Founding Owner and Attorney
Founding Attorney Jonathan May graduated from Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad College of Law. He is admitted to the Florida Bar (0110057) and is admitted to the Southern District of Florida, Federal Immigration Court (A41684), Federal Tax Court and Federal Bankruptcy Court. He has been recognized as a Superlawyer since 2020 and has received many legal advocacy awards including “Immigration Lawyer of the Year”, “Top 100 Attorneys”, “Top 3 Business Lawyers” and “Ten Best Attorneys”.
Attorney May achieved a Master’s Degree in Communication Studies (scientific experimentation of communication patterns) and taught debate, persuasion, interpersonal communication and persuasion at the collegiate level. He is a natural born strategist and sought out competitive strategy activities all throughout his life.
Jonathan May, Esq., M.A. studied communications at the University of Illinois and the University of Miami and Law at Nova Southeastern University. Attorney May developed skills in leadership, teaching, coaching and physical training as a collegiate football coach with the University of Miami, University of Illinois and Florida International University.
Attorney May then became a communications professor and has taught at over sixteen schools in the area. This is a unique background that has helped contribute to his success in the legal field. Most people are not aware that a communications background involves education and the development of skills in many areas that attorneys use everyday. Linguistics helps one with the decisions process of the most appropriate word usage to convey an idea to another person. Literary devices can involve the use of metaphors and analogies that help another person understand a complex idea and help create a comparison of characteristics. Cultural communications helps one to communicate with people of different backgrounds and language styles. Interpersonal communication helps one communicate in a one on one situation and teaches one how to show empathy for others, to react appropriately and supportively and to avoid communication that may be inappropriate for a specific situation. Group communication teaches one about the roles in a group and the many roles that must be filled in order for a group to maximize it’s efficiency and effectiveness. Persuasive speaking helps one break down an argument to its core and to analyze its different components and the process to tailoring points for ones specific audience. Informative speaking helps introduce an unknown subject area to an audience. Listening helps one grasp information provided efficiently and to analyze the information.
Attorney May co-founded The Lions’ Den directly after graduating from law school and has been working to grow the practice ever since. Attorney May learned under Janine Rice with the Broward State Attorney office and contributed to the prosecution against felony domestic violence offenders. Attorney May volunteered for about a year about twenty hours per week with Dade Legal Aid to gain valuable legal experience in probate, client retention and other areas of law. Attorney May volunteered with Fidelity National Title Group in order to learn how to handle permit disputes and coordinate with city officials to work out violations. Attorney May is admitted to practice before the Tax Court, Immigration Court, Bankruptcy Court, Federal Court for Southern District of Florida and the Florida Bar.
Attorney May is a Christian that started a church named Connecting Christ. Community outreach and building are an important part of his life.
Admitted to practice before the Federal Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of Florida.
Admitted to practice before the Federal Immigration Court.
Admitted to practice before the Southern District of Florida Federal Court.
Admitted to practice before the United States Tax Court
Coauthored the Book Police Promotion Preparation
Real Estate License (2015)
Florida Notary Public (2015)