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A revocable living trust is the most powerful tool in modern estate planning. When designed and funded correctly, it lets you avoid the cost and delay of probate, protect your beneficiaries from creditors and poor financial decisions, plan for your own incapacity, and maintain privacy over how your assets are distributed — all while keeping you in full control of everything during your lifetime.
At Zoecklein Law, we create comprehensive trust-based estate plans tailored to Florida families. Whether you’re protecting minor children, planning for a blended family, shielding assets from creditors, or simply want to make things as easy as possible for your loved ones, a trust-based plan gives you options that a will alone cannot.
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Not everyone needs a trust — for some families, a well-drafted will and supporting documents are sufficient. But a trust-based plan is worth serious consideration if any of the following apply to you:
You Own Real Property in Florida
If you own a home, rental property, or other real estate, a properly funded trust allows that property to transfer to your beneficiaries without going through probate. This is especially important in Florida, where probate can take six months to a year or longer, and your family may not be able to sell, refinance, or manage the property during that time.
You Have Minor Children or Young Adult Beneficiaries
A trust lets you control when and how your children receive their inheritance. Instead of a lump sum at age 18 (which is what happens without a trust), you can stagger distributions — a portion at 25, more at 30, the remainder at 35 — or tie distributions to milestones like completing a degree. You also name the trustee who will manage the funds on their behalf.
You Have a Blended Family
If you or your spouse have children from a prior relationship, a trust is essential. Without one, the surviving spouse could inherit everything and ultimately leave it all to their own children — cutting your children out entirely. A trust can provide for your surviving spouse during their lifetime while ensuring your children receive their share when the surviving spouse passes.
You Want to Protect Beneficiaries from Creditors or Divorce
Assets held in a properly structured trust with spendthrift provisions are generally protected from your beneficiaries’ creditors, lawsuits, and divorce proceedings. This is one of the most significant advantages a trust offers over an outright inheritance.
You Own Property in Multiple States
If you own real estate in Florida and another state, your family could face probate in each state where you own property. This is called ancillary probate, and it multiplies the cost and complexity. A trust avoids probate in every state, not just Florida.
You Want to Plan for Incapacity
A revocable living trust includes provisions for a successor trustee to step in and manage your assets if you become incapacitated — without the need for a court-appointed guardian. Combined with a durable power of attorney and healthcare surrogate designation, this provides comprehensive incapacity protection.
Privacy Is Important to You
Wills become public record when filed with the probate court. Anyone can look up who inherited what and how much. A trust is a private document — only qualified beneficiaries are entitled to see its terms. For families where discretion matters, this alone can be worth the investment.
A significant number of our real estate fraud cases arise in the context of estates and aging family members. A parent develops dementia and a child transfers the home to themselves. A caregiver isolates an elderly client and obtains a deed. A family member forges a deed on a deceased relative’s property before probate is opened. As a firm that handles both probate litigation and real estate disputes, we’re uniquely positioned to pursue these cases — because the same facts often support both a real estate fraud claim and an estate litigation claim.
💡The probate connection
This is the most common question we hear. Here’s how the two approaches compare:
Feature | Will-Based Plan | Trust-Based Plan |
Probate Required? | Yes — must go through court | No — assets in the trust bypass probate entirely |
Privacidad | Public record once filed with the court | Private document — not filed with any court |
Speed of Distribution | 6–12+ months through probate | Weeks to months — no court oversight required |
Incapacity Planning | Limited — requires separate POA | Built-in — successor trustee steps in automatically |
Creditor Protection for Beneficiaries | None — assets pass outright | Yes — spendthrift provisions protect inherited assets |
Control After Death | None — assets distributed outright | Extensive — staggered distributions, conditions, ongoing management |
Multi-State Property | Requires probate in each state | Avoids probate in every state |
Blended Family Protection | Limited — surviving spouse may redirect assets | Strong — trust can lock in each spouse’s wishes |
Upfront Cost | Lower | Higher — but often saves significantly in probate costs later |
Ongoing Maintenance | Minimal | Requires funding the trust (transferring assets into it) |
A will tells a judge what you want. A trust tells your family what you want — without involving a judge at all. The trust-based plan costs more upfront, but it typically saves your family far more in probate costs, delays, and potential disputes down the road.
