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The Researching Paralegal

~ Articles and Research for Legal Professionals

The Researching Paralegal

Monthly Archives: February 2014

Use Requests for Admission For Authentication of Trial Exhibits.

17 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Discovery, Exhibits, Requests for Admissions, Trial Tips and Techniques

≈ Comments Off on Use Requests for Admission For Authentication of Trial Exhibits.

Tags

Discovery, Evan Schaeffer, Requests for Admission, The Trial Practice Tips Blog, Trial Exhibits, Trial Tips and Techniques

Using Requests for Admission to Simplify Your Case, by Evan Schaeffer, The Trial Practice Tips Blog

http://tinyurl.com/m3y82eq

I have never understood why this is not used more frequently. It saves time and aggravation for the parties and the court, especially if you want an exhibit to be part of the record. – CCE

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Intolerance Is A Door That Swings Both Ways When Presenting Your Case.

17 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Judges, Closing Argument, Cross-Examination, Direct Examination, Federal Judges, Judges, Jury Instructions, Jury Persuasion, Jury Selection, Making Objections, Opening Argument, Oral Argument, Plaintiff's Counsel, Trial Tips and Techniques, Voir Dire, Witness Preparation, Witnesses

≈ Comments Off on Intolerance Is A Door That Swings Both Ways When Presenting Your Case.

Tags

Conservatives, Dr. Ken Broda-Bahm, Judges, Juries, Liberals, Persuasive Litigator, Politics, Trial Tips and Techniques

Account for Ideological Intolerance, by Dr. Ken Broda-Bahm, Persuasive Litigator™

http://tinyurl.com/kovy8wo

It’s Valentine’s time again. It’s a holiday of love, but in the political world, we’re moving out of yet another debt ceiling standoff and there is no love lost between the two sides of the spectrum. Liberals point to yet another, albeit failed, attempt to hold the country’s full faith and credit hostage, while conservatives point to yet another increase in an already staggering national debt. Neither side can understand the values, arguments, and priorities of the other. And that’s just the debt. Add in social welfare programs, marriage equality, and — as the actual sign from an Arizona gun shop above testifies — gun control, and you’ve got a pretty bitter divide. Polling shows that we are politically more ‘tribal’ than ever before. As we’ve noted in earlier posts, liberals and conservatives appear to use their brains differently when assessing risk, and are resistant to applying basic empathy across the political aisles. . . .

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Email Virus Running Amuck In Some Appellate Courts.

17 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in 1st Circuit Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, Appellate Law, Emails, Legal Technology, Louisiana Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Email Virus Running Amuck In Some Appellate Courts.

Tags

1st Circuit Court of Appeals, 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, Emails, Louisiana Civil Appeals Blog, Louisiana Supreme Court, Malware, Raymond Ward, Virus

A virus going around, by Raymond Ward, Louisiana Civil Appeals Blog

http://tinyurl.com/kv5owgc

There must be a virus going around. Recently the Louisiana Supreme Court and the First, Third, and Fifth Circuits have published warnings about malicious e-mails purporting to come from those courts. . . .

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DOJ Warns Louisiana Supreme Court To Stop Civil Rights Abuse of Bar Applicants.

17 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Disabilities, Legal Ethics, Louisiana Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on DOJ Warns Louisiana Supreme Court To Stop Civil Rights Abuse of Bar Applicants.

Tags

ADA, Alan Childress, Alston Walker, Dane Ciolino, Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, DOJ, Lauren Michel, Legal Profession Prof Blog, Louisiana Bar Admission, Louisiana Supreme Court, Loyola

DOJ Sends Critical Letter to Louisiana Supreme Court re its Bar Admission Process, by Alan Childress, Legal Profession Prof, Legal Profession Prof Blog

http://tinyurl.com/qhryrrf

Dane Ciolino (Loyola-New Orleans, Law) has blogged on the recent letter of warning the DOJ sent the state’s supreme court and chief disciplinary counsel about the civil and disability rights of its applicants. . . .

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Shawn Roberts Explains Estate Planning Via Podcasts.

17 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Durable Power of Attorney, Estate Planning, Living Will, Probate and Trusts, Trusts, Wills

≈ Comments Off on Shawn Roberts Explains Estate Planning Via Podcasts.

Tags

Durable Power of Attorney, Estate Planning, Living Will, Podcasts, Resolution Legal Group, Shawn J. Roberts, Trusts, Wills

Estate Planning Demystified, by Shawn J. Roberts, Resolution Legal Group

http://www.shawnjroberts.com/oklahoma-forms/podcasts/

A series of eight podcasts on Estate Planning. -CCE

This is my discussion of the basics of estate planning, what it is, what the tools are and why you would want to do it. . . . .

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Beautiful Young, Dead Paralegal Found in Bathtub of Attorney Boss Who Has Possible Mob Connections.

17 Monday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Criminal Law, Employment Law, Ethics, Grand Jury, Law Office Management, Legal Ethics, Management, Paralegals/Legal Assistants, Social Media, Supervising Support Staff, Using Social Media

≈ Comments Off on Beautiful Young, Dead Paralegal Found in Bathtub of Attorney Boss Who Has Possible Mob Connections.

