About
Jeffrey A. Libert, Esq., a life-long New Jersey resident, was born in Jersey City, attended Saddle Brook High School (Bergen County), received his bachelor’s degree from Rutgers College in New Brunswick, and his juris doctor or “J.D.” degree from Rutgers School of Law in Camden, NJ.
Jeff graduated law school in 1982, immediately passed the NJ bar exam and began practicing law that same year in Woodbury, Gloucester County, NJ.
He has lived in Saddle Brook, New Brunswick, Piscataway, Vorhees and currently lives in Mullica Hill (Harrison Township), N.J., where he has lived and raised a family – with his Jersey girl wife Carleen Buggle Libert – since 1983. He served 2 3-year terms as a committeeman in Harrison from 1990-1995 and as Mayor of Harrison Township in 1995-1996.
Jeff’s law practice extends to most southern New Jersey counties, primarily Gloucester, Camden, Salem, Cumberland, Burlington, Atlantic and Cape May Counties, though for the right person or case he has traveled as far north as Morris and Bergen counties.
As you can there’s ample reason to find this lawyer’s website at “Jersey Lawyer” . . dot com.
He has handled civil cases (lawsuits / litigation) since the start of his legal career, primarily personal injury claims arising from motor vehicle accidents, defective products and dangerous conditions or unsafe maintenance of property. His personal injury practice expaned to include work place injuries for employees whose injury claim included or was limited to claims for workers compensation benefits brought in the NJ workers compensation courts.
Additionally, Jeff routinely handles muncipal court cases (DUI/DWI, revoked list, no insurance, speeding, simple possession of marijuana, petty disorderly, muncipal ordinance violiation, etc.), residential real estate (buyer/seller) transactions and closings, preparation of wills / living wills / power-of-attorney and estate administration matters.
Jeff accepts, selectively, matters of family and divorce law, juvenile offenses and criminal law. Retainers for divorce and/or family law matters and criminal matters are often substantial.