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Pascagoula Longshore Lawyer: The TV Lawyer Has Never Stood In Front Of A Federal Judge On A Longshore Case In His Entire Career
I have never seen or heard of a single TV lawyer, not just on the Gulf Coast but anywhere in the entire New Orleans district of the U.S. Department of Labor, ever trying a longshore case in front of an Administrative Law Judge.
Not one.
So if you need a Pascagoula Longshore lawyer, why are you calling them? The New Orleans district covers multiple states and covers the entire Gulf Coast waterfront. Billions of dollars in maritime commerce. Thousands of workers at shipyards, ports, and waterfront facilities who get hurt every year doing some of the most dangerous industrial work in America. And the TV lawyers who plaster their faces on billboards from Biloxi to Baton Rouge have never once walked into that federal hearing room and tried one of these cases.
Think about what that means for you.
Imagine you need surgery. Not a consultation. Actual surgery. Someone is going to cut you open and either fix what is wrong or make it permanently worse. And the surgeon sitting across from you has never performed that surgery. Has never been in the operating room when it was being done. Has read about it. Has a brochure in his waiting room that says he handles it. But has never actually done it.
Would you let that surgeon touch you?
Of course not. It would be insane.
But that is exactly what you are doing when you call the TV lawyer about your longshore case. You are handing your federal workers’ compensation claim, your wages, your medical care, your family’s financial future, to a lawyer who has never stood in front of the judge who will decide your case. Who has never filed the forms. Who has never taken on the insurance carrier at a formal hearing. Who has never been through the Benefits Review Board on appeal. Who does not know the judges, does not know the system, and does not know this fight.
I try the heck out of these cases. I know the judges. I know the system. I know what it takes to win in a federal longshore hearing. The TV lawyer does not, because he has never been there.

WARNING: What Happens The Moment You Call The TV Lawyer About Your Longshore Case
Here is what actually happens when you call that 1-800 number on the billboard.
Someone answers. It is not the lawyer whose face is on the sign. It is a person whose job is to sign you up. They ask a few questions, tell you that you have a great case, and put your information into their system. Then they assign your file to a case manager.
The case manager is a secretary with a different title. She handles dozens of files at once. She is not a lawyer. She cannot give you legal advice. She cannot make strategic decisions about your case. She cannot walk into a federal hearing room and fight for you. Her job is to manage the paperwork and keep you from calling too often. What she definitely isn’t is this: she isn’t a Pascagoula longshore lawyer.
Months go by. You call. You get the case manager. She tells you they are working on it. Meanwhile, the insurance carrier handling your claim has a dedicated longshore adjuster who does this every single day. That adjuster knows the federal system better than your TV lawyer does, because your TV lawyer has never been in the federal system.
The carrier makes a lowball offer. Your TV lawyer, who has never tried one of these cases and has no interest in starting now, tells you it is a reasonable offer. You take it. You leave money on the table. You find out years later what your case was actually worth. By then it is too late.
That is not a hypothetical. That is a pattern that plays out on this coast every year with longshore workers who deserved better.
The Federal System The TV Lawyer Has Never Entered
The Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act is a federal law. It has nothing to do with Mississippi state workers’ compensation. It is administered by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs. Mississippi longshore claims are handled through the New Orleans District Office and the cases are tried in front of Judges in the Covington, Louisiana Offices, and cases that go to formal hearing are decided by Administrative Law Judges.
This is a completely separate federal system with its own forms, its own procedures, its own deadlines, its own standards, and its own judges. Knowing Mississippi personal injury law does not prepare you for this system. Knowing Mississippi workers’ compensation law does not prepare you for this system. The only thing that prepares you for this system is actually practicing in it.
I have practiced in it. The TV lawyer advertising on your television set has not so he’s pretending to be a Pascagoula longshore lawyer and the truth is he isn’t.
When your case goes to hearing before an Administrative Law Judge, the judge has seen lawyers walk through that room hundreds of times. He knows which lawyers know what they are doing and which ones are faking it. He knows which lawyers have prepared their clients properly and which ones showed up hoping for the best. He knows which lawyers understand the LHWCA and which ones looked it up the night before.
I know those judges. I try the heck out of these cases. The TV lawyer has never met them and has nothing to offer you when the hearing date arrives so why would you hire him as your Pascagoula longshore lawyer?
