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Did you know that establishing paternity at birth can protect your child's legal rights for their entire life?Hi, I'm Mi...
01/29/2026

Did you know that establishing paternity at birth can protect your child's legal rights for their entire life?

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a family law attorney.

I've seen too many families struggle years down the road because paternity wasn't established when their child was born.

Here's what many parents don't realize.

When paternity is confirmed at birth, your child automatically gains access to critical benefits and protections. We're talking about Social Security benefits, veterans benefits, inheritance rights and health insurance coverage through both parents.

But it goes beyond financial protection.

Establishing paternity creates a legal foundation for custody arrangements, visitation schedules and child support. Without it, unmarried fathers have no legal rights to their children, even if their name is on the birth certificate.

Think about medical emergencies too.

When paternity is legally established, both parents can make medical decisions and access your child's health records. This matters when seconds count.

I've worked with parents who waited years to establish paternity, and the process became complicated, expensive and emotionally draining. Court-ordered DNA tests, legal fees and the stress of proving what could have been simple at birth.

The hospital makes it easy when your baby is born.

Both parents sign an Acknowledgment of Paternity form right there. It's straightforward, it's free and it gives your child the legal protections they deserve from day one.

Some fathers assume that signing the birth certificate is enough. It's not. That's just a hospital record, not a legal document establishing parental rights.

And here's something that surprises many parents - even married couples benefit from clear paternity establishment. It eliminates any future questions and protects everyone's interests.

Your child deserves the security of knowing both parents are legally recognized and committed to their well-being.

Have questions about paternity establishment or how it affects your family's rights? I'm here to help you understand your options and protect your child's future.

NBA Hall of Famer Paul Pierce is facing a new legal challenge after a woman filed a paternity lawsuit demanding a DNA test. The filing reportedly seeks to establish whether Pierce is the father of her child, pushing the matter into the courts.

Pierce has not publicly responded to the claim, but the lawsuit adds to growing public scrutiny around the former Boston Celtics star. More details are expected to emerge as the legal process unfolds.

01/18/2026

Have you ever felt like your job owned you instead of the other way around?

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a family law attorney.

Let me paint you two pictures of my life.

BEFORE:

My phone was glued to my hand.

7 AM. 9 PM. Saturday morning. Sunday afternoon. Didn't matter.

Every ping. Every buzz. Every ring sent my heart racing because what if a client needed me?

I answered calls while cooking dinner. Responded to emails during my grandson's birthday party. Drafted motions at midnight because "just one more thing."

Family dinners got interrupted. Plans with friends got canceled. Sleep became optional.

I told myself it was noble. That being available 24/7 meant I cared more than other attorneys.

The truth?

I was drowning. Exhausted. Missing moments I'd never get back.

My grandson would score a basket and I'd be staring at my phone instead of cheering in the stands.

Friends stopped inviting me places because I always had to "check my email real quick" or "take this one call."

I wasn't living. I was just working.

THE SHIFT:

One Tuesday afternoon, I watched my grandson's game on FaceTime because I couldn't leave the office.

He kept looking for me in the crowd.

That's when it hit me.

All these clients I was "helping" by being available every second? Their cases would still be there tomorrow.

But my grandson's childhood wouldn't be.

I made a decision right then. My time had value. My life had value.

And I deserved to live it.

AFTER:

Now? Office hours are 9 to 5. Period.

I built systems that work. Automated responses that set expectations. A team that handles emergencies using clear protocols.

My office phone isn't ringing off the hook at 8 PM anymore.

My work cell stays silent on weekends.

And you know what's wild?

My clients are happier. They know when to reach me. They respect the boundaries. The cases still get handled with the same care and expertise.

But now?

I'm sitting courtside at every one of my grandson's basketball games. Screaming. Cheering. Present.

I meet my friends for happy hour without checking my phone every five minutes.

I've been to Greece. Dubai. Jamaica. Puerto Rico. And on my first solo cruise.

I cook dinner without interruptions. I sleep through the night. I breathe.

I'm not just practicing law anymore.

I'm living life.

The best part? You don't have to choose between being good at your job and having a life you actually enjoy.

You can have both.

But first, you have to decide your time is worth protecting.

