Jackson Laws (operating under the brand Joseph McClelland, Esq.) is a law firm based in Decatur, Georgia that specializes in credit repair through legal enforcement rather than traditional dispute services. Founded and led by Joseph P. McClelland, a Georgia and New York licensed attorney with 20 years of experience, the firm has received media recognition from Martha Stewart, Best Company, Newsday, and Investopedia. The firm positions itself explicitly against traditional credit repair companies, instead functioning as a legal practice that pursues violations of the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA).
The firm handles seven primary service areas: credit report errors, identity theft, mixed/merged credit files, deceased consumer reporting, background check errors, bankruptcy-related credit issues, and TCPA robocall violations. Their approach focuses on disputing only items they can prove are inaccurate—not simply disputing all negative items. Services include correcting wrong balances, addressing false missed payment reports, removing fraudulent accounts from identity theft, fixing merged credit files between individuals, resolving reports of deceased consumers, correcting bankruptcy-related balance and payment errors, and pursuing damages under FCRA provisions.
What distinguishes this firm is their contingency fee model: they charge no upfront fees and only collect payment if they secure a settlement. Under FCRA law, defendants must pay both actual damages plus attorneys' fees if the plaintiff prevails. This means clients do not pay legal fees directly—the defendant's settlement covers legal costs. The firm explicitly differentiates itself from credit repair companies by only pursuing provable inaccuracies rather than blanket disputes, and by leveraging statutory damages under federal law rather than offering dispute-only services.
This is a legitimate law firm pursuing legal remedies for credit reporting violations, not a credit repair service. However, the model requires that errors be provably false and that the firm believes it can win a case—they will not dispute items where the accuracy is questionable. The firm operates remotely and virtually and offers free initial consultations. While the contingency model eliminates upfront costs, success depends on the firm's assessment that a case is winnable and that damages are recoverable.