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Alan D. Freer

Alan D. Freer

Solomon, Dwiggins, Freer & Steadman, Ltd

Alan D. Freer is a member of the management committee at Solomon, Dwiggins, Freer & Steadman, Ltd., where he focuses his practice primarily on trust and estate litigation. He represents beneficiaries, fiduciaries, and grantors in contested matters ranging from prelitigation assessment and negotiation through trial and appellate practice. Alan has substantial experience challenging and defending the validity of estate planning documents, including wills, codicils, trusts, and amendments, and routinely handles claims involving breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, undue influence, lack of capacity, unjust enrichment, elder abuse, and closely held business disputes. He also advises fiduciaries in complex administrations, including multi-jurisdictional and international matters, and sophisticated business succession implementations. In recent years, he has been actively involved in domestic asset protection (spendthrift) trust litigation, representing creditors, trustees, beneficiaries, and grantors in both prosecuting and defending such matters.

FAQ

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Will my CLE credits be recognized in my state?

Yes — MyLawCLE is an officially accredited CLE provider in all 50 states. All of our live webinars, on-demand programs, and replays meet or exceed state bar requirements, ensuring your CLE credits are fully recognized wherever you practice.

Yes — MyLawCLE is an officially accredited CLE provider in all 50 states. All of our live webinars, on-demand programs, and replays meet or exceed state bar requirements, ensuring your CLE credits are fully recognized wherever you practice.

Yes — MyLawCLE is an officially accredited CLE provider in all 50 states. All of our live webinars, on-demand programs, and replays meet or exceed state bar requirements, ensuring your CLE credits are fully recognized wherever you practice.

Yes — MyLawCLE is an officially accredited CLE provider in all 50 states. All of our live webinars, on-demand programs, and replays meet or exceed state bar requirements, ensuring your CLE credits are fully recognized wherever you practice.

Alabama

Requirements

The Alabama State Bar MCLE Commission requires attorneys to complete 12 credits, including 1 ethics, by December 31 of each year. All credits must be reported by February 15 of the following year. A maximum of 12 credits, including 1 ethics credit, may be carried over for 1 year only.  

Formats

  • Attorneys can earn unlimited “live” credit through live seminars, live webcasts, and co-sponsored locations with MyLAWCLE-Alabama approved programs
  • Attorneys are limited to 6 credits per compliance period of “online” programs through MyLAwCLE On-Demand programs