How do you make sure you have time to live life?

01/17/2026

Can I get sole custody of my child?

This is one of the most common questions I hear in my practice, and I understand why parents ask.

When a relationship falls apart, emotions run high.

Trust breaks down.

Communication becomes difficult.

You start questioning whether sharing custody with your former partner is truly what's best for your child.

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a family law attorney.

I want to give you a clear, honest answer about sole custody in the District of Columbia.

Here's what you need to know:

In DC, joint legal and joint physical custody is the standard.

The Court starts with the presumption that both parents should be involved in raising their child.

Sole custody is rarely granted.

It's not impossible, but the bar is high.

The Court will evaluate the best interest of the child factors to determine if the evidence you present overcomes that standard.

Why this matters:

I hear many reasons why parents pursue sole custody.

Sometimes it's about safety concerns.

Sometimes it's about a parent who's truly uninvolved or unstable.

But often, I hear reasons rooted in relationship issues that have nothing to do with the child.

Anger at your former partner.

Frustration with how they handled the separation.

Disappointment in choices they made during the relationship.

These are valid feelings.

They're real and they hurt.

But they're not what the Court considers when making custody decisions.

The one thing you must remember:

The best interest of the child is the only thing the Court will consider.

Not your anger.

Not their mistakes as a partner.

Not who was right or wrong in the relationship.

The question is always: What serves this child's wellbeing, stability and development?

Does this child benefit from a relationship with both parents?

Is there evidence that one parent poses a genuine risk to the child's safety or welfare?

Can both parents communicate and cooperate for the child's sake?

These are the questions that matter in custody cases.

If you're considering pursuing sole custody:

Ask yourself honestly why you're seeking it.

Is it truly about your child's safety and wellbeing?

Or is it about punishing your former partner for how the relationship ended?

The Court can tell the difference.

Judges hear custody cases every single day.

They've seen every argument and every justification.

They know when a parent is focused on the child versus focused on the conflict with the other parent.

I'm not saying your concerns aren't valid.

I'm saying you need evidence that directly relates to your child's best interest.

Documentation of concerning behavior.

Records of missed parenting time.

Proof of substance abuse or instability that affects the child.

Evidence matters more than emotion in family court.

My role as your attorney:

If you come to me wanting sole custody, I'll listen to your concerns.

I'll evaluate your situation honestly.

I'll tell you whether the evidence supports your goal.

And I'll help you understand what the Court will actually consider.

Sometimes that means pursuing sole custody when safety is genuinely at risk.

Sometimes that means helping you build a workable co-parenting plan instead.

My job is to give you realistic expectations and strategic guidance, not false hope.

What questions do you have about custody in DC?

I'm here to help you understand the process and make informed decisions about your child's future.

01/17/2026

Are your co-parenting conversations turning into arguments before you even hit send?

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a family law attorney.

Let's be real about something I see every single day in my practice.

Communication between co-parents can get messy fast.

What starts as a simple "Can you pick up the kids at 4?" turns into paragraphs of blame, emotion and rehashing stuff that happened three years ago.

It doesn't have to be this way.

I've been recommending co-parenting apps to my clients for years now, and the difference they make is real.

Here's what these apps actually do:

They let you share calendar events so everyone knows when soccer practice is, when school pictures happen, when the dentist appointment is scheduled.

No more "you never told me" conversations.

They analyze your messages for tone and profanity before you send them.

Think of it like having a filter that catches you before you say something you'll regret in court later.

Every message gets a date and time stamp showing when it was sent, when it was read and when someone responded.

No more claiming you didn't get the message.

Why I genuinely love these tools:

Communication is the foundation of any successful relationship, whether it's professional or personal.

When you remove the face-to-face tension and the tone of voice that can escalate things, you're left with just the facts.

No attitude. No disrespect. Just information.

How this helps you:

These apps keep everyone focused on what matters, your kids.

Messages stay short and to the point.

There's no space for name calling or bringing up old relationship drama.

You're not rehashing who did what in 2019.

You're talking about pickup times and permission slips.

That's it.

The apps my clients tend to like:

OurFamilyWizard and TalkingParents are the two I hear the most positive feedback about.

Both do the job well.

Both keep things documented.

