A new way to get legal advice online

The Online Law Office of Walter Oney gives you...

Get started this way:

You download special WebLaw™ software that will run on your PC. It talks directly to software running on a computer in my office and enables me to conduct an interview at your convenience and pace rather than mine. Note: WebLaw runs only on computers with Microsoft Windows.

Your personal information stays on your computer until you specifically send it to me. WebLaw uses strong encryption to protect your information, both on your computer and over the Internet.

Click here to download and install WebLaw™.

You may receive security warnings during the download. Click on "Run" or "Open" to proceed to the next steps. Click here and here to see examples of some warnings you might see.

After the download and installation finishes, press the Start Interview button on the last page of the setup program in order to begin your intake interview.

Submitting your case:

The initial interview should take just a few minutes, and the final screen will tell you exactly how to submit the interview results to my office so that I can consider whether to accept your case or not. If I'm able to handle your case, my office will contact you with an intake code for use in a more detailed second interview, also using WebLaw.

Are you trying to start WebLaw a second time after already installing it?

Using the mouse, click on the "Start" button (usually in the lower left-hand corner of your Windows screen), then on "Programs" or "All Programs", then on "Walter Oney Attorney at Law", and then finally on "WebLaw online office software".

WebLaw will prompt you for the user name and password you created the first time.

Follow the instructions on the first screen to reload a saved interview file.

Important notice:

Any information you provide to me using WebLaw is covered by attorney-client privilege, even if I end up not taking your case. I will not, however, be acting as your lawyer until I specifically tell you so. That means that I will not be giving you legal advice until I agree to take your case. You should not act, or fail to act, based on any information you obtain from the WebLaw screens you view until after I formally notify you that I'm taking your case.