What The LHWCA Actually Does And Does Not Do For You
If you are covered under the Longshore and Harbor Workers’ Compensation Act, your employer’s insurance carrier is required to pay your medical expenses with no deductible, pay you two-thirds of your average weekly wage while you cannot work, and compensate you for permanent disability if your injury leaves you with lasting impairment.
Two-thirds of your wage sounds like something. It is not enough. If you are the primary earner in your household, two-thirds of your wages while the mortgage, the car payment, the groceries, and the medical bills keep coming in is a financial crisis playing out in slow motion. The insurance carrier knows this. They count on it. The pressure is designed to make you accept whatever they offer before you understand what you are entitled to.
The Act also provides a schedule of compensation for permanent partial disability. Lose the use of a hand. Lose the use of an arm. Suffer permanent hearing loss from years of working in the noise of a shipyard. Lose vision from a workplace incident. Each of those injuries is assigned a specific number of weeks of compensation under the schedule. The insurance carrier’s entire strategy is to fight the extent of your disability and minimize the number of weeks they have to pay. Your lawyer’s entire job is to document your disability fully and fight for the maximum the law allows.
That fight requires knowing the system cold. It requires knowing which medical evidence matters and how to present it in a federal hearing. It requires knowing how to cross-examine the carrier’s medical expert when he minimizes your injury on the stand. It requires knowing the judges and knowing how they think about these cases.
The TV lawyer cannot do any of that. He has never done it. And he is not going to figure it out on your case.
Ingalls, Bollinger, And The Employers Who Have Been Fighting Longshore Claims For Decades
Huntington Ingalls Industries operates Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula. It is one of the largest military shipbuilders in the United States and one of the largest private employers in Mississippi. Bollinger Shipyards operates multiple Gulf Coast facilities. The port and waterfront operations along the Pascagoula River corridor have been generating longshore claims for generations.
These employers and their insurance carriers have been handling LHWCA claims for decades. The adjuster sitting on the other side of your claim has processed hundreds of injured worker files. He knows every tactic. He knows how to conduct a recorded statement that sounds routine and produces answers that will hurt you at hearing. He knows which forms to send you that, if you sign them without reading them carefully, give away rights you did not know you had. He knows which doctors will minimize your injury and how to funnel you toward them.
That is who you are up against from the moment you report your injury. The carrier starts building its defense before you have even thought about calling a lawyer. Every day without experienced representation on your side is a day the carrier is pulling ahead of you.
The TV lawyer whose face is on the billboard has never gone up against an Ingalls longshore adjuster in a federal hearing. I have. That is not a small distinction.
The Three Things The Insurance Carrier Does In Every Single Longshore Case
First, they attack the claim’s legitimacy. No matter how clear the facts are, the carrier will find something to dispute. A prior medical record. A statement you made without thinking about how it would read later. Something in your personnel history. They will build an argument that your injury was pre-existing, that you exaggerated it, or that it was not caused by your work. The adjuster running this has done it so many times he does it without thinking. That is not a threat. It is a description of what is already happening on your file.
Second, they control your medical care. The LHWCA gives the employer the right to direct your initial treatment. The doctor they send you to is not there to get you fully healed. He is there to produce records that serve the carrier’s position and clear you for return to duty as quickly as possible. You have rights here, including the right to your own physician, but asserting those rights correctly and at the right time while choosing a doctor whose documentation will actually hold up in a federal hearing is a strategic decision with consequences that run through your entire case.
Third, they offer you money before you know what your case is worth. The timing is deliberate. They watch the financial pressure build and they put a number in front of you when you are most vulnerable. That number is calibrated to the minimum they believe they can get away with, not to what your injury is actually worth under the Act. The workers who take it spend years learning what they gave up. The ones who get proper representation before accepting anything find out what the case was actually worth first.
Three Mistakes That Will Wreck Your Longshore Case Before It Even Starts
The first mistake is giving a recorded statement to the insurance adjuster before talking to a lawyer. You are not required to give one. The adjuster will frame it as routine, as something that speeds up your claim, as just getting the facts down. As you hear that framing, understand that every word in it is designed to lower your guard. The statement is a tool. It exists to get answers from you that will be used against you at hearing. Every question the adjuster asks is crafted to produce an answer that helps the carrier, not you. Do not give that statement to anyone before talking to a lawyer who has actually been in that federal hearing room.
