Employment Law | Serving Indianapolis, IN
Indiana Law Firm
If you are a Hoosier, and you believe your legal rights have been violated – by your employer, your school, by a public accommodation or business, or by your local, state, or federal government itself – please call Employment and Civil Rights Legal Services today to discuss your case at no cost.
When your civil rights have been violated, the last thing you want to be is on your own! You need an attorney who can help you navigate through the legal system and help you get the justice you deserve. That's what we do at Employment & Civil Rights Legal Services.
Contact us today if you need legal assistance with any of the following:
Call Jay Meisenhelder, Attorney at Law today at 317-231-5193 to arrange your initial consultation.
Jay Meisenhelder created Employment & Civil Rights Legal Services after several years of practicing plaintiff's employment law with one of Indiana's leading plaintiffs employment law firms: The Employment Discrimination and Labor Law Firm of John H. Haskin & Associates (formerly, HASKIN LAUTER LaRUE & GIBBONS). Prior to joing the Haskin firm, he was a deputy prosecutor in Marion County for eight years, primarily in the Sex Crimes and Child Abuse Unit, where he maintained a jury trial conviction rate of 69.7 percent. Jay received his law degree from Indiana University Mauer School of Law in May 1997, graduating cum laude, and receiving admission to the Order of Barristers, a national honorary society recognizing excellence in courtroom advocacy skills.
Following his graduation, Meisenhelder served as an Adjunct Professor of Law at the school, teaching Trial Advocacy classes and coaching the school’s trial competition team to a fifth-place finish in the National Trial Competition, sponsored each year by the Texas Bar Association's Young Lawyers Committee. Jay was admitted to the Indiana State Bar in October 1997. He is admitted to practice before all Indiana state courts, as well as the United States District Courts for the Northern and Southern Districts of Indiana, and the Western District of Michigan, as well as the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit.