
25 January 2014 | 14 replies
I currently work for a Defense Contractor and have been doing so for almost 6 years now.

31 July 2018 | 6 replies
You have several strong lines of defense against liability available to you:Good property managementA note against the property (low equity is not a lawsuit target)InsuranceUmbrella liability

26 April 2017 | 13 replies
our bremerton prop has several Navy and department of defense tenants as well as locals.

2 November 2019 | 10 replies
However, you will have violated numerous SEC regulations, and chance legal action from the SEC, state securities board, state AG office, and lose any definitive defenses should an investor decide to sue.

27 November 2019 | 7 replies
I'm a retired Army veteran currently working as a defense contractor.

10 February 2017 | 14 replies
Call the agent and set them straight as to your exact needs and expectations.Fire them if they get defensive or start blaming you for not being "cooperative" with their mediocre efforts.I would travel to Atlanta and interview a dozen agents over a weekend and see if one of them can better serve your needs.

2 September 2017 | 3 replies
(6) You may also want to make sure that your lease restricts the tenant’s ability to assign or sublease so you can make sure that your tenant is always a responsible “operator”(7) You definitely want to make sure they maintain the property in a safe manner, put up fencing and other precautionary measures to eliminate the possibility of kids climbing on the billboard post, or electrocution god forbid, if it has electricity running, etc. and you want them to indemnify you, hold you harmless, and agree to pay the costs of your defense in the event that you are sued or incur any damages at all in connection with their operation at the premises (sometimes owners even get sued for allowing ugly billboards to be built!).

29 October 2014 | 7 replies
This week I'm presenting at Tenley Library on the Soft Answer/ the Gentle Art of Verbal Self Defense right at 7 on the 29th!

18 October 2018 | 23 replies
That does make a little more sense, in defense of the LO, on where the confusion is coming from.

27 June 2014 | 28 replies
I have one property free and clear and I guarantee it has insurance on it,,I couldn't sleep at night if it didn't.Without insurance a LOT of things could happen,,including someone suing you for something related to the house and you don't have an insurance company to pay for your defense/pay claim