The second mistake is signing carrier forms without reading them. Some of those forms are broad medical releases that hand the carrier the keys to your entire medical history. They will review every record going back years looking for the pre-existing condition argument. Some forms waive rights you did not know existed. The moment you decide your interests matter is the moment nothing gets signed until a lawyer who handles longshore cases has reviewed it first.
The third mistake is waiting too long to act. The LHWCA has a two-year statute of limitations from the date of injury or the date you knew or reasonably should have known your injury was related to your work. Two years sounds like a long time. It disappears fast. Witnesses leave the facility or forget the details. Surveillance footage from the day of the accident gets overwritten. Medical records become difficult to obtain. And every day you wait is another day the carrier’s defense gets stronger while yours stands completely still.
The Pascagoula Shipyard Community That Has Built This Country’s Navy And Deserves More Than A Settlement Mill
The workers at Ingalls Shipbuilding have built destroyers, amphibious assault ships, Littoral Combat Ships, and some of the most technically complex naval vessels afloat anywhere in the world. The people working along the Pascagoula waterfront do work that requires years of training, carries serious physical risk every single day, and keeps this country’s naval capability operational.
When one of those workers gets hurt, they deserve a lawyer who takes their claim as seriously as they took their work. Not a lawyer whose face is on a billboard and whose name the case manager will mention to them three months after they signed the contract. A lawyer who picks up the phone, knows your name, knows your file, knows the system your case lives in, and is prepared to walk into that federal hearing room in New Orleans and fight.
My office is in Ocean Springs. That is twelve miles from the Ingalls main gate. I am not calling you from a tower in Jackson or a New Orleans satellite office staffed by people who have never been to Pascagoula. I am here. I know this community. I know what is at stake for the families in Moss Point, Gautier, Hurley, and Escatawpa who depend on those shipyard wages.
I have been practicing law since 1994. I have tried these cases. I know the judges who decide them. The TV lawyer on the billboard cannot say any of that, and if you ask him directly, he will not be able to prove otherwise.
The Foster Fair Fee Guarantee
I am the only lawyer on the Gulf Coast who puts this in writing and means it: you will put more money in your pocket than I put in mine on your case. Every case. No exceptions. That is the Foster Fair Fee Guarantee, and it goes in your contract on the day you hire me.
The TV settlement mill will not make that promise. Their operation depends on volume. When you run dozens of cases at once through a system of case managers, the fee is the priority and your individual recovery is what it is. That is not a character attack on anyone. It is the math of how that business model works.
I take a limited number of cases. I work every one myself. When I am willing to guarantee in writing that you come out ahead of me financially, that tells you something different about how I operate than what the billboard lawyer is offering.
One Gulf Coast TV lawyer was so threatened by injured Pascagoula shipyard workers seeing this guarantee that he weaponized the Bar complaint process to try to get it taken down. The Bar reviewed it and threw the complaint out. When a competitor uses a regulator as a marketing weapon to suppress a written promise that benefits consumers, he is not raising a legitimate ethics concern. He is telling you exactly what he is afraid of. An injured worker who knows the right comparison question is the worst thing that can happen to a settlement mill, and that complaint is what the worry looks like in writing.
Before you make any decision, get my free longshore book. It covers what the carrier is doing to your claim right now and what mistakes will permanently damage your case before you ever get a lawyer involved. Fill out the form below and I will send it immediately.
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The Pascagoula Longshore $5,000 Double Dare No TV Lawyer Has Ever Collected
I will pay you $2,500.00 cash if the TV lawyer whose face is on the billboard personally handles your Pascagoula longshore case from the first call to the final check. Every phone call. Every hearing appearance. Every filing. Personally. I will pay you another $2,500.00 if that same TV lawyer personally argues your case before a federal Administrative Law Judge in the New Orleans district of the U.S. Department of Labor.
That offer has been open for years. Nobody has ever collected. Because it never happens. The carriers handling Ingalls and Bollinger longshore files know it. That is exactly why they lowball every case signed by a TV settlement mill.
Questions You Should Be Asking Before You Hire Anyone
Should I Hire A TV Lawyer Who Has Never Tried A Longshore Case?