Both help reduce conflict.

I'm not getting paid to say this.

I'm sharing it because I've watched these tools help families move forward instead of staying stuck in the same toxic patterns.

Your kids deserve parents who can communicate without world war three breaking out over a text message.

What resources have helped you navigate co-parenting?

I'd love to hear what's working for you.

01/15/2026

Have you been operating under the assumption that ma*****na is completely legal in DC?

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a criminal & family attorney.

Let me set the record straight on something I hear all the time.

The Myth: Ma*****na is legal in the District of Columbia.

The Reality: Not exactly.

Here's what you need to know.

Ma*****na remains a controlled substance under federal law. Full stop.

In DC, if you're 21 or older, you can possess up to 2 ounces for personal use. That's it.

But here's where people get tripped up.

Smoking ma*****na in public spaces? Still illegal.

Possessing more than 2 ounces? Also illegal.

Why does this matter?

Because the consequences are real.

Get caught with more than the legal limit and you're looking at potential jail time. We're talking 180 days or more depending on how much you have.

Public consumption carries penalties too.

The lines aren't as blurred as people think. And confusion about what's actually allowed can land you in a situation that affects your custody arrangements, your visitation rights, and your family's future.

Know the law. Stay within the limits. Protect what matters most.

Did you believe ma*****na was completely legal in DC before reading this?

01/12/2026

Are you treating your separation like it's the same as a divorce?

Let's be real about something I see way too often in my practice.

Couples separate and think they're done. They move on emotionally. They start building separate lives. They assume they're protecting what they earn now.

But here's what's actually happening in the District of Columbia.

That paycheck you're earning? Marital asset.

Your retirement account that's growing every month? Marital asset.

The car you just bought? Marital property.

And here's the part that really stings — any debt your spouse takes on during this separation? That could become your debt too.

I know it feels like you've already done the hard part by separating. You're living in different places. You've divided your lives. It feels final.

But legally? You're still married.

And that means everything you're working for right now is still tied to your spouse.

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a family law attorney. I've watched too many people lose thousands of dollars because they waited years to finalize their divorce after separating.

They thought they were moving on. Instead, they were still building marital assets that would have to be divided later.

When you know it's over, it's time to make it official.

Filing for divorce and getting a final order isn't just about paperwork. It's about protecting what you earn. It's about truly closing that chapter. It's about giving yourself the legal freedom to build your new life without looking over your shoulder.

You deserve a clean start. Not a separation that keeps you legally tied to someone you've already moved on from.

Have you been separated for more than two years? Now is the time to put an end to it.

At Lockard Law we can help you close that chapter and truly start fresh. Schedule a consultation today at the link below

https://lockardlawconsultation.as.me/

Have you made this mistake of treating separation like divorce?

Schedule your appointment online Lockard Law, PLLC

01/12/2026

Ever wonder how I can stand in front of a judge and argue a case but get nervous speaking at my kid's PTA meeting?

Let's be real.

Public speaking terrifies me.

Like sweaty palms, heart racing, want to disappear kind of terrified.

But put me in a courtroom?

Different story.

When I'm in there advocating for a client, something shifts. The nerves disappear. I don't even notice the judge, the opposing counsel or anyone else in the room.

My entire focus locks in on one thing — protecting my client's rights and their future.

It's not about me anymore.

It's about the parent fighting to see their child. The person ready to start a new chapter. The family that needs someone in their corner.

That focus drowns out everything else, including my fear.

Funny how that works, right?

The things that scare us in one setting become our superpower in another.

When the stakes matter, when someone's counting on you, fear takes a backseat to purpose.

Your turn.

What's something people would be surprised to know about you?

01/10/2026

Have you ever answered the phone and immediately regretted it?

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a family law attorney.

Let me share something I tell my clients all the time that changes everything about co-parenting communication.

You do not have to answer the phone just because your co-parent is calling.

Let it go to voicemail.

Here's why this works.

It cuts down on arguments because your tone isn't too aggressive or you don't sound concerned enough. You're not reacting in the moment when emotions are high.

Here's how to do it:

Let the call go to voicemail.

Listen to the message.

Process and think about the issue.

Formulate a response.

