Bankruptcy Collections Consumer Debtor and Creditor Estate Planning Probate Wills Family Foreclosures Personal Injury Torts Appellate Civil Litigation Contracts Debtor-Creditor Family Litigation Family
Quintairos, Prieto, Wood, & Boyer, P.a. Sep 2014 - May 2017
Associate Attorney
Wyatt, Tarrant & Combs, Llp Sep 2014 - May 2017
Senior Associate Attorney
Indiana University Maurer School of Law Aug 2013 - May 2014
Development Fellow
Quintairos, Prieto, Wood, & Boyer, P.a. May 2013 - Aug 2013
Law Clerk
Lawrence County Prosecutor's Office Jun 2012 - Apr 2013
Certified Legal Intern
Education:
Indiana University School of Law—Bloomington 2011 - 2014
Doctor of Jurisprudence, Doctorates, Law
Saint Mary's College 2007 - 2011
Bachelors, Bachelor of Arts, Communication
Skills:
Legal Writing Editing Legal Research Social Media Civil Litigation Long Term Care Public Relations Strategic Communications Nonprofits Event Planning Crisis Communications Marketing Communications Press Releases Media Relations Facebook Blogging Social Networking
North Heights Elementary School North Little Rock AR 1975-1982, Redwood Elementary School North Little Rock AR 1981-1982, Central Junior High School North Little Rock AR 1982-1983, Ridgeroad Middle School North Little Rock AR 1983-1985
Community:
Harold Wood
Biography:
Life
Immediately after graduation I moved to Indiana with my family. I've since gra...
Julia Tuttle, Leslie Walls, Brian Lawhead, Beth Berry, Rick Bonnell, Beulah Arvizu, Misty Weger, Troy Jackson, Shannon Johnson, Lee Lawhead, Monica Woodward
Biography:
After highschool I met and married Bill, we have 2 children and I work with an Insur...
In November, CBS13 Investigative Reporter Julie Watts, and her family, were among the first to have their COVID test results processed by the states new lab. Two out of their four results came back inconclusive.Why would someone take a human specimen swab out of the lab into the bathroom? CBS13 Investigative Reporter Julie Watts asked Dottie. Who knows what theyre doing? Theyre not supervised, she responded.
Savvy hackers and phone payment apps are both on the rise, but a surge of new options, including iPhone6's Apple Pay, allows consumers to pay with their phones in a more secure way, CBS News' Julie Watts reports.