With 20-plus years as a personal injury lawyer, Michael Levine’s advice to clients may be one of the best pieces of free info you ever get. “I always tell my clients, just tell it like it is,” says Levine, in a soft-spoken ‘New Yorkah’ accent. “I have told my clients two and a half million times that there is no substitute for the truth. The truth never hurts you.evine says not being truthful is a lethal mistake when pursing a lawsuit. “People think no one will ever find out if you tell a lie,” he says. “Sometimes they block out the truth or intentionally hide it, but in a lawsuit your whole life becomes an open book.”
“People must be extremely truthful with their attorneys in order to get the best representation possible,” he adds.
Not telling the truth is at the top of Levine’s list of “deadly sins” clients can commit when pursing a lawsuit. “When I talk about deadly sins I am talking about what can hurt a client’s case,” says Levine. “I have been doing this since 1983 and I tell clients from the top: ‘I am not going to be the one that hurts your case; you are going to be the one that hurts your case.'"
Don’t Exaggerate
Exaggerating the claim can also poison a case. “People exaggerate, thinking that will help their case and that is not true,” says Levine. “Exaggerating can really hurt you in a personal injury case. For example claiming you can no longer do something and then get caught doing things you claimed you couldn’t do!”
Although it may seem obvious that not telling the truth or overstating the case is a negative, Levine says it is amazing how many people make those mistakes.
“Maybe the client had a criminal problem in the past. Maybe they even spent time in jail,” says Levine. “If they lie about it and it is discovered later it will hurt them."
A defense attorney will use even a tiny mistruth or inconsistency to tear apart the case. “That lawyer is going to keep on pouring salt into that wound and make it fester,” says Levine. “The jury is going to be thinking about that minor lie rather all the positive aspects of my client’s case. It may sound like a cliché but it is true.”
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