『Roy T. Willey IV』のカバーアート

Roy T. Willey IV

Roy T. Willey IV

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Charleston trial lawyer Roy T. Willey IV traces a path from a skinny, freckled kid who hated seeing people pushed around to a courtroom advocate who measures success by the lives he can improve — not by the percentage of policy limits recovered. Raised largely by a single mom, Roy carried a simple vow into adulthood: don’t let people be taken advantage of.

Roy describes his “trial ready process” — building every file like it will be tried, even though, as he notes, most will settle. It forces clarity on themes early and keeps leverage real. And it keeps promises to clients.

He then walks us inside the wrongful-death case that produced a $700 million verdict for the mother of a 17-year-old abducted and murdered in South Carolina — a case as much about truth-telling as it was about compensation. The path was long: a missing-person investigation, the FBI’s eventual involvement, a confession corroborated by recovered remains, and civil suits targeting not just the perpetrator but institutional actors who enabled harm. Roy emphasizes that juries understand money cannot restore a life; damages are our non-barbaric alternative to eye-for-an-eye justice. The verdict — historic in scale — functions as moral accounting and public accountability than a bank deposit.

Roy is candid, too, about what comes next. He may one day trade trial travel for a pulpit, but the vocation — serving people in their worst moments — won’t change.

In his "Closing Argument," Roy reminds us that justice is chosen, daily — that our greatest asset isn’t doctrine but humanity — and that worthy fights, not easy ones, are where trial lawyers prove their value.

Learn more about Roy at Anastopoulo Law Firm and www.roywilley.law.

Key Takeaways

  • Service-first lawyering — not profit-maximization — can shape case selection, strategy, and impact.
  • Building every matter to be trial-ready strengthens leverage, storytelling, and client trust.
  • Damages are society’s imperfect but necessary substitute for eye-for-an-eye justice.
  • Historic verdicts can be about truth and accountability even when collectability is limited.
  • Faith, empathy, and disciplined preparation can coexist with hard-edged advocacy.

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