Lawyer
Law Offices Of Ronald D. Cummings
Joliet
Illinois 60435
Our bankruptcy lawyer serves clients throughout Northern Illinois including Will County, Grundy County, Kendall County, Du Page County, Joliet, Plainfield, Braidwood, Bolingbrook, Crest Hill, Frankfort, Homer Glen, Lemont, Lockport, Minooka, Morris, Naperville, New Lenox, Oswego, Romeoville, Shorewood, Tinley Park, Wilmington and the surrounding towns and areas. We are not one of the large bankruptcy infomercial firms you see on TV who pay millions of dollars for commercial advertising and then pass those costs down to you. We purposefully keep our office small so we can give you personal attention and high quality legal service at reasonable fees. You will not be just another number to us! Financially, we all want to be able to take care of ourselves and our loved ones. Right now, millions of Americans are having a hard time doing that. Struggling to make ends meet because of medical issues, divorce, the housing market crash, job layoffs or any number of other reasons — most only manage to limit how much further behind they fall on a weekly or monthly basis.
Our bankruptcy lawyer serves clients throughout Northern Illinois including Will County, Grundy County, Kendall County, Du Page County, Joliet, Plainfield, Braidwood, Bolingbrook, Crest Hill, Frankfort, Homer Glen, Lemont, Lockport, Minooka, Morris, Naperville, New Lenox, Oswego, Romeoville, Shorewood, Tinley Park, Wilmington and the surrounding towns and areas. We are not one of the large bankruptcy infomercial firms you see on TV who pay millions of dollars for commercial advertising and then pass those costs down to you. We purposefully keep our office small so we can give you personal attention and high quality legal service at reasonable fees. You will not be just another number to us! Financially, we all want to be able to take care of ourselves and our loved ones. Right now, millions of Americans are having a hard time doing that. Struggling to make ends meet because of medical issues, divorce, the housing market crash, job layoffs or any number of other reasons — most only manage to limit how much further behind they fall on a weekly or monthly basis.