Do-It-Yourself Divorce Site Launched in Portland – Let’s Untie The Knot

New Platform Empowers Oregon Residents to File for Divorce for a Fraction of the Cost and Hassle

PORTLAND, OR (Oct. 16, 2018) – A Portland family law attorney has launched Let’s Untie the Knot, a new lawyer-free, court-free, hassle-free online resource to file for uncontested divorce in the state of Oregon. The site offers an easier and more affordable way to get divorced for a fraction of the cost, and represents the future of law in a digital age where Americans are seeking efficiency and value over cumbersome and costly traditions.

Using a step-by-step, automated approach, Let’s Untie the Knot guides users through every step of their divorce proceedings for significantly less than they would spend on a lawyer, and offers them help and guidance along the way. The site’s secure server keeps all personal information encrypted and 100 percent safe.

“The average cost of a single family law attorney is $17,250, and usually clients don’t know what the final cost will be since most lawyers charge by the hour,” says Let’s Untie the Knot Founder Nicole Schaefer. “I wanted to offer a service that lets you know the exact price from the start, and empowers users to do as much or as little of the work as they want. I saw a way to leverage today’s technology to streamline the process in a way that makes filing for divorce more affordable, straightforward and efficient.”

Let’s Untie the Knot guides users through six simple steps of the uncontested divorce process, from the initial sign up and petition to serving a spouse, financial disclosures, negotiating terms, and creating the final document to be filed with the court. Users can file and manage the process anytime, anywhere via the automated platform that saves them from doing a mountain of paperwork. 

The site offers four packages: Free ($0), Basic ($750), Pro ($1,500) and Premium ($2,500).

·       Free – Allows users to take a quiz, review a summary of paperwork needed, and test the site

·       Basic – Provides all PDFs, offers 72-hour responses, and instructs users how to file themselves

·       Pro – Files on behalf of one spouse, offers 48-hour responses, and includes a parenting plan

·       Premium – Offers a personal divorce consultant, 24-hour responses, and files for both spouses 

For more information, visit https://letsuntietheknot.com/


Former CFO at Two Irvine Companies Sentenced to 3 Years in Federal Prison for Embezzling Over $2 Million from his Employers


          SANTA ANA, California – A former executive at two Irvine-based engineering firms was sentenced today to 36 months in federal prison for embezzling more than $2 million by making over 800 unauthorized withdrawals from company accounts over a five-year period.

            Deepak Kharbanda, 44, a Mission Viejo resident who formerly lived in Irvine, was sentenced by United States District Judge James V. Selna. In addition to the prison term, Judge Selna ordered Kharbanda to pay $1,363,496 in restitution.

Kharbanda, who was the chief financial officer at Applied GeoKinetics and Advanced Construction Technologies, stole $2,074,496 from his employers from 2010 to 2015. Kharbanda admitted in court that he made 841 unauthorized withdrawals from the companies’ bank accounts and that he used the money to pay personal expenses, including costs associated with a girlfriend, trips to Las Vegas, upgrades to his home and the lease on a Lamborghini.

            Kharbanda “stole more than $2 million dollars from companies where he was a trusted C-suite executive,” prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memorandum. “He stole from them repeatedly, and did so time and time again over a five-year period.”

Prosecutors noted that the companies suffered during this time because they were forced to cut salaries and they lost some employees as a result of Kharbanda’s conduct, which included attempts to cover up the crimes by preparing phony payroll accounts and summaries.

            Kharbanda pleaded guilty in September 2017 to two counts of wire fraud. Soon after entering his guilty pleas and while free on bond, Kharbanda forged a letter and sent it to a potential employer, claiming it was a communication from the court’s Pretrial Services Agency, which supervises defendants who have been freed on bond. The bogus letter claimed that Kharbanda was only a witness – not the defendant – in this case. After Pretrial Services obtained a copy of the letter, Kharbanda admitted he authored the letter and was remanded into custody by Judge Selna in December 2017.

            “The illegal and fraudulent conduct of forging the seal and signature of Pretrial Services, creating a counterfeit Pretrial Service letterhead, writing a false statement on that counterfeit document, and hiding his actions from Pretrial Services is the epitome of being untruthful with Pretrial Services,” prosecutors wrote in court documents earlier this year. “In fact, Pretrial Services was able to discover defendant’s illegal conduct only because the employment background investigator contacted Pretrial Services.”

This case was investigated by the United States Secret Service.

This matter was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Daniel H. Ahn and Gina J. Kong of the Santa Ana Branch Office.

            Release No. 18-169

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