RTRICHARD WILLIAM TOMCUpdike, Kelly & Spellacy, P. C.
52
Years
Experience
Trusted

Updike, Kelly & Spellacy, P. C.

Richard William Tomc

0.0(0 reviews)
179 Main Street Ext, Middletown, CT, 06457
Bankruptcy & DebtAdmiralty & MaritimeAntitrust & Trade LawCommercial
Claim my Profile

About

Richard William Tomc is an admiralty and maritime attorney with over 52 years of legal experience, practicing at Updike, Kelly & Spellacy, P. C. in Middletown, CT. He attended Harvard. He is admitted to practice in Connecticut (since 1973) and New York (since 1971). His practice encompasses admiralty and maritime, antitrust and trade law, bankruptcy and debt, and commercial real estate, allowing him to serve clients across a range of legal needs. He maintains a clean professional disciplinary record.

Hourly Rate

Contact for rates

Consultation

Paid consultation

Licensed Since

1973

License Status

No misconduct found

Practice Areas

4Practice Areas
  • Admiralty and Maritime25%
  • Antitrust and Trade Law25%
  • Bankruptcy and Debt25%
  • Commercial Real Estate25%

Languages

English

Experience

52+ years

Admiralty and Maritime Attorney at Updike, Kelly & Spellacy, P. C.. Admitted to practice in Connecticut, 1973. Focus areas include Bankruptcy & Debt, Admiralty & Maritime, Antitrust & Trade Law.

Licenses & Bar Admissions

Connecticut

Bar #Connecticut Bar Association · Admitted 1973

Active

New York

Bar #New York State Bar Association · Admitted 1971

Active

Schools & Education

Harvard

Degree · 1973

Sample Legal Cases

Past results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Client details have been anonymized.

Reviews (0)

0.0

Based on 0 verified reviews

Richard William Tomc's Lawyer Endorsements

No endorsements yet.

Additional Locations

Main Office

179 Main Street Ext, Middletown, CT, 06457

Social Media

Contact

Legal Disclaimer: Lexoor is an attorney directory and does not provide legal advice. Attorney profiles are based on publicly available bar association records. Contacting an attorney through Lexoor does not establish an attorney-client relationship. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Always verify an attorney's license with your state bar before retaining counsel.