New York, New York
The firm's principal office is in New York, New York. Meetings are arranged deliberately rather than as walk-in visits, and the contact route remains the first step before any office logistics are confirmed.
- Office
- New York, NY
- Visit model
- Appointment only
- First step
- Contact route
This page describes office logistics and visit protocol. It should not be read as an invitation for unscheduled walk-in visits.
Office context
The public site identifies New York, New York as the principal office. That is the geographic anchor used across the firm's materials, navigation, and contact surfaces. The office page is therefore less about a storefront and more about setting expectations for how contact begins.
For most matters, the first useful step is not arriving at a desk. It is giving the firm enough information to review the matter for conflicts and fit so the consultation can begin on the right footing.
Visits are scheduled in advance
The office does not present itself as a walk-in destination. Visits are arranged by appointment, after the initial inquiry has been reviewed and the firm knows what kind of meeting is needed. That protects time, confidentiality, and the quality of the first substantive conversation.
This is especially important where a matter may involve family information, estate documents, business records, or other materials that should not be handled casually. The office page is meant to set that expectation clearly.
- Begin with the contact route rather than a drop-in visit.
- Consultation logistics follow conflicts review and fit.
- Sensitive documents should be shared through the channels the firm requests.
What happens after you reach out
The contact page explains the immediate sequence: the firm reviews your message, determines whether it can help, and then suggests a consultation and next steps by email or phone when appropriate. That sequence remains the best orientation for office logistics as well.
In practical terms, the office page exists to reinforce that communication comes first. Once the matter is understood, the firm can confirm the right meeting format, the right documents to bring, and whether any in-person step is necessary at all.
Keep the orientation clear.
Start the inquiry, review what happens next, and use the firm's current contact channels.
Open pageChristopher MoyeRead the attorney page before deciding whether the matter fits the firm's scope.
Open pageAbout the firmPlace the office details inside the wider structure of the firm and its public work.
Open pageHow we chargeRead how consultations, retainers, and matter scope are discussed after intake review.
Open pageIf you need the office, begin before the visit.
Use the contact route to describe the matter. After review, the firm can confirm consultation timing, requested documents, and whether an office meeting should be arranged.