A Different Approach To Divorce And Family Law in Colorado

A Different Approach To Divorce And Family Law in Colorado

Listen to Kyle McFarlane explain how BAM Family Law, a Denver Family Law Firm, takes a different approach to divorce and family law in Colorado for their clients. We don’t take a one-size-fits-all approach to our client’s cases. From the initial status conference you can go straight to mediation you can go into arbitration you can go and take a collaborative approach you can go right to settlement negotiations. The case for each client is so very different and you have to be very sensitive to that.

 

Kyle McFarlane, chief marketing officer of BAM, co-founded the firm after gaining experience working for both government and private entities. From an early age, Kyle began preparing herself for a career in family law, earning a bachelor’s degree in Sociology and Psychology from the University of Denver in 2009.

 

While still attending the University of Denver Sturm College of Law, Kyle worked for the Arapahoe County Public Defender’s Office assisting with misdemeanor criminal defense trials. She also worked at the Denver District Attorney’s Office, where she was as an intern in 2013 for the Economic Crimes Unit. Kyle researched and briefed Fourth Amendment, governmental immunity and evidentiary issues for a motion to suppress on a complex murder trial. She wrote several other motions and helped prepare a complex securities fraud case for trial, reading hundreds of pages of grand jury transcripts.

 

She also worked on the Colorado attorney general’s Justice Review Project, which used DNA evidence to exonerate inmates wrongfully convicted. She reviewed approximately 300 applications, including appellate files, news articles and DataAccess, from Colorado inmates incarcerated for violent crimes.

 

She drafted memoranda to supervisors on each case, explaining rational for exclusion or inclusion, and she researched complicity theories, witness credibility issues, and testing of physical evidence in effort to determine whether the case warranted DNA testing.

 

As part of her work with the Justice Review Project, Kyle studied laws in 27 states that offered compensation to wrongfully incarcerated prisoners, and she made an oral presentation of her findings to the Colorado deputy attorney general as part of a proposal for similar legislation in Colorado, which has since been passed and known as Dewey’s Bill.

 

To learn more about more the process you’ll go through when working with us, click here: http://bamfamlaw.com/your-process/