How we collect, use, share, and protect your information.
Legal Help Justice ("we," "us," or "our") respects your privacy and is committed to protecting the personal information you share with us. This Privacy Policy explains what information we collect through legalhelpjustice.com (the "Site"), how we use it, who we share it with, and the choices available to you.
By using this Site or submitting your information through any form, you consent to the practices described in this Policy.
We collect information you provide directly to us when you submit a form, request a case review, or otherwise contact us. This includes:
We also automatically collect certain information when you visit the Site:
We use the information we collect to:
This is a lead generation website. By submitting your information, you understand and agree that we may share the information you provide with the following categories of recipients:
Different forms on the Site may share your information with different recipients from the list above. The specific recipients for each form are identified in the consent language presented at the time of submission.
We do not sell information to unrelated third parties for their independent marketing purposes without your consent.
When you submit a form on the Site, you expressly consent to receive communications from us and our partners — including emails, telephone calls, text (SMS) messages, automated calls, AI-generated calls, and pre-recorded messages — at the phone number and email address you provide, even if that number is on a federal or state Do Not Call registry.
California Residents (CCPA / CPRA): You have the right to (a) know what personal information we collect, use, and share; (b) request deletion of your personal information; (c) opt out of the "sale" or "sharing" of your personal information; (d) correct inaccurate information; and (e) be free from discrimination for exercising these rights. To exercise any of these rights, see Section 9 or visit our CCPA page.
Other U.S. State Residents: Residents of states with comprehensive privacy laws (including Virginia, Colorado, Connecticut, Utah, Texas, and others) have similar rights. Contact us using the details in Section 9 to exercise them.
EU/UK Residents (GDPR): If you are located in the European Economic Area or the United Kingdom, you have the right to access, correct, delete, restrict, or object to the processing of your personal data, and to data portability. You also have the right to lodge a complaint with your local data protection authority.
We retain your personal information for as long as necessary to fulfill the purposes described in this Policy, comply with our legal obligations, resolve disputes, and enforce our agreements. You may request deletion at any time (see Section 9), subject to legal record-keeping requirements.
We use cookies, pixels, and similar technologies — including Google Analytics, Google Tag Manager, and other analytics or advertising tools — to understand how visitors use the Site, measure marketing performance, and improve our services. You can control cookies through your browser settings. Disabling cookies may affect Site functionality.
This Site is intended for adults (18 years of age or older). We do not knowingly collect personal information from children under 13. Inquiries involving a minor must be submitted by a parent or legal guardian. If you believe we have inadvertently collected information from a child, please contact us so we can delete it.
To ask questions, request access to or deletion of your information, or opt out of communications, contact us at:
Legal Help Justice
Email: contact@legalhelpjustice.com
Phone: +1 (530) 349-7939
We may update this Privacy Policy from time to time. The "Last Updated" date at the top reflects the most recent revision. Continued use of the Site after changes constitutes acceptance of the updated Policy.
Submitting information through this Site does not create an attorney-client relationship between you and Legal Help Justice or any attorney to whom your information may be referred. An attorney-client relationship is formed only through a signed written agreement with a specific attorney or law firm.