Gregory A. Busch
Greg Busch concentrates his practice on family law, probate litigation, estate planning and related practice areas. He served as a law clerk to the Honorable Douglas T. Hague in 1997-98.
Greg is a member of the Bars of New Jersey and the United District Court for the District of New Jersey. He has been honored as a New Jersey Super Lawyer. Greg is also a longstanding panelist for the Middlesex County Early Settlement Program.
Greg works closely with his clients and is always available to meet, strategize and communicate.
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- Greg was admitted to the New Jersey State and U.S. District Court, District of New Jersey since 1998. He graduated from Lehigh University in 1993 and from the Rutgers University School of Law, Camden, J.D., in 1998.
- New Jersey Super Lawyer
- Panelist for the Middlesex County Early Settlement Program.
- Member of the Bars of New Jersey
- Member of United District Court for the District of New Jersey
- Estate Planning
- Last Will and Testament
- Durable Power of Attorney
- Living Will/health care proxy
- Family law
- Probate
- Business litigation and business consulting
Greg will be a valuable addition to our law firm and our clients, past and present. Here is a message from Greg to all of our clients, past and present:
When settling your personal injury or worker’s compensation claim, regardless of the amount you receive, it is important that you have proper Estate and personal documents. At Mintz & Geftic, we recommend that our clients have the following important documents to protect your family, your money and your estate:
- Last Will and Testament (a “Will”). A Will governs the disposition of your estate after you pass. A Will allows you to control where your assets go upon your death and who acts as the executor of your estate and ensures compliance with the directives and bequests in your Will. If you pass without a Will in New Jersey, a state law governs the disposition of your assets. Without a Will you risk unintended and undeserving relatives and family receiving a share of your assets.
- Durable Power of Attorney. A Power of Attorney allows you, while you are of sound mind, to appoint a trusted and reliable person to act on your behalf with respect to financial and other personal matters and it can allow you to appoint a trusted person to be your guardian and be responsible for your health, safety and welfare should you become incapacitated. Addressing these responsibilities in a Power of Attorney is much easier and cheaper than having to go through the courts should you become incapacitated.
- A living Will/health care proxy. A living will enables you, while healthy and of sound mind, to make end-of-life decisions concerning treatment and medication. Similarly, the appointment of a health care proxy enables you to appoint a trusted person, should you become incapacitated, to make medical decisions on your behalf.
Our fees for this work are reasonable and we complete our work promptly. I am looking forward to working with you on these important documents.
Thank you,
Greg Busch
Mintz and Geftic
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