💡 The bottom line
A trust-based estate plan from Zoecklein Law is not just a trust document. It’s a comprehensive package designed to cover every scenario — death, incapacity, and everything in between. Your plan typically includes:
Fideicomiso revocable en vida
The centerpiece of your plan. This document creates the trust, names your trustees (initial and successor), identifies your beneficiaries, and spells out exactly how your assets should be managed and distributed. During your lifetime, you remain the trustee with full control. Upon your death or incapacity, your successor trustee takes over and follows your instructions — no court required.
Pour-Over Will
A safety net will that “catches” any assets you didn’t transfer into the trust during your lifetime and directs them into the trust at death. While these assets may still require a brief probate, the pour-over will ensures everything ends up governed by the trust’s terms.
Durable Power of Attorney
Designates someone to handle your financial and legal affairs if you become incapacitated. This covers bank accounts, bill payments, tax filings, insurance claims, and other financial matters that fall outside the trust.
Healthcare Surrogate Designation
Names the person authorized to make medical decisions on your behalf if you cannot communicate your own wishes. This is critical for hospital admissions, treatment decisions, and end-of-life care.
Living Will (Advance Directive)
Documents your wishes regarding life-prolonging medical treatment in the event of a terminal condition, end-stage condition, or persistent vegetative state. This takes the burden of impossible decisions off your family.
HIPAA Authorization
Grants your designated agents the legal authority to access your medical records and communicate with your healthcare providers. Without this, privacy laws can prevent your family from getting the information they need to make informed decisions.
Pre-Need Guardian Designation
Allows you to nominate, in advance, the person you want to serve as your guardian if a court ever determines you need one. While your trust and power of attorney are designed to avoid guardianship, this serves as an additional layer of protection.
A trust is not as complicated as it sounds. Here’s the basic framework:
Grantor (You)
The person who creates the trust, sets the terms, and transfers assets into it. During your lifetime, you are typically both the grantor and the initial trustee, which means you maintain full control over everything in the trust. You can buy, sell, add, or remove assets freely. You can amend or revoke the trust at any time.
Trustee (Initially You — Then Your Successor)
The person who manages the trust’s assets according to the trust agreement. While you’re alive and competent, you serve as your own trustee. When you die or become incapacitated, your named successor trustee takes over. The successor trustee has a legal obligation (fiduciary duty) to follow the trust’s terms and act in the best interests of the beneficiaries.
Beneficiaries
The people who ultimately receive the trust’s assets. During your lifetime, you are typically the primary beneficiary. After your death, the trust distributes assets to your named beneficiaries according to the terms you set — whether that’s an immediate lump sum, staggered distributions, or ongoing management.
Phase 1: You create the trust, fund it (transfer assets into it), and live your life normally. Nothing changes day-to-day. You still file the same tax return, use the same bank accounts, and live in the same house.
Phase 2: If you become incapacitated, your successor trustee steps in to manage the trust assets for your benefit — paying bills, managing investments, maintaining property — all without going to court.
Phase 3: When you pass away, your successor trustee distributes or manages the assets according to your instructions. If the trust says distribute everything outright, they do. If it says hold funds for minor children until age 30, they do that instead. No probate. No judge. No public record.
This is the most important part of any trust-based estate plan, and it’s the step that gets overlooked most often: you must actually transfer your assets into the trust for it to work.
Creating a trust document without funding it is like buying a safe and leaving everything on the kitchen counter. The trust can only protect, manage, and distribute assets that are actually owned by the trust. Assets that remain in your individual name at death will still require probate — defeating the entire purpose.
At Zoecklein Law, we don’t just hand you a trust document and wish you luck. We prepare the deeds, draft the account transfer letters, and walk you through every step of the funding process. We’ve seen too many families pay for a trust and then end up in probate because nobody transferred the assets. We make sure that doesn’t happen.
⚠️ We handle the funding for you
One of the most compelling reasons to choose a trust over an outright inheritance is the protection it provides to the people you’re leaving assets to. Here’s what a properly drafted trust can do:
Spendthrift Protection
A spendthrift clause prevents your beneficiaries from pledging their expected inheritance to creditors and prevents those creditors from attaching to the funds while they’re held in trust. This is particularly valuable for beneficiaries who have financial difficulties, pending lawsuits, or a history of poor money management. The assets stay protected in the trust until the trustee distributes them according to your terms.