Tags

A. Charles Peruto Jr., Above the Law (blog), Accidental Death, Alcohol, David Lat, District Attorney Seth Williams, Grand Jury, Julia Papazian Law, Paralegal, Philadelphia, Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office

Paralegal’s Death In Boss/Boyfriend’s Bathtub Declared Accidental, by David Lat, Above the Law Blog

http://tinyurl.com/k6fafzo

 Last May, a 26-year-old paralegal by the name of Julia Papazian Law was found dead in the bathtub of her boss and boyfriend, prominent Philadelphia defense attorney A. Charles Peruto Jr. The news set tongues wagging in Philly. It had all the elements of a tabloid tale: a beautiful young woman, a wealthy and successful lawyer, and possible organized-crime connections. (Peruto has represented such prominent alleged Mob figures as Joey Merlino and Nicodemo Scarfo.) . . .

A grand jury was convened, conducted an investigation, and concluded there was no evidence that the paralegal’s death was anything but accidental. I saw no discussion or evidence of an investigation of any ethical or employment violations concerning the employer/employee relationship.

After the grand jury’s investigation, the paralegal’s boss used Facebook to reply to the District Attorney in a direct and explicit statement. -CCE  

http://tinyurl.com/lnbb9gh

 

 

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How Skillful Are You At Mediation?

16 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Alternative Dispute Resolution, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Mediation, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

≈ Comments Off on How Skillful Are You At Mediation?

Tags

Above the Law (blog), Alternative Dispute Resolution, Biglaw, Gaston Kroub, Intellectual Property, Litigation, Mediation, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

Beyond Biglaw: Mediation Matters (Part 1), by Gaston Kroub, Above The Law Blog

http://tinyurl.com/kv9d9ag

Mediation. For some lawyers, it is a great way to spend a day; for others, it is an interminable bore, and ineffective to boot. It is easy to imagine that lawyers who have had successful mediation experiences are more likely to fall into the former category than the latter. What is more certain, however, is that mediation skills are increasingly important for a litigator to have, for a number of reasons. . . .

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Got Your Gun? OSBI Launched Self-Defense Act License Online Application System.

16 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Constitution, Second Amendment

≈ Comments Off on Got Your Gun? OSBI Launched Self-Defense Act License Online Application System.

Tags

eGovernment, Gun Control, Handgun License, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation, Online Gun License, OSBI, Second Amendment, Self-Defense Act

Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation Offers Online Gun License Application, OK.gov

http://tinyurl.com/m86brv3

Applying for an Oklahoma gun license just got easier. The Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation (OSBI) has launched the Self-Defense Act (SDA) License Online Application system. The system allows users to submit applications to apply for or renew a handgun license. The online application can be accessed on the OSBI website at http://www.ok.gov/osbi.

Last year, more than 60,000 Oklahomans applied for a gun license. To deal with the influx of applications, OSBI hired more temporary and full-time staff for the unit and added a night shift. The online application will expedite and streamline the process.

The online service is a product of a partnership between the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation and OK.gov, Oklahoma’s official website managed by the eGovernment firm, NIC Inc. (Nasdaq: EGOV). The actual launch date of the online application system was January 14, 2014. . . .

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Spread The Love.

16 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Law Office Management, Legal Ethics, Management, Supervising Support Staff

≈ Comments Off on Spread The Love.

Tags

Daniel E. Cummins, Law Office Management, Management, Professionalism, Supervising Support Staff, TORT TALK

Spread A Little Love: Being Pleasant And Considerate Is Part Of Being A Professional, by Daniel E. Cummins, TORT TALK

http://www.torttalk.com/2014/02/spread-little-love-article-for.html

Excellent relationship advice for all professionals. -CCE

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Divorcing Husband’s Hidden Assets and Tax Fraud.

16 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Child Support, Divorce, Family Law, Hidden Assets

≈ Comments Off on Divorcing Husband’s Hidden Assets and Tax Fraud.

Tags

Asset Search Blog, Beth M. v. Joseph M., Child Support, Divorce, Fred Abrams, Hashimoto v. De La Rosa, Hidden Assets, Internal Revenue Service, Tax Fraud

Divorce & Hidden Money: Whistleblowing, Tax Fraud & Tipping The IRS, by Fred Abrams, Asset Search Blog

http://tinyurl.com/l22u73b

The post ‘An Asset Search, Tax Fraud & Divorce’ was first published at the Asset Search Blog on January 16, 2008.  It is republished below as the seventh post in the ‘Divorce & Hidden Money’ series.  The post describes my investigation of a divorcing husband.

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Latest Ninth Circuit Decision on Rule 26 Discovery From Testifying Experts.

16 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Attorney Work Product, Court Rules, Court Rules, Discovery, Evidence, Expert Witness, Experts, Federal District Court Rules, Federal Rules of Evidence, Requests for Production, Rule 26, Trial Tips and Techniques

≈ Comments Off on Latest Ninth Circuit Decision on Rule 26 Discovery From Testifying Experts.

