The Needleman Law Office has been operating for over 30 years and specializes exclusively in bankruptcy law for individuals and small businesses across Ohio, primarily serving the Southern District including Central Ohio, Franklin, Delaware, and Knox counties. The firm positions itself as a direct-attorney service rather than a paralegal-dependent operation, emphasizing that clients work with an actual bankruptcy attorney during consultations and throughout their cases.
The firm offers comprehensive bankruptcy services including Chapter 7 liquidation bankruptcy, Chapter 13 repayment plan bankruptcy, debt settlement and negotiation, foreclosure prevention through bankruptcy filing, and specialized student loan bankruptcy guidance. They also provide free virtual debt relief consultations lasting 15 minutes or less, which is a defined marketing promise on their website. Their service model includes a transparent three-step process: initial no-cost telephone consultation, paperwork preparation with credit counseling instructions, and final filing with court hearing preparation.
What distinguishes The Needleman Law Office is their emphasis on direct attorney involvement, their flat-fee pricing structure (quoted during consultation based on individual circumstances), and their explicit promise of dignified treatment during difficult financial situations. The firm also offers mock bankruptcy hearing practice to prepare clients for their actual 341 hearing, and they provide follow-up email summaries after initial consultations to ensure transparency.
As a law firm rather than a debt relief or settlement company, their service is fundamentally different from consolidation or settlement agencies. The main caveat is that bankruptcy is presented as a last resort, and they acknowledge during consultations they may recommend alternative routes depending on client circumstances. Specific financial outcomes (credit score recovery, discharge amounts) are not guaranteed on their website, and Chapter 7 cases are noted as typically being "no asset cases," meaning limited asset recovery.