Divorce Protection
Assets held in a properly structured trust are generally not considered marital property in a divorce. This means if your child inherits through a trust and later gets divorced, the inheritance is protected from their ex-spouse’s claims. Without a trust, an outright inheritance that gets commingled with marital assets can be lost in a divorce.
Incentive Provisions
You can condition distributions on milestones that matter to you. Common examples include requiring a beneficiary to complete a college degree, maintain employment, remain free from substance abuse, or reach a certain age. These aren’t punitive — they’re designed to encourage responsible behavior while providing a safety net.
Special Needs Protection
If you have a beneficiary with a disability who receives government benefits (Medicaid, SSI), an outright inheritance could disqualify them. A special needs trust (also called a supplemental needs trust) allows you to provide for that beneficiary without jeopardizing their eligibility for public benefits.
Blended Family Protection
With a trust, you can provide for your surviving spouse during their lifetime while guaranteeing that the remaining assets pass to your children (not your spouse’s children from another relationship) when the surviving spouse dies. This is typically accomplished through a marital trust or an A/B trust structure. Without a trust, the surviving spouse controls everything — and your children have no legal guarantee.
These are the two fundamental categories of trusts, and they serve very different purposes:
Fideicomiso revocable en vida
This is the standard estate planning trust. You create it, fund it, and maintain full control during your lifetime. You can amend it, revoke it, or empty it at any time. Because you retain control, the IRS treats the trust’s assets as yours for income tax and estate tax purposes. The primary benefits are probate avoidance, incapacity planning, privacy, and control over how assets are distributed after death.
Irrevocable Trust
Once created and funded, an irrevocable trust generally cannot be changed or revoked. You give up control of the assets. In exchange, those assets are typically no longer considered part of your estate for estate tax purposes and are generally protected from your creditors. Irrevocable trusts are used for advanced planning strategies — including Medicaid planning, estate tax reduction, life insurance trusts, and asset protection. They are not appropriate for everyone, but they serve an important role for clients with specific planning needs.
For most Florida families, a revocable living trust is the right choice. It gives you probate avoidance, incapacity planning, and distribution control while letting you keep full access to your assets. We’ll recommend an irrevocable trust only when your specific situation — estate tax exposure, Medicaid planning, or asset protection needs — calls for it.
💡 Which type do you need?
Florida’s homestead laws are some of the most complex in the country, and they interact with trusts in important ways. Your homestead — your primary residence — receives special treatment under the Florida Constitution, including protection from creditors, property tax benefits, and restrictions on who can inherit it.
When transferring your homestead into a revocable living trust, it’s critical that the trust is drafted correctly to preserve these protections. Specifically:
This is an area where drafting precision matters enormously. Our attorneys ensure your trust properly addresses Florida’s homestead requirements so your family retains every protection available.
Step 1: Free Consultation
We start with a no-obligation conversation about your family, your assets, and your goals. We’ll tell you whether a trust-based plan is right for your situation or whether a will-based plan would serve you just as well. We don’t upsell — we recommend the plan that fits.
Step 2: Plan Design
Based on our consultation, we design your plan — selecting the right trust structure, drafting distribution provisions, naming trustees and successor trustees, and building in the protections that matter to your family (spendthrift clauses, blended family provisions, special needs provisions, etc.).
Step 3: Document Preparation
We draft all documents: the trust agreement, pour-over will, powers of attorney, healthcare surrogate designation, living will, HIPAA authorization, and pre-need guardian designation. You review everything and we make any revisions before signing.
Step 4: Signing Ceremony
We conduct a formal signing session at our office (or remotely, when appropriate) with proper witnesses and notarization for all documents. This typically takes about an hour.
Step 5: Trust Funding
This is where we separate ourselves from firms that hand you documents and say “good luck.” We prepare the deeds to transfer your real property, draft transfer letters for your financial accounts, and provide detailed instructions for updating beneficiary designations. We follow up to make sure the funding is actually completed.
✓ We See What Happens When Plans Fail
Most estate planning attorneys only draft documents. We also litigate probate and trust disputes. That means we’ve seen firsthand what goes wrong when trusts are poorly drafted, unfunded, or missing critical provisions. We build your plan to withstand the scenarios we see in litigation every day.
✓ We Handle the Funding
We don’t hand you a binder and wish you luck. We prepare the deeds, draft the transfer letters, and walk you through every step of moving your assets into the trust. An unfunded trust is a failed estate plan — we make sure yours works.
