Category: Media release

← Back to Disaster Relief

Legal Aid of North Carolina’s Disaster Relief Project will be on site at the Pender County Long Term Recovery Group Disaster Preparedness Expo on July 17 to help survivors of Hurricane Florence prepare wills and advanced directives and to provide information about the other disaster-related legal services that the organization offers.  

The expo will take place at the Joint Community Center at 17808 NC Hwy 210 in Rocky Point from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.  

“Property ownership and estate planning are probably not the first things that come to mind when preparing for hurricane season, but they can be critical factors to recovery after a storm,” said Dale Deese, managing attorney of Legal Aid’s Disaster Relief Project. “In fact, estate planning documents can provide certainty for you and your heirs if disaster strikes and you end up in an extended recovery process. We are excited to be at the expo to provide this service as well as information about additional ways Legal Aid may be able to help with disaster recovery in Pender County.”  

Legal Aid may be able to draft a simple will or deed on site at the expo for eligible Hurricane Florence survivors who want to make sure that ownership of their home and land is clear and that their home and land will go to the person that they want to inherit it. Legal Aid’s services are free of charge. While walk-ins are welcome, advanced sign up is preferred. Please call Tommy Johnson at (984) 297-1977 or Michelle Green at (910) 623-1933 to sign up and secure a spot.  

Legal Aid is helping survivors of Hurricane Florence access recovery assistance for damage to their homes sustained during the storm, and may also be able to help when other legal issues arise during the recovery process.  For those who would like to learn more about Legal Aid’s services and eligibility, call the Legal Aid helpline at 866-219-5262. 

###

About  
Legal Aid of North Carolina is a statewide, nonprofit law firm that provides free legal services in civil matters to low-income people in order to ensure equal access to justice and to remove legal barriers to economic opportunity. Legal Aid’s Disaster Relief Project provides legal assistance and education to survivors of natural disasters in North Carolina and supports community economic development and long-term recovery in disaster-impacted communities.  

Category: Media release

RALEIGH—Our board of directors installed new leadership and welcomed new members during its virtual meeting June 25. The slate of fresh faces includes big names in North Carolina’s corporate, legal and nonprofit communities.

“We are fortunate to enjoy such strong support from so many sectors in our state,” said George R. Hausen, Jr., our executive director.

“That we can attract such high-profile leaders from law firms, banks, global technology companies and top-flight nonprofits,” he continued, “is testament to the broad importance and high quality of the work we do.

“These directors understand that poverty is a universal issue and that providing access to our civil justice system—a necessary part of the fight against poverty—is not the sole responsibility of the legal community. All of us must chip in to solve a problem that affects us all.”

New leadership

Gonzalo E. Frias, Senior Vice President & Senior Company Counsel in Wells Fargo’s legal department, in Charlotte, is our new board chair. Gonzalo joined our board in 2017 and has served as vice-chair since 2019. He takes over as chair from Clayton D. Morgan, associate general counsel of Duke Energy, who left our board today.

“It is a privilege to lead these legal luminaries on the board of an organization with such a noble purpose,” Gonzalo said.

“Our board’s passion for justice helps drive Legal Aid of North Carolina’s commitment to client service across our 20 offices throughout the state.  I am so excited to be a part of this organization at such a pivotal time.”

Learn more about Gonzalo.

Ashley H. Campbell, Director of Campbell Law’s Blanchard Community Law Clinic, in Raleigh, is our new vice-chair. Ashley joined our board in 2019 and has served as chair of our Fundraising and Resource Development Committee since 2019. She takes over as vice-chair from Gonzalo Frias, our new chair.

“I began my career at Legal Aid of North Carolina serving the citizens of Gaston, Lincoln and Cleveland counties,” Ashley said.

“It is an honor to continue to serve the organization in this capacity and to continue the quest for equal access to justice for all North Carolinians.”

Learn more about Ashley.

