Social Security Disability Claims Attorney Ward HarperSalt Lake City attorney Ward Harper's interest in Social Security income and disability claims litigation dates back to 1984, when he went to work as a law clerk for Utah Legal Services. In the more than 20 years since then, he has kept his focus on appeals of disability benefits and supplemental security income claims before the Social Security Administration. As a trial lawyer, Ward Harper has won victories for his clients in 99% of the cases he has handled since January 2001. To find out how you can benefit from his experience, focus and remarkable record of success, contact the office of Ward Harper, Attorney at Law. We serve clients in Salt Lake City, Provo, Orem, Ogden, and anywhere in northern Utah. Administrative law judge hearings for this entire area are held in Salt Lake City. As your lawyer, Ward Harper represents you personally at every step of the process. Our law firm offers free consultations in all Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI) cases. We never charge or collect an attorney's fee unless we win your case, and then the fees are paid as a percentage of your past-due benefits. After completing law school at the University of Utah in 1987, Ward Harper stayed with Utah Legal Services, where he became head of the Social Security division at the Salt Lake City office. He then worked for several years as a staff attorney for the Salt Lake City Social Security administrative law judges, where he saw the claims litigation process from another side. He opened his own practice in 1994, and he has served the needs of persons with problems collecting disability benefits ever since. If you need advice and assistance with your SSDI or SSI claim, put Ward Harper's experience to work for you. Contact his Salt Lake City office for a free consultation. Every legal matter is different. The outcome of each legal case depends upon many factors, including the facts of the case. An attorney's success in past legal matters should not be relied upon to predict a successful outcome in your own case. |