✓ Probate, Trust, and Real Estate Litigation Under One Roof
If a trust dispute, probate challenge, or real estate issue ever arises involving your estate, our litigation team handles it. Your family doesn’t need to find a new firm.
✓ Flat-Fee Pricing
You’ll know exactly what your trust-based estate plan costs before we start. No hourly surprises. The price covers all documents, the signing ceremony, and the trust funding assistance.
✓ Se Habla Español
Our team serves Florida’s Spanish-speaking community with the same depth of care and legal expertise.
Trust-based estate plans are more expensive upfront than a simple will because they involve more documents, more complex drafting, and the trust funding process. However, they typically save your family significantly by avoiding probate — which can cost thousands of dollars in attorney fees, court costs, and personal representative fees. At Zoecklein Law, we offer transparent flat-fee pricing so you know the full cost before we begin. Contact us for a free consultation to get a quote based on your specific situation.
No. With a revocable living trust, you remain the trustee and maintain full control over all assets in the trust during your lifetime. You can buy, sell, spend, invest, add, or remove assets freely. You can also amend or revoke the trust entirely at any time. The trust only becomes irrevocable after your death.
A revocable living trust does not reduce estate taxes by itself — the assets are still part of your taxable estate. However, the federal estate tax exemption is currently over $13 million per individual (as of 2025), so most Florida families do not owe federal estate tax. Florida has no state estate tax. For high-net-worth individuals, irrevocable trust strategies can be used to reduce estate tax exposure. We’ll discuss whether estate tax planning is relevant to your situation during your consultation.
If you create a trust but don’t transfer your assets into it, those assets will likely require probate at your death — which defeats the primary purpose of the trust. Your pour-over will directs unfunded assets into the trust, but they must still pass through probate first. This is why we prioritize trust funding as a core part of our engagement — not an afterthought.
Yes, and you should be. With a revocable living trust, you typically serve as both the grantor and the initial trustee. This means you maintain full control over the trust’s assets during your lifetime. You’ll also name a successor trustee who takes over if you become incapacitated or pass away.
A will is a document that tells a probate court how you want your assets distributed after death. It must go through probate, becomes public record, and only takes effect after death. A trust is a separate legal entity that holds your assets and distributes them according to your instructions — without court involvement, without becoming public, and with the ability to manage assets during your incapacity as well as after your death.
Yes. Your trust-based plan includes a “pour-over will” that serves as a safety net. It catches any assets not transferred into the trust during your lifetime and directs them into the trust. The pour-over will also allows you to name a guardian for minor children, which can only be done in a will. However, the goal is for most or all of your assets to already be in the trust, so the will is rarely the primary operative document.
Assets held in a trust with spendthrift provisions are generally not considered marital property in a divorce. If you leave your child an outright inheritance and they commingle it with marital funds (deposit it in a joint account, use it to buy a jointly-titled home), it can become marital property subject to division. A trust keeps the inheritance separate and protected by the trustee’s management.
Yes, and it’s recommended. Transferring your homestead into your revocable living trust avoids probate on the property and facilitates incapacity planning. However, the trust and the deed must be drafted correctly to preserve your homestead exemption from creditors, your Save Our Homes property tax cap, and compliance with Florida’s constitutional restrictions on homestead disposition. Our attorneys handle this routinely.
You should review your trust whenever a major life event occurs: marriage, divorce, birth of a child or grandchild, death of a beneficiary or trustee, significant change in assets, a move to or from Florida, or a change in your wishes. We recommend reviewing your estate plan at least every three to five years even if nothing major has changed, as laws and personal circumstances evolve over time.
Too many Florida families pay for estate planning documents that sit in a drawer and fail when they’re needed most — because the trust was never funded, the provisions didn’t account for their real situation, or nobody thought about what happens when things go sideways. We build trust-based plans that work because we’ve seen what happens when they don’t.
Contact Zoecklein Law today for a free consultation. We’ll review your situation, explain your options, and tell you whether a trust-based plan is the right choice — or whether a simpler approach would serve you just as well.
Miranda Pages serves as the Client Operations Manager, bringing over a decade of leadership and management experience in youth program administration. Throughout her career, she has overseen team operations, staff development, and program coordination, experience that translates seamlessly into managing client services and internal operations in a professional environment.
Known as the team’s go-to resource, Miranda is highly reliable and deeply dedicated to supporting both colleagues and clients. Her commitment to professionalism and service helps ensure the team operates efficiently while maintaining the high level of care clients expect.