E.D. “Ed” Gaskins, Jr., Partner in Everett Gaskins Hancock LLP, in Raleigh, is our new treasurer. Ed joined our board in 2017 and has served as secretary since 2019. He takes over as treasurer from Francisco J. Benzoni, assistant attorney general at the N.C. Department of Justice, who left our board today.

Learn more about Ed.

Tadra Martin, Supervising Attorney at Disability Rights North Carolina, in Raleigh, is our new secretary. She joined our board in 2020. Before joining Disability Rights NC, Tadra served as one of our staff attorneys. She takes over as secretary from Ed Gaskins, our new treasurer.

Learn more about Tadra.

New members

Alice Freeman, a licensed cosmetologist, is a resident of Lumberton. Living in a community that was hit hard by two recent hurricanes—Matthew in 2016 and Florence in 2018—she is well acquainted with devastation and misery on a personal level. Natural disasters have forced her to close or relocate her business more than once.

Her role as small-business woman also puts her in touch with the pain of her entire community. “Sometimes I feel like a personal psychiatrist,” she said, describing how she listens to her customers talk about the problems and challenges that affect their families. Many of her neighbors are still waiting to be compensated by FEMA.

Not content to merely be a sympathetic ear, Alice is passionate about finding resources to help her neighbors. She has sought connections with other community members and organizations that provide critical services.

“I know what it feels like,” she said, referring to the indignities suffered by a poor community in the wake of a natural disaster, “so no one is better than me at finding ways to make it better.”

Linda McCall is a proud resident of Durham. She knows the challenges that Legal Aid clients face, because they have been her own challenges. Homelessness, abuse, abandonment—these are not hypothetical or theoretical to her. They have been and continue to be part of her life.

Since she knows what it’s like to be treated as if she doesn’t exist, she seeks to help and make connections with those whom others might ignore. She sees herself in their faces and hears the longing in their voices. No matter their circumstances, she sees possibilities in everyone she meets.

Her compassion and uncommon empathy have caused her to become a resource for her neighbors in need. She collects informational pamphlets and useful phone numbers to give to those who need help. She talks with young people about making good choices and shares with them that her own choices were not always good ones. She talks with parents, giving them encouragement and listening to their dreams and concerns.

“I can be a fun person,” she says, though her tone let’s you know that she’s serious about the business of helping people.

John Moschandreas joined our board in earlier this year. John is the Deputy General Counsel for Technology, Privacy, and Procurement for Truist, in Charlotte. Before starting his current position in 2019, he served in the legal departments of SunTrust, Procter & Gamble, and Convergys. He earned his J.D. from the Marshall Wythe Law School at William & Mary, in Williamsburg, Va., in 2003.

Learn more about John.

Jennifer T. Salinas joined our board earlier this year. Jennifer is the Executive Director, General Counsel of the Infrastructure Solutions Group and head of global litigation at Lenovo, in Morrisville. Salinas served as president of the Hispanic National Bar Association from 2018 to 2019, capping off nearly a decade of service in leadership positions with the organization.

“I’m delighted to join Legal Aid of North Carolina’s board,” Jennifer said.

“I have spent most of my 23-year legal career fighting for the rights of the underserved, so I’m excited to continue this work in my new hometown of North Carolina. And of course I look forward to forging longstanding relationships with my fellow board members; a top-notch group of professionals that I’m proud to be associated with.”

Learn more about Jennifer.

John R. Wester joined our board today. John is an attorney with Robinson Bradshaw, in Charlotte. He served as president of the North Carolina Bar Association in 2009-2010. In 2021 he received the Advocate’s Award and Citizen Lawyer Award from the NCBA. In 2019 he received the John B. McMillan Distinguished Service Award from the State Bar of North Carolina.

“Early in my time as a lawyer, I had the great good fortune to meet talented lawyers who had chosen Legal Aid for their careers,” John said.