No. And here is why that answer is exactly that simple. A longshore case that goes to hearing is tried in front of a federal Administrative Law Judge under federal law and federal procedure. The lawyer who has never done this does not know the judges, does not know the evidentiary standards, does not know how to present medical evidence in this specific federal system, and does not know the arguments that work and the ones that get you nowhere. He is learning on your case. Your injury, your wages, your family’s financial future becomes his classroom. You deserve someone who has already been through that classroom and knows how to win.
Should I Hire A TV Lawyer Who Has Never Even Met The Judge That Will Decide My Longshore Case?
Think about what that actually means in practice. The judge who will decide whether you receive full benefits or a fraction of them, whether your medical care is covered going forward or cut off, whether your family gets what it needs or gets what the insurance carrier decided to offer, that judge has never seen your lawyer before. Your lawyer does not know how that judge thinks about medical evidence. Does not know what that judge has ruled on similar disputed injuries in prior cases. Does not know what that judge expects in terms of preparation and how evidence is organized and presented. Your lawyer is walking into that federal hearing room blind. You are not just at a disadvantage. You started behind and you stayed there.
What Is The Covington District Office And Why Has No TV Lawyer Ever Been There?
The Covington, Louisiana offices of the U.S. Department of Labor are where the Administrative Law Judges who hear Mississippi longshore cases work. No TV lawyer has ever been there for a hearing because TV lawyers do not try these cases. They settle them, or they settle for whatever the carrier offers, because they have no credible ability to threaten a formal hearing. When a case goes to hearing, it also goes to the Benefits Review Board on appeal and potentially to the Fifth Circuit. Every stage of that process requires a lawyer who knows the federal system. The carrier’s team knows it. Your lawyer needs to know it too.
Am I Covered Under The LHWCA Or Mississippi Workers’ Compensation?
As you think through that question, understand that the answer is not obvious and it is not the same for every worker at the same facility. Workers doing maritime employment on navigable waters or in the adjacent loading, unloading, and shipbuilding areas generally fall under the LHWCA. Workers at the same employer doing administrative or land-based support work may fall under Mississippi state workers’ compensation instead. The difference in available benefits can be significant. Getting the coverage question wrong at the start of your case, or trusting it to a lawyer who does not know the difference, is the kind of mistake that cannot always be fixed once it is made.
The Adjuster Wants A Recorded Statement. What Do I Do?
You decline. You are not required to give a recorded statement to the insurance carrier. The adjuster will tell you it is just standard procedure, that it helps document the facts, that it is in your interest to cooperate. None of that is true. The statement exists to produce answers that will be used against you at hearing. The adjuster is trained to ask questions that sound routine and produce answers that hurt your claim. The right answer is: I need to speak with my lawyer before I give any statement.
How Long Do I Have To File A Pascagoula Longshore Claim?
Two years from the date of injury or the date you knew or reasonably should have known your injury was related to your work under 33 U.S.C. Section 913. For occupational conditions like hearing loss or respiratory disease that develop over years of exposure at Ingalls or Bollinger, the clock runs from when you knew or should have known the connection to your employment. Evidence disappears. Witnesses move. Medical records become difficult to obtain. Every day you wait is a day the carrier is ahead of you.
What Is The Foster Fair Fee Guarantee And How Is It Different From What The TV Lawyer Offers?
The Foster Fair Fee Guarantee is a written commitment in your contract that you will put more money in your pocket than I put in mine. Not a promise at the initial meeting that evaporates when the case gets complicated. A written guarantee in the contract you sign on day one. The TV lawyer’s contract does the opposite. His fee structure is engineered so that on most cases his cut comes out larger than yours after expenses, costs, and the referral fee he is collecting that you were never told about. No TV settlement mill anywhere will put a fee fairness guarantee in writing because the math of their operation does not allow it.
P.S. The adjuster handling your Ingalls or Bollinger claim has worked hundreds of longshore cases in this federal system. The TV lawyer you are thinking about calling has worked zero. That is not an even fight. The free book on this page tells you exactly what questions to ask before you decide who fights it for you.
P.P.S. The Foster Fair Fee Guarantee is in your contract in writing on day one. You put more money in your pocket than I do. Every case. No exceptions. No TV settlement mill on this coast will promise you that because they cannot afford to keep it.
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