Find Your Situation
I received the notice on a Tuesday. By Friday I was on the phone with Marshal's team. They pulled the inspection logs, cross-referenced the code revisions, and by the time we walked into that hearing room, the opposing counsel looked like they'd brought a knife to a ballistics test. Charges dismissed. My badge is still on my belt.
Deputy Marshal Raymond Kowalski
Fire Marshal, 19 years
A developer whose project I failed three times decided to sue me personally after the building partially collapsed during construction — a collapse caused by his own contractor cutting corners I'd flagged twice. Marshal's attorneys turned my inspection records into a wall of exculpatory evidence. Suit dropped in sixty days.
Building Inspector Diane Osei
Chief Inspector, 14 years
The board review felt like a trap — vague allegations, no specific incident, just a pattern-of-conduct complaint filed by a contractor I'd cited four times in two years. My attorney had the complaint's evidentiary basis shredded before the second session. License renewed. Contractor is now under investigation himself.
Code Enforcement Officer Marcus Tran
Senior Code Officer, 11 years
— Defense Team —

Catherine Drummond
Senior Defense Counsel
Seventeen years in without a single sustained complaint. Then a fire fatality in a building I'd inspected fourteen months prior turned into a departmental hearing that could have ended everything. Marshal's team reconstructed the entire inspection timeline — every notation, every photograph, every follow-up request I'd submitted. The department closed the file.
Fire Marshal James Whitfield
District Fire Marshal, 17 years
The plaintiff's attorney called my inspection notes 'inadequate.' My Marshal attorney called them 'a textbook model of due diligence.' The jury agreed with ours. Three weeks of trial. Verdict for the defense. I went back to work the next Monday.
Inspector Priya Mehta
Commercial Building Inspector, 9 years
I didn't know what a licensing board review even meant until I was in one. My attorney explained every step before it happened. When I walked into that room I wasn't scared — I was prepared. The board found no basis for further action. My license is clean.
Code Officer Sandra Reyes
Residential Code Officer, 7 years
— Defense Team —

Eliot Vasquez
Trial Attorney
The union gave me a name. That name led me to Marshal. Fourteen months later, after two hearings and a departmental appeal, I'm back on duty with a commendation in my file for how I handled the incident in question. The outcome is the argument.
Fire Marshal Terrence Okeke
Battalion Fire Marshal, 22 years
Three plaintiffs. One incident. One very long deposition where my attorney had every document organized, indexed, and ready before opposing counsel finished the first question. Settlement demand dropped from $2.1 million to zero. The case never reached a courtroom.
Inspector Lena Kowalczyk
Fire Safety Inspector, 12 years
I called at 11:47 PM after getting the board notice. Someone answered. That's when I knew this was different. By 8 AM I had a strategy call scheduled. The review concluded in my favor six weeks later.
Code Enforcement Officer Derek Huang
Commercial Code Officer, 8 years
— Defense Team —

Margot Ellison
Licensing & Regulatory Counsel
I've testified in hundreds of hearings as a marshal. Sitting on the other side of the table was disorienting. My attorney made it feel like a procedure, not a punishment. The department's case fell apart on the second day when she produced documentation they hadn't reviewed.
Fire Marshal Audrey Simmons
Senior Fire Marshal, 26 years
The hearing doesn't wait. Neither should you.
Every day without counsel is a day the opposing record grows. Use the form to request a confidential review — or call now.