“After engaging with them in many courtroom experiences,” he continued, “I became their teammate in a federal court class action representing disabled citizens that ran for 18 years (Hyatt v. Shalala).

“Although we in our profession must be wary of elitism, I have learned that there are some tools that only lawyers can wield. To join this board, to be part of this cause, is some honor indeed.”

Learn more about John.

As a grantee of the federal Legal Services Corporation, at least 60% of our board members must be attorneys and at least one-third of our members must be financially eligible to receive our services. The remaining members can be appointed by the board itself without regard to the members’ professions or financial circumstances.

Click here for the full list of our board members.

# # #

About

Legal Aid of North Carolina is a statewide, nonprofit law firm that provides free legal services in civil matters to low-income people in order to ensure equal access to justice and to remove legal barriers to economic opportunity. Learn more at legalaidnc.org and follow us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and LinkedIn.

Media Contact

Sean Driscoll, Director of Public Relations, 919-856-2132, seand@legalaidnc.org

Category: Media release

← Back to Disaster Relief

To help ensure North Carolinians are prepared for this upcoming hurricane season, Legal Aid of North Carolina’s Disaster Relief Project is holding free events for Craven and Jones county residents aimed at helping eligible North Carolinians overcome the legal issues that could be a barrier to recovery from a storm.    

“While property ownership and estate planning may not immediately come to mind when thinking about preparing for hurricane season, they can be critical aspects of recovery after a storm,” said Dale Deese, managing attorney of Legal Aid’s Disaster Relief Project. “These events are a great opportunity to learn more about how Legal Aid can help with disaster recovery and also access some of our services directly at the events.”  

Legal Aid will partner with the Craven County Disaster Recovery Alliance on Saturday, May 8, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Oak Grove United Methodist Church in Havelock for a drop-in informational event focused on heir property, property that has been passed down within families informally and not through a will. Legal Aid representatives will be available at the event to provide general information about how property ownership issues can arise when seeking recovery funds following a storm and can screen individuals on site for eligibility for Legal Aid’s free services. 

On May 22, Legal Aid will partner with The Father’s Refuge to provide estate planning services to survivors of Hurricane Florence. Individuals who are eligible for Legal Aid’s services will be able to get help drafting and executing end-of-life documents such as wills and powers of attorney free of charge. The Father’s Refuge will also be providing food and use of their campgrounds during the event. The event will take place at 9210 Hwy 55 W., Dover, NC 28526 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. While walk-ins are welcome, Legal Aid encourages people to register in advance by calling (984) 297-1977 to reach Legal Aid or (252) 497-8783 to reach Scott Murphy at The Father’s Refuge.  

Both events will take place outdoors, and masks and social distancing will be enforced. 

About 
Legal Aid of North Carolina is a statewide, nonprofit law firm that provides free legal services in civil matters to low-income people in order to ensure equal access to justice and to remove legal barriers to economic opportunity. Legal Aid’s Disaster Relief Project provides legal assistance and education to survivors of natural disasters in North Carolina and supports community economic development and long-term recovery in disaster-impacted communities. Call the Legal Aid NC helpline at 866-219-5262 or visit legalaidnc.org/apply to learn about eligibility for our services and to get Legal Aid’s assistance. 

Category: Media release

← Back to Consumer Issues

NEW HANOVER COUNTY—New Hanover County residents with a suspended or revoked driver’s license have until July 2 to register for a free license-restoration event.

To register:

  • Call Legal Aid of North Carolina’s toll-free helpline at 1-866-219-5262
  • As soon as you hear the automated greeting, dial 2659
  • The helpline is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
  • July 2 is the last day to register. Space is limited, so act fast!

Legal Aid staff will screen callers to ensure they are eligible for a license restoration. The first 200 eligible callers will be asked to attend an event on Friday, August 20, in New Hanover County, where they will complete the restoration process.