Record a voice message or send a text message with your response.

Or better yet?

Use a parenting app with a tone meter that doesn't allow profanity. These apps keep communication focused on the kids and nothing else.

This simple shift gives you control over your communication. You respond instead of react.

You protect your peace and your co-parenting relationship at the same time.

Try it and let me know how it goes.

01/10/2026

Have you ever had a moment where everything you've worked toward finally clicks into place?

Recently, I had the privilege of serving as a volunteer attorney for a brave mother who had survived domestic violence and s*x trafficking. She came to me seeking safety and a fresh start for herself and her infant child.

Together, we fought for and secured a permanent civil protection order, an absolute divorce, and sole legal and physical custody of her child.

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a family law attorney.

What made this case so meaningful wasn't just the legal outcome. It was watching this mother reclaim her power and knowing her child would grow up protected from harm. She walked out of that courtroom with something priceless — peace of mind that her ex had no custody rights or visitation.

Her child will never become a victim of their father.

This is why I do what I do. Every parent deserves to protect their children. Every survivor deserves a chance to rebuild their life without fear.

These moments remind me that the law, when used with compassion and determination, can truly change lives.

What's a win you've experienced recently, big or small? I'd love to hear what you're celebrating today. Drop it in the comments below.

01/09/2026

Have you ever wondered what a criminal defense attorney's day really looks like?

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a family law attorney, but criminal law? That's my first love.

Today was one of those all-criminal days that reminds me why I do this work.

My morning started at 8:00 with back-to-back hearings. A preliminary hearing. A mental health court review. A competency hearing. A status hearing. Each one representing someone's life, freedom, and future.

Between hearings, I'm scheduling client meetings, navigating plea negotiations, and coordinating legal meetings with incarcerated clients. Today also included a call with the General Counsel for the jail because that's just part of making sure my clients' rights are protected.

But here's the real reality.

When court wraps up, my day is far from over. There's still discovery to review, motions to draft, legal research to conduct, body worn camera footage to watch, and preparation for tomorrow's cases. Some nights I'm working well past when most people have settled in for dinner.

One thing people don't realize about what I do: most days, my biggest challenge isn't the legal arguments or the courtroom strategy.

It's managing clients' and families' expectations and emotions during what's often the most difficult time of their lives.

I'm not complaining. This is the work I chose, and I'm passionate about it. But it's honest. It's real. And it's rarely confined to business hours.

So tell me, what does a typical day look like in your world?

01/08/2026

Do you believe that because a mother carried and delivered a child, she automatically gets final say in everything?

I don't.

Hi, I'm Michelle Lockard and I am a family law attorney.

Let's be real about something that makes a lot of people uncomfortable.

The idea that mothers are the default parent just because they gave birth is outdated.

In most cases, it took two people to create that child.

Two people who are equally capable of raising, nurturing and making decisions for their kids.

Yet we've created this system where dads are treated like assistants instead of partners.

Where fathers have to fight twice as hard to prove they deserve equal time with their own children.

Where moms are expected to carry the mental load of parenting alone, even when they're exhausted and burnt out.

This isn't fair to anyone.

Not to the fathers who want to be present but are pushed to the sidelines.

Not to the mothers who are overwhelmed because they're doing everything.

And definitely not to the children who deserve access to both parents equally.

In my practice, I encourage fathers to show up and engage.

Not just write checks.

Not just be the "fun weekend parent."

But to be an active, equal partner in raising their children.

And I help mothers see that sharing parenting responsibilities isn't about giving up control.

It's about creating space for themselves to breathe.

To rest.

To be more than just "mom."

When both parents step into their roles fully, everyone wins.

Kids get the benefit of two engaged parents.

Moms get relief from carrying everything alone.

Dads get the opportunity to build real relationships with their children.

Equal parenting isn't about one parent being better than the other.

It's about recognizing that both parents bring value.

Both deserve respect.

Both have a right to be present in their children's lives.

The gatekeeping has to stop.

Not because it's politically correct to say so.

But because our families function better when we let go of outdated ideas about who "should" do what.

Agree or disagree?

Address

80 M Street SE, Suite 100
Washington D.C., DC
20005

Opening Hours

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

Telephone

+12026290254

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