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Robert H.
Blondis is a partner of the firm. He concentrates his practice in
the areas of personal injury and worker’s compensation. He
consistently obtains excellent results for his clients, including
persons who have been injured in nursing homes and other institutional settings, persons who have
incurred organic brain or psychological injuries. He has significant experience in representing juvenile and disabled persons.
Mr. Blondis
graduated from Marquette University Law School in 1969. He is
admitted to practice in the state of Wisconsin and before the U.S.
District Courts for the Eastern and Western Districts of Wisconsin
and the United States Supreme Court.
He was staff
attorney and later Associate Director of Legal Action of Wisconsin,
Inc. from 1970 until 1980. There, he advocated for low income and
disabled people, meeting their everyday legal needs, as well as
representing their interests in major civil rights cases.
He went into
private practice in 1980, and was one of the founders of First,
Blondis, Albrecht, Bangert & Novotnak, s.c. (now First, Albrecht &
Blondis, s.c.) in 1994. Mr. Blondis has won multiple awards
relating to his legal practice, including “Mental Health Citizen of
the Year” for his efforts to advance the legal rights of the
mentally disabled. His memberships include the Wisconsin Association for Justice. He is a founding member of the Leander Foley Section
of the Matrimonial Inns of Court. He is a former member of the
Board of Directors of the Wisconsin Civil Liberties Union.
Representative
cases include:
Lessard v.
Schmidt,
349 F. Supp. 1078 (E.D. Wis. 1972), vacated and remanded, 414 U.S.
473, on remand, 379 F. Supp. 1376 (E.D. Wis. 1974), vacated and
remanded, 421 U.S. 957 (1975), reinstated, 413 F. Supp. 1318 (E.D.
Wis. 1976), 414 U.S. 473 (1974), which had the effect throughout the
country of expanding the rights of the allegedly mentally ill;
mental health organizations have recently written that this case
“revolutionized mental health law.”
Redhail v.
Zablocki,
434 U.S. 374 (1978), which established marriage as a fundamental
constitutional right. This case has been hailed as one of the 50
most significant family/constitutional law cases in our nation’s
legal history.
Bartels v.
Biernat,
427 F. Supp. 226 (E.D. Wis. 1977), in which the court permanently
enjoined Milwaukee County from acquiring mass transit vehicles
unless they are designed to allow accessibility and utilization by
mobility handicapped persons.
Examples of his
recent work include:
Jablonski, et
al. v. Ace American Insurance Co., et al.,
Wis. Circuit Court, Kenosha County, Case No. 05-CV496 (2005), which
resulted in a substantial pre-trial settlement for a juvenile who
suffered serious burns while he was a spectator at a drag race.
Wessels and
Strande v. Juodawlkis, et al.,
Wis. Circuit Court, Washington County (2007), which resulted in a
significant award for the mother of a young woman who was killed by
the negligence of an uninsured motorist while she was a passenger on
a motorcycle.
__________ v.
__________, Milwaukee County Circuit Court (2006) (names cannot be divulged
because of a confidentiality agreement). In this case he
represented an elderly woman with dementia who was seriously injured
when she fell after she was allowed to “elope” from a
community-based residential facility. The insurance company for
that facility paid a significant amount shortly before trial to
compensate the elderly woman for her injuries and pain and
suffering.
Mr.
Blondis recently completed two worker’s compensation cases in which
he was able to obtain sizeable awards for clients who suffered
severe psychological injuries in the course of their employment. He also recently obtained a sizeable settlement for a woman who was wrongly imprisoned over a weekend because an employee of a sheriff’s department failed to enter accurate data regarding an arrest warrant into the department’s computer system.
When he is not
practicing law, he enjoys photography, gardening and tinkering with
and driving vintage automobiles. |