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Peel v. Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission of Illinois, 110 S.Ct. 2281 (1990), disallows any state from prohibiting disclosure of NBTA certification.

Kansas State Coordinator

I am proud of this certification. . . . it was the best thing I could do to assist potential clients in making an informed decision [about my competence].
--Woody Longan
Why I Chose Board Certification
When I became Board Certified, I was the fourth lawyer in the State of Kansas. There was no local bar certification process. I felt the legal consumer in Kansas needed a benchmark to measure attorneys in their ability and willingness to go to trial. [NBTA] certification met that need.

Being able to publicly tell consumers of my certification served to give them a measure of confidence knowing they were represented by an attorney who not only goes to court but knew what to do when he got there.

I am proud of this certification. I think, in retrospect, it was the best thing I could do to assist potential clients in making an informed decision about the competence of their attorney.

S. W. "Woody" Longan III.
Certified since 1990
913.491.4050

Choose a Board Certified Trial Lawyer

All lawyers are not created equal, but all lawyers are free to take any case they want, regardless of whether they've proven themselves.

NBTA board certification provides both consumers and other lawyers looking to refer cases with an objective credential.

It just makes great sense to choose a board certified trial lawyer over a non-certified lawyer.

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