Thomas H. Roberts
Viirgnia Hearing Officer (Administrative Law Judge)Mr. Roberts was admitted to practice law in Virginia in 1986 and before the United States Supreme Court in 1991. Mr. Roberts has a broad background of experience in litigation and business. His practice includes the successful representation of clientele in obtaining recoveries in cases of personal injury, in commercial disputes, and in civil rights. Additionally, Mr. Roberts has served as corporate counsel and director for several electronic technology corporations. Mr. Roberts is a founder and the principal member of the firm of Thomas H. Roberts & Associates, P.C. He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree with honors in business and economics from Gordon College in New England and his Juris Doctorate degree from the University of Richmond Law School. With a passion for liberty and justice, Mr. Roberts regularly represents individuals protecting rights and enforcing the constraints on government officials guaranteed by the Constitutions of the United States and Virginia. Mr. Roberts family arrived in the United States in 1667 seeking religious freedom – he continues that strong tradition in litigating matters involving religious freedom. Mr. Roberts lived four informative years in Afghanistan, and has witnessed first hand the dramatic differences between countries with deep traditions of religious liberty that have enabled the blessings of a people who understand the gravity of the words adopted on July 4, 1776, “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” Mr. Roberts was the first attorney in the history of Henrico County, Virginia to obtain a jury verdict in excess of $1 Million in the Circuit Court. He has worked on numerous trial and appellate cases over the last two decades that have involved briefing and argument of complex issues resulting in both reported and unreported decisions.
- Personal Injury
- Animal & Dog Bites, Brain Injury, Car Accidents, Construction Accidents, Motorcycle Accidents, Premises Liability, Truck Accidents, Wrongful Death
- Products Liability
- Drugs & Medical Devices, Motor Vehicle Defects, Toxic Torts
- Civil Rights
- Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), Discrimination, Employment, Fair Housing, Police Misconduct, Privacy Law
- Employment Law
- Employee Benefits, Employment Contracts, Employment Discrimination, ERISA, Overtime & Unpaid Wages, Sexual Harassment, Whistleblower, Wrongful Termination
- Criminal Law
- Criminal Appeals, Drug Crimes, Expungement, Fraud, Gun Crimes, Internet Crimes, Sex Crimes, Theft, Violent Crimes
- Health Care Law
- Credit Cards Accepted
- Contingent Fees
- Pennsylvania
- Virginia
- 3rd Circuit
- 4th Circuit
- Federal Circuit
- U.S. Supreme Court
- English: Spoken, Written
- Viirgnia Hearing Officer (Administrative Law Judge)
- Current
- University of Richmond School of Law
- J.D. (1986)
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- Gordon College
- B.A. (1983) | Economics-Business
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- Q. Can my employer make me get Covid tested weekly even if I don’t have symptoms? I am unvacc. and only one getting tested
- A: The analysis may need to begin with the question - did you obtain a Title VII religious exemption from an employer's vaccination mandate? If so, the next question would be whether singling you out for testing may be a form of harassment or retaliation and not the required accommodation under Title VII. One might argue that there is no legitimate company objective in limiting the COVID tests to only those (you) that have not been vaccinated. If they are concerned about the potential spread of COVID, then they should test all employees - since the vaccinations will not prevent the other employees from becoming infected or spreading COVID. Under popular theories, the COVID vaccines will ... Read More
- Q. Can my spouse evict my family from while I'm away on deployment?
- A: You should provide to him a document expressly authorizing him to stay in your house to care for the same.
Here's some old Virginia law: "One joint tenant, co-parcener, or tenant in common, although he has a right to the possession of the whole against strangers, cannot make a valid lease for more than his own part of the land; and therefore, no more can be recovered in ejectment than the part to which the lessor, who is a joint tenant, tenant in common, or parcener, is entitled." Allen v. Gibson, 25 Va. 468, 477 (1826)
Whether Ralph McCalley Chinn agreed with the actions of his three co-tenants is not relevant. His co-tenants had the right and power to enter into the ... Read More
- Q. Wife moved out-of-state abandoning junk vehicle on my property. She won't move it. Can I legally have it removed?
- A: Nobody will give you a "guarantee" on any response.
By the term "wife" your question implies that you are still married and therefore have not "equitably divided" the marital assets in a divorce proceeding. So generally, there are at least three legal principles taken into account. 1. Did she really "abandon" the property?; 2. Are you the bailee of the property (A person with whom property is left for safekeeping. In law, the person to whom goods are committed in bailment. He has a temporary possession of them and a qualified property in them for such purpose only.The person to whom goods are committed in trust, and who has a temporary possession ... Read More