St. Tammany Parish
Slidell sits inside a triangle of three interstates. I-10, I-12, and I-59 all converge here, carrying New Orleans commuters over the Twin Spans and Gulf Coast traffic through St. Tammany Parish. High speeds and heavy volume make Slidell one of the most crash-prone areas on the Northshore.
We see Slidell injury cases coming off the I-10 Twin Span and the Oak Harbor exits, the I-12 and I-10 split, Gause Boulevard's commercial corridor, and US 11 toward Pearl River. Slidell Police and Louisiana State Police Troop L handle most reports, and lawsuits are filed in the 22nd Judicial District Court in Covington.
Litigator Law, LLC represents people injured in Slidell and throughout St. Tammany Parish in car accident, uninsured motorist, and truck accident claims. Attorney David Patin, Jr. personally handles every case, and the firm serves clients statewide from its New Orleans office, meeting Slidell clients by phone, by video, or in person.
Your claim is governed by Louisiana law regardless of which parish road or highway the wreck happened on. That includes comparative fault rules that let you recover even if you were partly at fault, uninsured motorist coverage that follows you when the other driver has no insurance, and bad faith statutes that penalize insurance companies for unreasonably delaying or underpaying valid claims.
Deadlines matter most of all. Louisiana's filing deadline depends on the date of your crash, and missing it can end a valid claim permanently. If you were hurt on I-10, I-12, I-59, US 11, and Gause Boulevard or anywhere else in St. Tammany Parish, call now and let us calculate your deadline for free.
Nothing up front. Litigator Law represents Slidell clients on a contingency fee: the consultation is free and you pay no attorney fee unless we recover money for you. Clients may remain responsible for court costs and case expenses, which we explain in writing before representation begins.
No. Your case is governed by Louisiana law, and if suit is needed it is filed in the 22nd Judicial District Court in Covington. Litigator Law handles cases across the state, appears in courts throughout Louisiana, and meets Slidell clients by phone, by video, or in person. If you cannot travel, we come to you.
It depends on the date of your wreck. For most Louisiana crashes occurring on or after July 1, 2024, you have two years to file suit, while older claims may be subject to a one-year deadline. Exceptions exist in both directions, so call promptly and let us calculate your exact deadline.
You may still have a strong claim. If you carry uninsured motorist coverage, your own policy can pay for your injuries, and Louisiana law penalizes insurers that unreasonably delay or underpay valid UM claims. UM and UIM claims are the signature focus of this firm.
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One call tells you where your case stands. You speak with a Louisiana attorney, not a call center. If we take your case, you pay no attorney fee unless we recover money for you.*
(504) 800-1012