Juan G. Croussett is a litigation attorney at Zoecklein Law, where he represents clients in complex probate and trust disputes and other contested matters. Known for his strong courtroom presence and strategic approach to advocacy, Juan focuses on protecting clients’ interests through thorough preparation, persuasive legal argument, and disciplined case management.
Juan earned his Juris Doctor from Florida Coastal School of Law and holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and History from the University of South Florida. Over the course of his career, he has developed extensive litigation experience handling a variety of complex matters, including property disputes, dependency proceedings, and high-conflict cases involving sensitive family issues.
Before joining Zoecklein Law, Juan served as a Senior Attorney with the Florida Department of Children and Families and later as Lead Dependency Attorney at The Spring of Tampa Bay. In these roles, he regularly appeared in court, managed complex case portfolios, and advocated on behalf of individuals navigating difficult legal circumstances.
At Zoecklein Law, Juan brings this depth of litigation experience to guide clients through challenging disputes with clarity, diligence, and strong advocacy. He is committed to developing thoughtful legal strategies and delivering results-driven representation.
Outside of his legal practice, Juan is a devoted husband and father who values family and community
Keegan Ashmore Gothers is an attorney at Zoecklein Law, where he assists clients with probate, estate, guardianship, and other civil litigation matters. He is known for his strong analytical skills, attention to detail, and ability to navigate complex legal issues while providing thoughtful and strategic support throughout the litigation process.
Keegan earned his Juris Doctor from the University of Miami School of Law and holds a Bachelor of Science in Sports Administration with a minor in Business Administration from the University of Louisville. During law school, he distinguished himself in competitive arbitration competitions, earning recognition as a champion in the University of Miami MLB Arbitration Competition and a finalist in the Tulane International MLB Arbitration Competition.
Prior to joining Zoecklein Law, Keegan gained experience working on a variety of civil litigation matters, including real estate disputes, contract issues, probate matters, and business disputes. He has experience drafting pleadings, conducting legal research, preparing discovery, and assisting with depositions, mediations, and motion hearings.
Outside of his legal practice, Keegan enjoys watching sports, spending time with friends and family, and golfing. His background in athletics reflects a competitive spirit and team-oriented mindset that he brings to his work serving clients
En la actualidad, el Sr. Rubin se centra en la administración de sucesiones, litigios sucesorios y litigios civiles en general. El Sr. Rubin creció en Miami, Florida, y se licenció en Ciencias de la Comunicación por la Universidad de Miami.
El Sr. Rubin obtuvo su doctorado en Derecho en la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad Internacional de Florida en Miami, Florida. Mientras estudiaba en la Universidad Internacional de Florida, el Sr. Rubin fue miembro del Equipo de Negociación y Mediación, y compitió en varias competiciones, incluida la Competición de Negociación de Fútbol Profesional de la Facultad de Derecho de Tulane. Durante su estancia en la Universidad Internacional de Florida, el Sr. Rubin realizó prácticas en la Oficina del Fiscal del Estado de Miami-Dade y en la Oficina del Defensor Público de Broward.
Después de graduarse, el Sr. Rubin trabajó en la Oficina del Defensor Público de Fort Myers como Asistente del Defensor Público, y luego trabajó para Florida Rural Legal Services, donde se centró en la ley de familia e inmigración. El Sr. Rubin se unió a Zoecklein Law, P.A. en julio de 2023. Cuando no está trabajando, el Sr. Rubin disfruta pasar tiempo con su novia y sus tres gatos, cuatro arañas, una serpiente y un escorpión.
Una abogada licenciada por el Colegio de Abogados de Florida desde 2011 con una pasión por la justicia, un historial de éxito en la sala del tribunal y experiencia en juicios con jurado, y un fondo diverso que se extiende más allá del mundo jurídico. Como ex asistente del fiscal del estado y co-propietario de un exitoso negocio en línea, traigo una mezcla única de experiencia legal y espíritu empresarial a todo lo que hago.
Mi dedicación al bienestar de la comunidad comenzó con mi servicio en la Reserva del Ejército de EE.UU., evolucionó para mantener a los conductores ebrios fuera de las calles, y ahora se centra en ayudar a las personas a encontrar un cierre en momentos difíciles, poner a sus seres queridos a descansar, y mitigar las injusticias del sistema legal.
