Baby Boomers formerly Parisi Law Firm

Baby Boomers formerly Parisi Law Firm I provide assistance for families who are facing difficult choices assisting their aging parents. I The definition of "old" has changed.

Georgianna Parisi, an Attorney who has registered her license as inactive, had been a certified specialist in Estate Planning, Trusts, and Probate since the Ohio Supreme Court first recognized this law specialty in 2003. There are only about 150 Ohio attorneys who are certified specialists in this area of the law. During the last 20 years, Georgianna has seen a need develop in which families neede

d expert assistance for aging parents. More people are living longer and more productive lives, while the traditional safety net of families has been stretched by other family obligations as well as through geographical distances and financial limitations. Georgianna's experience in working with families in maintaining safety precautions so parents can remain in their homes, and in assisting transitions into independent and assisted living facilities when appropriate is invaluable. Further, Georgianna continues to be available to resolve issues (which invariably arise) and to keep families apprised as to the status of their loved ones. The first half hour of the initial consultation is complimentary. Georgianna is here to provide all assistance needed. Peace of Mind is Priceless!

10/03/2022

Test

05/13/2022

What a Surprise (NOT).

As long as the politicians treat lawyers carrying $200,000 of student debt as indentured servants, the criminal processing system will continue to fail.

It’s time for the politicians to recognize the vital role attorneys play.

Georgianna Parisi

From the ABA Journal:

The public defender system in Oregon is so overburdened that several hundred defendants don’t have legal representation at any given time.
Some judges have dismissed cases, and some have threatened to hold the state public defenders office in contempt for failing to provide lawyers for indigent defendants, the Associated Press reports.

Kelly Simon, legal director for the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon, told the AP that the group hasn’t ruled out litigation. The system is “buckling before our eyes,” Simon said.

The public defender system in Oregon is the only one in the nation that relies entirely on contracted services to provide representation, according to the AP. The state contracts with nonprofit defense firms, groups of lawyers or independent attorneys.

But there aren’t enough lawyers available amid a post-pandemic onslaught of cases. Some nonprofit firms are refusing to take new cases because of high workloads, and some private attorneys are turning down work because of low pay, late payments and too much work.

At current caseloads, the Oregon Office of Public Defense Services needs another 1,296 full-time equivalent defense lawyers, according to a January report by the ABA Standing Committee on Legal Aid and Indigent Defense, prepared with Moss Adams.

To provide effective assistance of counsel currently, all 592 contract public defense attorneys in Oregon would have to work 26.6 hours per working day to provide effective assistance of counsel, the report said.

Looking for a gorgeous well maintained furnished office around June 1st in no income tax Washington Township?  257 Regen...
04/02/2022

Looking for a gorgeous well maintained furnished office around June 1st in no income tax Washington Township? 257 Regency Ridge Dr., Dayton, Ohio 45459

The office is about 150 square feet with two nice sized closets. Furniture includes a glass topped desk, table, and three bookcases. It is located on the second floor, and looks out to a lovely tree. It includes the use of a waiting room. A conference room is available for an hourly rate upon request

There is a bathroom on the second floor which is shared with two other tenants.

The rent is $250/month with a one year’s Lease. The $250 includes WiFi, all utilities, janitorial, condo fees, and property taxes. You are only responsible for your own insurance.

Owner is on site daily. Please see pictures for more particulars.

If interested, please contact Georgianna Parisi at 937-305-4191.

01/28/2022

Hi—Just a point of order.

I want to make it crystal clear that I do not permit anyone to promote their business on my Page.

I just had to hide a comment made on a post that had nothing to do with this person’s business on my Page.

Frankly, I found the commenter to be unbelievably rude in promoting her business on MY PAGE without even having the minimal courtesy to first ask if such a comment was OK with me.

Thank you.

Georgianna Parisi

01/28/2022

Thank you, Susan Calhoun, for liking Baby Boomers!

Georgianna Parisi

12/10/2021

I am appalled by this disgusting ruling by Alabama.

I have not read the opinion, but the excerpts from this judge’s opinion sounds to me like she spoke the truth. The problem appears to be that the Alabama “ethics” board doesn’t like judges who speak the truth, and it will do everything in its power to destroy people to silence them. Keep your mouth shut and your head down, if you don’t want sanctions.

I see the judge is black and I can’t help but wonder if her race played a role in this obvious effort to silence an outspoken judge. “Open your mouth and we’ll smite you!”

She used statistics to buoy up her points. Judges do this all the time.

