COVID-19 underscores the importance of estate planning. You are sitting at home. Schools and businesses have been closed. You are rationing toilet paper. (Who saw that coming?) You cannot see your loved ones. Could things be any worse? According to a recent Kiplinger article titled “Coronavirus Legal Advice: Get Your Business and Estate in Order […]
COVID-19 tests will be covered under certain Medicare plans. As a worldwide pandemic, COVID-19 has been all over the news. The value of COVID-19 testing is emphasized by healthcare workers across the country. Although these tests are important, they raise a number of questions. What are they? According to a recent CNBC article titled “Medicare […]
Our Law Firm COVID-19 Response With the current events surrounding COVID-19, we are reminded of the frailty and unpredictability of life. Everyone has been impacted in some way—whether through the closing of businesses, quarantining of loved ones, or the social distancing of the general population. Because the services we provide are especially important to individuals […]
Advance health care directives are important for all adult Americans. People do not stay healthy forever. Bodies either wear out over time or get beat down through injury or illness. When this happens, people may not be able to express their own medical decisions. According to a recent Forbes article titled “Two-Thirds of All Americans […]
Commercial solicitations are permitted by the Missouri Rules of Professional Conduct but are neither submitted to nor approved by the Missouri Bar or the Supreme Court of Missouri.
Overland Park Estate Planning Attorney Kyle Krull assists clients in Kansas and Missouri with Estate Planning, Wills, Trusts, Revocable Living Trusts, Charitable Planning, Asset Protection and Business Succession Planning in the greater Kansas City area including Overland Park, Leawood, Olathe, Lenexa, Johnson County Kansas and Jackson County Missouri.
REMEMBER: “The choice of a lawyer is an important decision and should not be based solely upon advertisements.” This statement is required by rule of the Supreme Court of Missouri.