Crecí en Tampa, Florida, y después de 2 años en la American University de Washington, D.C., regresé al estado y me gradué con honores en Historia por la Universidad de Florida. Me licencié en Derecho por la Universidad de Maine. Tras decidir que los inviernos de Nueva Inglaterra eran demasiado sombríos, regresé al estado por segunda vez. Cuando no estoy trabajando, me encanta pasar tiempo con mi esposa y nuestras mascotas.
La Sra. Zoecklein es una profesional altamente cualificada y motivada, con una exitosa trayectoria tanto en contabilidad como en atención al cliente. Como esposa devota y madre de tres hijos maravillosos, valora la importancia del equilibrio entre la vida laboral y personal y se esfuerza por dar ejemplo manteniendo una vida familiar satisfactoria junto con su carrera profesional.
Con un sentido innato de la iniciativa y la ambición, la Sra. Zoecklein ha demostrado constantemente unas excepcionales dotes de liderazgo y organización, lo que la ha convertido en un activo inestimable para todos los equipos de los que ha formado parte. Gracias a su experiencia en contabilidad, ha gestionado las operaciones financieras con precisión y atención al detalle, garantizando la fluidez de las transacciones financieras y la exactitud de los registros.
En el ámbito del servicio al cliente, la Sra. Zoecklein ha perfeccionado sus habilidades de comunicación e interpersonales, estableciendo una sólida relación con clientes y colegas por igual. Se enorgullece de ofrecer un servicio excepcional, superando constantemente las expectativas y garantizando la satisfacción del cliente.
Aparte de sus actividades profesionales, la Sra. Zoecklein encuentra una inmensa alegría en la compañía de su amado esposo y sus tres hijos. Cree que la familia es la piedra angular de una vida plena y aprovecha las oportunidades para crear recuerdos duraderos con ellos. Ya sea embarcándose en excursiones aventureras, participando en proyectos creativos o simplemente disfrutando de tiempo de calidad en casa.
Con una mezcla perfecta de dedicación profesional y valores centrados en la familia, la Sra. Zoecklein encarna a una persona polifacética y motivada, cuyo compromiso con la excelencia se extiende tanto a su carrera como a las preciadas relaciones que enriquecen su vida.
El enfoque principal del Sr. Zoecklein se centra en sucesiones y litigios civiles de demandantes. Su estimado equipo maneja activamente casos en todo el Estado de la Florida en las áreas de administración testamentaria, litigios sucesorios, reclamaciones de seguros y derecho comercial. Originario de Blacksburg, Virginia, se graduó cum laude de Virginia Tech con un título en administración de empresas, dirigiendo con éxito varias franquicias en Virginia y Carolina del Norte durante su tiempo allí. Tras cursar estudios superiores, el Sr. Zoecklein obtuvo su doctorado en Derecho cum laude, junto con un máster en Administración de Empresas, en la Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad de Stetson, donde representó notablemente a la universidad en numerosos concursos académicos jurídicos nacionales e internacionales. Uno de los momentos culminantes de su trayectoria en la Facultad de Derecho fue ganar un concurso nacional de tribunales simulados para Stetson, demostrando su excepcional perspicacia jurídica. Durante su estancia en Stetson, Brice también colaboró con el Center for Advocacy of Elder Law y realizó prácticas en la Fiscalía del Distrito Medio de Florida. Después de graduarse, se embarcó en una carrera con una prominente firma de defensa de seguros, pero su pasión por la defensa del demandante y la justicia del consumidor le llevó a dedicar sus actividades legales exclusivamente a la representación de los derechos del consumidor. Aparte de sus esfuerzos profesionales, el Sr. Zoecklein atesora tiempo de calidad con su esposa y sus tres hijos. A través de su inquebrantable búsqueda de la justicia, tanto dentro como fuera de la sala del tribunal, Brice Zoecklein ejemplifica la esencia de un defensor compasivo y un profesional de buena reputación, dedicado a defender los valores de integridad, empatía y equidad en todos los aspectos de su vida.
Facultad de Derecho de la Universidad de Stetson - cum laude
Instituto Politécnico de Virginia - cum laude
El Sr. Zoecklein y Zoecklein Law están actualmente litigando casos en las siguientes áreas de práctica:
Correo electrónico [email protected]
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Oficina de Lakeland: (863) 808-0530
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