Law Office of Ryan J. Reed, PLLC

Law Office of Ryan J. Reed, PLLC Law Office Law Office specializing in Personal Injury, Family Law, Criminal Defense, and Civil Rights Violations

My client was charged with murder.  Ameer Mabjish and Dan Schubert were co-counsel.  After fighting for 2.5 years... Not...
08/30/2022

My client was charged with murder. Ameer Mabjish and Dan Schubert were co-counsel. After fighting for 2.5 years... Not Guilty.

05/06/2020

Sir William Blackstone, in his Commentaries on the Laws of England, 9th ed., book 4, chapter 27, p. 358 (1783, reprinted 1978), says, “For the law holds, that it is better that ten guilty persons escape, than that one innocent suffer.”

07/18/2019

Every day is a gift. Use it or lose it.

10/04/2018

Facebook is telling me that I need to say something. Sorry for not keeping my FB current. My focus is on real people who need legal help and not search engine optimization.

Dr. Ziernicki did a great job of using the 3D Leica scans.  The data was collected by the Sheriff's department, but they...
12/09/2016

Dr. Ziernicki did a great job of using the 3D Leica scans. The data was collected by the Sheriff's department, but they never did anything with it. Many thanks to Dr. Ziernicki and Knott Laboratory for their time and effort in helping us show, scientifically, what occured that evening.

A report compiled on behalf of Samantha Ramsey's family sheds new light on a $3.5 million settlement the family reached with Boone County.

04/04/2016

Felony expungement bill heading to governor’s desk

FRANKFORT—Legislation that would allow those convicted of low-level felonies to ask the court to permanently seal—or expunge—their records is on its way to becoming law.

House Bill 40, sponsored by House Judiciary Chair Darryl Owens, D-Louisville, and Rep. David Floyd, R-Bardstown, received final passage today in the House by a vote of 84-13 and will now go to the governor for his signature. The bill includes provisions from Senate Bill 298 that were added to the bill by the Senate when it passed HB 40 by a vote of 33-5 on March 29.

“House Bill 40 is about redemption,” Owens said about HB 40 when it passed the House in January. “It’s about second chances.”

HB 40 would allow those convicted of a Class D felony under any of 61 specific criminal statutes, or who were charged but not formally indicted of a felony, to seek expungement of that conviction or charge five years after they have completed their sentences or probation. Those convicted of a s*x crime, a crime against a child, or who have criminal proceedings or violations pending would not be eligible for expungement under the bill.

Courts would also have the discretion under the bill to expunge Class D felonies of those with previous Class D felony convictions unless the previous conviction was for a s*x offense, a crime against a child, or if there is a criminal proceeding or violation pending against the individual.

Kentucky law currently allows for expungement of misdemeanors and violations. Those are lesser crimes than felonies which include offenses like shoplifting, bad check writing, and driving on a suspended license.

03/05/2016

http://www.lrc.ky.gov/record/16RS/HB203.htm

Abolish the Death Penalty in Ketucky

House Bill 203 will be voted on by the House Judiciary Committee on March 9th. If 10 of 19 members vote YES then this bill will move to the entire House of Representatives for debate. A bill to abolish the death penalty has not received this much support since 1979.

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2216 Dixie Highway, Ste 203
Fort Mitchell, KY
41017

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