Brown & James Principal Kristie Crawford Interviewed


Kristie Crawford










































Kristie Crawford Speaks with the Springfield Business Journal

September 22, 2010

Brown & James attorney Kristie Crawford was recently promoted to principal in the firm. She practices in the firm's Springfield, Mo., office in the Business & Commercial Litigation, Employment Law, Insurance Law, Premises & Retail Liability, Product Liability and Transportation practice groups.

She was interviewed as part of the Springfield Business Journal''s 5Q section:



Q: You have a bachelor's degree in psychology. How has that helped you in the courtroom?

"While I was getting that degree, I had the opportunity to conduct studies in social interaction and examine how groups think, kind of the biases and pressures that arise when people are acting in group. In the courtroom, a lot of it is, you want to represent your client, present the facts, present the law, but at the same time, you're trying to determine and predict how a jury will view those same facts. Of course, the jury isn't in a vacuum. Everybody brings their own biases ans experiences."

Q: What other experiences have prepared you for your attorney job?

"I was a clerk for the Missouri Court of Appeals for the Southern District (and) got to see the end result of an appeal, which, in turn, has made me more aware of the record that you need to make at trial to preserve error. That was actually a great experience because I had the opportunity to read briefs as well as transcripts of trials, look at exhibits, sit back and see what the verdict was and examine all of that. It was a good chance to see how all information and everything that happens in a trial comes together for the end results."

Q: You were also an institutional parole officer a the Fulton Reception and Diagnostics Center. How different is that experience from your trial work?

"What I do isn't that different. Just now, fortunately, I don't have to walk into a prison every morning. They are very similar because as a parole officer, it was my job to look at all the facts and apply them to the parole board's guidelines. Now my job is to investigate, look at all the facts, apply the law to the facts and try to predict for my client what's going to happen if the case goes to trial."

Q: What made you decide to represent businesses versus individuals?

"I know people often think of a corporation as being this impersonal entity. My parents had a business. It was incorporated. And they went through a few lawsuits. I had the personal experience to see what you go through when you're a defendant, how confusing it is, your life being disrupted. After going through that, basically, I wanted to go to law school so, first of all, I could prevent that from happening again and then figure out what to do if someone gets sued."

Q: What advice would you give to businesspeople to keep them out of the courtroom?

"Unfortunately, people operate on oral agreements and what they believe to be understandings with other people. There are ways that you can prevent these things from happening by planning for the future, putting it in writing, trying to anticipate what will happen. Certainly, in a partnership agreement, you would want to outline what the duties and responsibilities are of each partner, as well as what will happen if the partnership were to dissolve."

Published Sept. 21, 2010
Print version only, Springfield Business Journal
Interviewed by Jennifer Muzinic


Return to Announcements
Copyright © 2009 Brown and James, P.C. | Disclaimer | Contact Us | Site Map | Login
Lexis Nexis alfa Top 500