scott

Scott J. Chafin, Jr.

When I was 13, the coach of our rival baseball team was on the state tournament board.  He changed the rules to prevent me from playing in the state tournament two days before we were scheduled to play.  I asked my mom and dad what we could do.  They said “there’s nothing we can do about it because we don’t make the rules.”

At that moment when I was 13, I swore that I would always fight for the people who don’t make the rules.

Over the last twenty years of my legal career, I have won cases that others said could never be won.  I still truly believe in our justice system.  I believe that American courtrooms are where the people who don’t make the rules have a level playing field.  It takes a fighter to win cases who is personally motivated every single day.  I stay true to the promise I made to myself at 13 years old.

My parents instilled in me a deep sense of serving the community.  My father was in law enforcement for 38 years and my mother taught public school for 34 years.  They showed up, on time and prepared every single day of their careers to serve their communities.
My wife Emily and I continue to serve our community and our state.  Emily serves on several local boards and associations.  Together, we are raising three children.  I enjoy coaching our two boys in baseball, and being a “Dance Dad” to our daughter.  In my free time, I hunt and saltwater fish.  I enjoy cooking whatever we catch or shoot, and I am a reader of the great American storytellers Ernest Hemingway, Jack London, and William Faulkner.  My favorite time of day is dinner time with my family.

A Career Guided by Family and Service

Scott was born on the Louisiana Gulf Coast in Lake Charles, Louisiana.  He graduated from college in Lake Charles where he attended McNeese State University.  Scott was on the McNeese baseball team.  He attended law school at Loyola University New Orleans, and met his wife Emily in a law school class.  This year, Scott and Emily were honored to have the Loyola Law School Trial Room named after their family.

Scott has been at the firm since 2008, and has managed the firm since 2014.  He is a past President of the Louisiana Association for Justice, which is the state organization dedicated to training and educating trial attorneys.  Scott frequently speaks at conferences to train other lawyers.  When the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the legal system, in 2020, Scott founded Legal Grounds and hosted weekly Zoom meetings for attorneys to exchange best practices, offer support, and continue pursuing justice. Today, Legal Grounds is a thriving community of 8,000 members with a shared mission: to serve clients more effectively.

He takes on some of the toughest legal challenges, and has a success rate that is unmatched.
“One of things I’m proudest of is that even though I win really hard cases, I still choose to help people solve everyday problems.  I have a saying that I tell my firm – ‘We might win big cases, but there are no small cases.  Every case is big to somebody.’  I don’t let people in my office forget that.”

Outside of working for his clients, Scott continues to serve his community.
He has his own scholarship fund called the “Louisiana Heroes’ Scholarship Fund”.  In honor of his parents, this fund gives scholarships to children of Louisiana teachers and first responders who are attending Louisiana colleges.  Now in its 6th year, the Scott’s scholarship fund has given over $75,000.00 to Louisiana students.  The scholarship fund is entirely funded by a percentage of Scott’s fees on cases he wins.

Scott also hosts an annual benefit sporting clay shoot in conjunction with the Federal Bar Association of North Louisiana.  Each year the money from the shoot goes to first year servicemen who cannot afford a plane ticket home for the holidays.  In the last 12 years, Scott has raised over $100,000.00 and sent hundreds of servicemen home for the holidays to be with their families.

marshall

Marshall Johnston

Marshall Johnston is a native of Bossier City, Louisiana, and a graduate of the University of Southern Mississippi with a Bachelor of Arts in English and a minor in Political Science. After getting his law degree from Mississippi College School of Law, Marshall began work as a judicial law clerk at the First Judicial District Court clerking for Caddo Parish Judges Hon. Robert P. Waddell, Hon. Charles Tutt, and Hon. Roy Brun where he learned the practice of law from the Judges’ point of view.

For his entire legal career, Marshall has exclusively represented injured clients during their darkest times. He has represented clients in city court, parish district court, and federal court gaining trial experience in the process. Marshall is licensed to practice in the State of Louisiana as well as the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana and is an active member of the Bossier Bar Association, Shreveport Bar Association, the Louisiana State Bar Association, the American Association for Justice, and the Louisiana Association for Justice.

Marshall is married to Rachel and together they have two children. When he is not working, Marshall enjoys spending time with his family and enjoying outdoor activities like fishing, hunting, and golf.

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