a perfect world, all nurses would also be perfect and there would not be a need for mandatory reporting to the State Nursing Board.
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