Politics magazine, a major legal publication, as being among the District of Columbia’s “Super Lawyers.” Mr. Schultz and Mr. Trombly are both also members of the Million Dollar Advocates Forum.
We founded Schultz & Trombly, PLLC, because we wanted to focus on providing clients with professional service with a personal and human touch.
We respond promptly to client calls and work closely with our clients. In order to ensure that their needs are met, we are selective about the cases we accept, so that we can focus our resources on working to maximize the financial recovery in their personal injury cases.
Practice Focus and Memberships
Kenneth Trombly is a civil trial attorney whose practice is limited to catastrophic injury and wrongful death litigation in state and federal courts. Licensed in the District of Columbia and in Maryland, he has handled numerous significant cases on behalf of seriously injured persons, from seven figure settlements to noteworthy cases that have resulted in local or national publicity. For a number of years, he has been one of a select group of D.C. catastrophic injury attorneys who are included in both The Best Lawyers in America (Woodward White Publishing Co.) and “Super Lawyers” (Law & Politics magazine). A 1973 graduate of Columbus School of Law of The Catholic University of America, where he was both a staff member of the Law Review and a student coordinator of the school’s legal services clinic, Mr. Trombly earned his undergraduate degree at The George Washington University (B.A., 1970). As a young lawyer, before his legal practice took on its present focus, he was an active criminal defense attorney, regularly accepting court appointments to represent indigent defendants in the District of Columbia Courts. During this period, he attended the National College of Criminal Defense at the Bates College of Law, at the University of Houston, and was the recipient of a U.S. Department of Justice grant on account of his work representing indigent defendants in the criminal courts. In the early 1980’s, when he began representing people who were injured in accidents, he found this work to be both emotionally and intellectually rewarding – and within a few years, his law practice was focused on representing catastrophically injured persons and their families.
Admissions
Maryland Bar, 1973; District of Columbia Bar, 1975; United States District Court for the District of Maryland, 1974; United States District Court for the District of Columbia, 1975; United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, 1975; United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, 1977; United States Supreme Court, 1978.
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