This event is sponsored by LINC, the NC Second Chance AllianceNew Hanover and Pender County District Attorney’s Office, the New Hanover County Bar Association, the New Hanover County Public Defender’s Office and Legal Aid of North Carolina.

This effort is part of our Drive Forward NC program, which provides free license-restoration services to low-income people so they can secure and maintain employment, and otherwise engage fully and independently in their professional, family and social lives.

Category: Media release

RALEIGH—The North Carolina Bar Association announced May 19 that Johnnie C. Larrie, the head of our consumer practice group and Economic Justice Initiative, is this year’s recipient of the Deborah Greenblatt Outstanding Legal Services Attorney Award. Read the announcement.

Johnnie will receive the award June 17, during the Bar Association’s Annual Meeting, which will be held virtually this year. Learn more about the Annual Meeting.

The Greenblatt Award honors legal aid lawyers who make exemplary contributions to the provision of legal assistance to North Carolinians living in poverty. The award is one of the Bar Association’s annual Pro Bono Awards, which are given to lawyers, law students, law firms and other groups for public-interest legal work. Learn more about the Pro Bono Awards.

The late Deborah Greenblatt was the executive director of Disability Rights North Carolina for more than two decades before her death from cancer in 2005. She was an inspirational leader in the legal aid and disability rights communities. Learn more about Deborah Greenblatt.

To learn more about Johnnie Larrie’s career as one of North Carolina’s leading consumer-rights lawyers, read the award nomination submitted by her Legal Aid colleagues.

Nomination of Johnnie C. Larrie
for the
Deborah Greenblatt Outstanding Legal Services Attorney Award 

In her roles with Legal Aid, Johnnie manages the statewide consumer practice group responsible for fostering litigation, general advocacy strategies, and practices that enhance positive legal, economic, and social outcomes for North Carolina consumers. Additionally, she manages a highly skilled unit of paralegals and attorneys who provide consumer case management, supervisory assistance, and technical resource support to field offices responsible for providing legal representation to vulnerable populations. Established in 1991, The Deborah Greenblatt Outstanding Legal Services Attorney Award, formerly known as the Outstanding Legal Services Attorney Award, is presented to an attorney who provides exemplary legal service through an agency or other non-profit entity that serves low-income communities.

Johnnie is an experienced consumer defense attorney with over 25 years of legal experience. Her entire professional life has been dedicated to advancing law and policy initiatives that promote public education, health, and economic development causes for socially vulnerable populations. She currently serves as the consumer practice group manager for Legal Aid of North Carolina (LANC). In addition, she is the Senior Managing Attorney of our Economic Justice Initiative. In both roles she oversees and manages LANC’s statewide consumer work.

Prior to working at LANC, Johnnie worked as general counsel to Community Reinvestment Association of North Carolina regarding its fair lending and fair housing work; general counsel to North Carolina Community Development Initiative in support of its community economic development work; and she served as a public policy analyst with the North Carolina Institute of Minority Economic Development. All these advocacy roles fueled her passion to advocate for economically disadvantaged clients and pushed her forward to develop the skills she needed to be a champion for those who were most vulnerable.

Johnnie is a dynamic, passionate, and dedicated Legal Aid attorney. She began her career at LANC in 2004 as the Managing Attorney of the Fayetteville Office, where she served until 2008. In addition to managing a full-time staff regarding their general substantive legal work, she was hired to use her experience and training to advocate on behalf of consumer clients who had become caught in the aftermath challenges of Hurricane Floyd. Many of those clients were still facing a plethora of consumer challenges, of which one of the most pressing was mortgage foreclosure. Too many people were losing their homes and on the precipice of crippling economic instability. She, along with Hazel Mack, the Mortgage Foreclosure Project (MFP) director, helped to develop and implement MFP, which began in Eastern North Carolina and later spread statewide. When Johnnie joined LANC, the mortgage foreclosure crisis that hit the state and nation had been developing for years. In dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Floyd, the MFP team saw the developing foreclosure crisis in NC grow at alarming rates. By 2008, the housing crisis intensified, and Johnnie’s skills were needed full-time as part of the MFP team. Johnnie, along with other members the MFP team, made significant contributions in identifying innovative legal strategies to assist low-income homeowners save their homes. They worked together with attorneys from across the state to defend homeowners facing foreclosure, by developing a loss mitigation/loan modification program, building a Chapter 13 Bankruptcy practice to help homeowners restructure their debts and regain control over their financial futures, and expanding litigation strategies to fight mortgage foreclosures in court and save homes. Incorporating Johnnie’s impassioned approach to consumer representation, the team pursued untested legal theories and broke new ground in the application of NC foreclosure law.