Her point about politicization of judges is bourn out by the very decision itself!

And there is no doubt that political contributions gets rewards. I’ve seen it, and you’d have to be willfully blind to say it doesn’t happen. I am disgusted that the “ethics” (similar I guess to Saudi Arabia or the Taliban’s “morals” patrols) are trying to destroy this judge for telling the truth!

Georgianna Parisi

Sourced from the ABA Journal:

An Alabama judge who criticized the state’s death penalty sentencing system has been suspended for 90 days without pay by the Alabama Court of the Judiciary for what it called making inappropriate comments and disregarding appellate decisions.

Many of the charges concern Todd’s March 2016 opinion that struck down an aspect of Alabama’s death penalty sentencing scheme that allowed judges to impose the death penalty, even when jurors recommended life without parole.

According to the suspension order, Todd made improper comment in her decision that:

• Called appeals by defendants sentenced to death by judicial override “ceremonial at best.” She cited statistics showing that state supreme courts with judges elected in contested elections affirm death sentences in more than 62% of cases, while state supreme courts with lifetime appointees affirm death sentences in only 26% of cases, according to the complaint against her.

• Todd had written the appointment process in death penalty cases “falls prey to the hazards of political partisanship and bias in the judiciary,” according to the complaint against her. She also said that Alabama’s judiciary “has unequivocally been hijacked by partisan interests.”

• Suggested that court-appointed attorney assignments are based on political contributions to judicial campaigns. Todd had written that judges’ requests for campaign contributions are close to “legalized extortion,” and, “it is an open secret” that appointments locally are based on contributions, not expertise, the complaint said.

11/03/2021

First, the ABA Journal is spending a lot of time reporting on ethics cases involving judges who are not lawyers. It may surprise many in Ohio, but in many other states, judges are not required to be lawyers. This is true in Kansas, Alabama, and Georgia. I was an Executor for an estate in Georgia, and the probate judge was the local undertaker (jokes about we plant them and we probate them are welcome).

I am posting this story because I believe it is time for sanctimonious ethics panels to stop imposing their outdated ethics on folks whose personal activities have nothing to do with their jobs.

If this judge wants to post n**e pictures of himself on a swingers site, it DOES NOT reflect badly on the judiciary.

Georgianna Parisi

“Should a Kansas judge be disciplined after his retirement for posting n**e pictures of himself on a swingers website while he was still on the bench? The Kansas Supreme Court heard oral arguments on the question last week.

The Kansas Commission on Judicial Conduct recommended a public censure for Russell County Magistrate Judge Marty Clark in a May 4 decision. His retirement was effective a few days before that.

Clark’s lawyer, Chris Joseph, argued that there should be no discipline for sending n**e photographs on a private channel, according to Kansas City Star.

“I don’t think you look at morality as a basis for discipline … unless there is a connection to the job,” Joseph said. Clark can’t practice law because he isn’t a lawyer.

Justice Melissa Standridge said online photos can affect the perception of the judiciary, according to the Kansas City Star.”

09/14/2021

Thank you, Patrick Arehart, for liking Baby Boomers!

Georgianna Parisi

06/11/2021

“The actions of the state in this case—from the police officers’ decision to pursue defendant in a low-speed chase for the $25 specific-fine traffic violation of not wearing a helmet, to the prosecutor’s decision to pursue a felony charge under those circumstances, to the attorney general’s office’s decision to defend those decisions on appeal—should not be ignored.”

The trial judge should have granted an acquittal sua sponte in the prosecution of Jennifer Grace Gayman, the Oregon Court of Appeals ruled in a June 9, 2021 decision.

A woman who led police on a low-speed chase on her electric mobility scooter should not have been convicted for fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer.

One officer told Gayman that she could not continue to ride her scooter home without a helmet, and she would go to jail if she did so. Gayman drove her scooter home anyway, as officers trailed her with their lights and siren on in a low-speed pursuit that lasted two to three minutes.

MORE elder abuse—like the recent episode in which a woman with dementia was beaten up by the police.

My question: how was the woman SUPPOSED to get home if she didn’t have a helmet?!

Like the post I made about the cop who caused the pregnant woman to crash because he deliberately hit her car because she didn’t st quickly enough for a SPEEDING VIOLATION, I have to ask:

What happened to serve and protect as a mantra for police officers?

Georgianna Parisi

Address

257 Regency Ridge Drive
Dayton, OH
45459

Opening Hours

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Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 4pm

Telephone

(937) 298-1961

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