Johnnie’s passion, tenacity, experience, and leadership in advocating for consumers made her a natural fit to be selected to manage the MFP following Hazel Mack’s retirement in 2016. The MFP was recently renamed the Economic Justice Initiative (EJI), as the demand for expanded consumer defense representation necessitated enhanced advocacy beyond mortgage foreclosure work. As the Senior Managing Attorney of EJI, Johnnie leads an elite and highly skilled unit of attorneys and paralegals who provide consumer case management, supervisory assistance, and technical resource support to LANC’s field offices. The EJI team provides research and co-counseling support to local office legal staff with zealous defense of foreclosure and consumer cases; facilitates statewide and regional foreclosure and consumer defense trainings; develops collaborative advocacy frameworks with partnering government and nonprofit agencies to provide consumers with broad access channels for addressing mortgage creditor concerns and threats of foreclosure; provides financial education and program outreach to the client community at-large; and a host of other activities to support low-income consumers.

Although Johnnie has been an excellent leader who has performed remarkable work, she particularly exhibited superb leadership skills when she guided LANC and consumer clients through the rapid changes that affected consumers during the COVID-19 pandemic. COVID-19 unexpectedly shocked our nation and millions of people experienced economic instability. Between January 2020 and May 2020, there were approximately 54,000 pre-foreclosure filings in North Carolina. Numerous LANC clients experienced financial burdens, and many were at risk of facing foreclosure. Johnnie swiftly acted by examining relevant laws including the federal Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act) to support homeowners during the pandemic. She also dedicated a tremendous amount of time preparing and distributing educational resources including memoranda, presentations, and email alerts to guide attorneys through laws and agency rules that impacted consumers in the midst of the COVID-19 crisis. Johnnie spearheaded detailed, written guidance on areas such as foreclosure moratoria and loss mitigation options including mortgage forbearance and Chapter 13 Bankruptcy. Furthermore, she participated in virtual trainings about COVID-19 impacts on foreclosure, bankruptcy, and other consumer issues. Based upon Johnnie’s splendid work during the pandemic, many LANC clients were able to utilize protections to help them maintain homeownership. By the end of 2020, the number of pre-foreclosure filings exceeded 100,000. The preparatory measures Johnnie employed in response to COVID-19 will be invaluable to the comprehensive advocacy strategies required to go forward with ensuring protections for individuals and families to obtain and maintain economic stability.

Throughout her LANC career, Johnnie made an exemplary contribution to the provision of legal assistance to help meet the needs of low-income consumers in North Carolina. She strongly advocates for consumer rights and she is truly a relentless trailblazer whose leadership and consumer advocacy has protected thousands of consumers in North Carolina.

# # #

About 

Legal Aid of North Carolina is a statewide, nonprofit law firm that provides free legal services in civil matters to low-income people in order to ensure equal access to justice and to remove legal barriers to economic opportunity. Learn more at legalaidnc.org. Follow us on FacebookTwitterInstagram and YouTube.

Media Contact 

Sean Driscoll, Director of Public Relations, 919-856-2132, seand@legalaidnc.org

Category: Media release

DURHAM—The Durham Eviction Diversion Program is launching a campaign today to raise $100,000 in rental assistance for our neighbors in need. The nationwide eviction moratorium issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is set to expire June 30, leaving potentially tens of thousands of people in Durham County vulnerable to housing insecurity and eviction. While the moratorium has provided people with protection during the COVID-19 pandemic, it has not absolved them from owing past due rent.

To prevent a potential tidal wave of evictions following the expiration of the moratorium, the Durham Eviction Diversion Program will distribute rental assistance to tenants struggling to pay their rent. The program encourages those who are able to do so to donate to the fund to help our neighbors facing homelessness. The fund will support those who have been denied rental assistance from government-based programs or who have rental debt exceeding that paid by government-based programs. The fund will provide area residents with up to $3,000 in rental assistance.

Already, individuals and civic groups have started to generously contribute to the program’s new rental assistance fund. Most recently, the Rotary Club of Durham contributed $5,000 towards the fund. As Todd Taylor of the Rotary Club has explained, “by assisting tenants with the resources to help pay landlords rent owed, we help relieve the stress, worry, tension, and pressure on tenants and their families. By making sure the landlords get some fair compensation from the tenants, we hope to build on the goodwill between the landlords and tenants. The community at large wins because we avoid putting a family on the street, the landlord can pay property taxes and power bills and the ripple effect builds as those in our community go to lunch and shop locally. The Rotary Club of Durham is glad to be part of this effort and encourages others to join in and continue to make Durham truly a wonderful caring and sharing community.”

Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Durham Eviction Diversion Program has provided free legal services to more than 1,000 families and individuals. The program’s 10 advocates boast a significant success rate at keeping families in their homes, helping them avoid eviction, or enabling people to more easily pursue new housing options.

Durham Eviction Diversion Program clients consistently attest to the importance of free legal help. As explained by a former client, “The Durham Eviction Diversion Program saved me from being evicted…Had it not been for Legal Aid, I would be homeless.” As program director Peter Gilbert has emphasized, “everyone deserves a safe and secure place to call home.”

Those who wish to donate to the fund can do so by visiting Legal Aid of North Carolina’s online donation form at http://bit.ly/donatelanc and selecting “Durham Rental Assistance Fund” from the “Donation Designation” menu. For questions about the fund or about making a donation, please contact Community Resource Coordinator, Dr. Alexis Clark (alexisc@legalaidnc.org).

For those who donate at the $100 level, you’ll receive a Legal Aid of North Carolina t-shirt. Wear your pride for the Eviction Diversion Program on your sleeve. For those who donate at the $250 level, we’ll send you a book by one of the acclaimed authors in our 2021 lecture series. Learn more about housing and the law. For those who donate at the $500 level, you’ll be invited to attend court with one of our housing advocates. Bear witness to the difference that having legal representation makes in the lives of our clients. For those who donate at the $1,000 level, you’ll receive all of the aforementioned items and opportunities as well as an invitation to have coffee with our program director, Peter Gilbert.

# # #

About

The Durham Eviction Diversion Program is a partnership of Legal Aid of North Carolina’s Durham office, Duke Law’s Civil Justice Clinic and the Durham County Department of Social Services. The program provides free legal services and tenant education to Durham County residents to reduce evictions and increase housing stability. Learn more at durhamevictionsmap.org.

Media contact

Alexis Clark, Community Resource Coordinator, Durham Eviction Diversion Program, 919-597-8820, alexisc@legalaidnc.org

Category: Media release

← Back to Consumer Issues

WINSTON-SALEM—Forsyth County residents with a suspended or revoked driver’s license have until May 21 to register for a free license-restoration program.

To register:

  • Call Legal Aid of North Carolina’s toll-free helpline at 1-866-219-5262
  • As soon as you hear the automated greeting, dial 2659
  • The helpline is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
  • May 21 is the last day to register. Space is limited, so act fast!

Legal Aid staff will screen callers to ensure they are eligible for a license restoration. Eligible callers will be asked to attend a future event—date to be determined—where they will complete the restoration process.

The event is sponsored by Drive Forward NC, a partnership of Kilpatrick Townsend, Truist Bank and Legal Aid of North Carolina.

Category: Media release

← Back to Housing

DURHAM—Environmental justice advocate, MacArthur “Genius” Fellow and author of Waste: One woman’s fight against America’s Dirty Secret, Catherine Coleman Flowers will give a free virtual lecture about housing and environmental injustice May 20 from 12-1 p.m.

The lecture is hosted by the Durham Eviction Diversion Program, a partnership of Legal Aid of North Carolina and Duke Law’s Civil Justice Clinic; and the Nicholas School of Environmental Science at Duke University.

The lecture is the second in a series launched in February by the Durham Eviction Diversion Program to support the new Durham Rental Assistance Fund, which provides badly needed rental assistance to low-income tenants in Durham County, a hotspot for North Carolina’s eviction crisis.

To attend the Flowers lecture

  • On Zoom: Use the form below or click here to register. (You do not need a Zoom account to register or attend.)
  • On Facebook: Visit our Facebook page at 12 p.m. on May 20 to watch the live broadcast.

To give to the Durham Rental Assistance fund

  • Go to our online donation form
  • Select “Durham Rental Assistance Fund” in the “Donation Designation” drop-down menu
  • Complete and submit the donation form

To learn more about the Durham Eviction Diversion Program’s lecture series, contact Community Resource Coordinator Dr. Alexis Clark.

Register

Category: Media release

Dear friends and colleagues, 

On April 20, 2021, the jury reached a guilty verdict, on all counts, in the Derek Chauvin case. Legal Aid of North Carolina supports this decision.

Regardless of your personal thoughts concerning this case and its outcome, it is undeniable that the death of George Floyd has been an extremely impactful event for our country. As we consider next steps as a nation, we encourage everyone to remember the humanity of those around you. Social justice, equity, and, most importantly, humanity must be at the core of everything that we do if we are ever to eradicate the systemic racism that still exists in our nation. 

While this verdict is a relief for many, this is not the end. There is still much work to be done as numerous Black and Brown victims of unjust police killings have not received justice. We view this verdict with hope, as a step in the right direction on the moral arc of the universe. We must continue to support one another and join together in peaceful solidarity as we progress towards true justice and equality for all people, not only on matters of police reform, but on matters of housing, education, employment, and the simple essentials necessary for meaningful participation in all that our nation has to offer. 

As we individually process this outcome, we encourage everyone to continue to take care of their mental health and remember that we are stronger together. 

Sincerely, 

Legal Aid of North Carolina

Category: Media release

← Back to Consumer Issues

RALEIGH—If someone claiming to be an employee of Legal Aid of North Carolina asks you to send them your financial information by email—don’t do it! A real Legal Aid employee will never ask you to send financial info by email.

Here are some things you can do to make sure you are talking with a real Legal Aid employee:

  • Call them through our phone system: How do you know if the phone number someone gave you is a real Legal Aid number? Visit our Offices page to find the real phone numbers for all of our offices. If a person really works for Legal Aid, you can reach them though their office’s phone system.
  • Ask them to email you from a Legal Aid address: All Legal Aid employees have an email address that ends in “legalaidnc.org.” Look closely! Scammers often use email addresses that look like real addresses but are slightly different. For example, “legalaidenc.org” looks like it’s from us, but the extra “e” in the address means it’s from someone else.
  • Ask for a business card. All Legal Aid employees have business cards with their name, phone number, email address and the Legal Aid logo.

Still not sure? Call or email our director of public relations, Sean Driscoll, at 919-856-2132 or seand@legalaidnc.org to verify if someone really is a Legal Aid employee.

Visit the Protecting Consumers section of the N.C. Department of Justice website to learn how to protect yourself from fraud and scams, and how you can file an official complaint with the department.