Tags

9th Circuit Court of Appeals, Chevron, Cogent Legal Blog, Court Rules, Expert Witnesses, Federal Rule 26, Michael Kelleher, Paul Hastings, Republic of Ecuador v. Mackay, Work Product Objection

Ninth Circuit Rules on Scope of Discovery from Testifying Experts, by Michael Kelleher, Cogent Legal Blog

http://tinyurl.com/knvhgv2

[A] new Ninth Circuit decision about the scope of expert discovery in federal court caught our attention. The decision in Republic of Ecuador v. Mackay, No. 12-15572 (9th Cir. Jan. 31, 2014) poses the question: where the expert has served both as a confidential advisor to counsel and as a testifying expert, may counsel withhold documents shared with the expert by asserting an opinion work product objection? The short answer is no—documents from testifying experts must be produced unless protected by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(4).

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An Argument For Teaching Psychology In Legal Writing.

16 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Legal Writing, Psychology

≈ Comments Off on An Argument For Teaching Psychology In Legal Writing.

Tags

Lawrence M. Solan, Legal Skills Prof Blog, Legal Writing, Legal Writing Courses, Psychology, Social Science Research Notebook

Four Reasons to Teach Psychology to Legal Writing Students, by Lawrence M. Solan, Social Science Research Notebook (with hat tip to Legal Skills Prof Blog)

http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2391974

Abstract:

Over the past quarter century we have learned a great deal about psychological biases that are by-products of the strategies we use in everyday reasoning. This essay invites educators to introduce some basic facts about these biases to students in legal writing courses. By teaching students to understand the psychological phenomena that underlie some of the core strategies of good legal writing, legal writing instructors may help students to internalize more of what they learn in legal writing classes. This will make it more likely that they will be able to transfer the skills to tasks performed in their legal careers.

While a number of psychological biases are relevant to good legal writing, the essay describes four: the preference for simple writing; the confirmation bias (causing us to ignore evidence that contradicts positions we have taken); the correspondence bias (overemphasizing character and undervaluing context in explaining an individual’s conduct); and the bias blind spot (thinking we ourselves are less susceptible to these biases than are people in general). The essay suggests ways to introduce each of these psychological phenomena into the legal writing course in ways that should enhance the student’s sensitivity to these important issues, and not take up too much class time.

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Appellate Procedure Resource Guide for State Courts.

16 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Judges, Appellate Law, Court Rules, Courts, Intermediate Appellate Courts, Judges, Pro Se Guides, State Appellate Courts, Unpublished Opinions

≈ Comments Off on Appellate Procedure Resource Guide for State Courts.

Tags

Appellate ADR, Appellate Case Management, Appellate Judges, Appellate Procedure, Appellate Procedure Resource Guide, Filing Fees, Intermediate Appellate Courts, National Center of State Courts, Pro Se Appeal Guides, Statistics and Trends, Unpublished Opinions

Appellate Procedure Resource Guide, National Center of State Courts

http://www.ncsc.org/Topics/Appellate/Appellate-Procedure/Resource-Guide.aspx

There is a plethora of information here. It is diverse and abundant. Once you arrive at the website, please take your time and browse each section. Please do not overlook the button to the far right for “Companion Sights.” -CCE

The most common structure for a state appellate court system involves one court of last resort with largely discretionary review, commonly called a supreme court, and one intermediate appellate court with largely mandatory review.  Because of this jurisdiction, the intermediate appellate court is the court of final review for the vast majority of state court appeals. Ten states are without an intermediate appellate court. Various combinations based on mandatory versus discretionary jurisdiction, size of the courts, use of panels, geographical divisions, and division between criminal and civil jurisdiction by court exist in the state appellate systems.

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Good Advice On How to Avoid Embarrassing Mistakes In An Appeal.

16 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, Appellate Law, Bad Legal Writing, Brief Writing, Case Law, Citations, Citations to the Record, Legal Analysis, Legal Writing, Mandatory Law, Primary Law, Proofreading, Research, Statement of Facts, Texas Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Good Advice On How to Avoid Embarrassing Mistakes In An Appeal.

Tags

Appellate Briefs, Appellate Law, Appellate Lawyer, Chad M. Ruback, Citations, Citations to the Record, Hyperbole, Justice Debra Lehrmann, Legal Writing, Proofreading, Statement of Facts, Texas Supreme Court

Common Mistakes Seen in Appellate Petitions and Briefs, by Chad M. Ruback, Appellate Lawyer

http://news.appeal.pro/appeals-to-texas-supreme-court/appellate-petitions-and-briefs/

Mr. Ruback served as a briefing attorney to the Fort Worth Court of Appeals. Here he shares the common mistakes that are normally seen in appellate writing. Because an appellate court never questions witnesses or hears evidence, the written documents submitted by the parties are all it has upon which to base its ruling. Sloppy and lengthy garbled arguments simply will not do. Mr. Ruback’s comments are worth noting.

I would like to add to Mr. Ruback’s list – neglecting to verify the accuracy of the appellate record while it remains in the jurisdiction of the trial court. It is a simple exercise to compare the record compiled by the trial court clerk using the Designation of Record and Counter-Designation of Record to make sure that the record is accurate.

This may seem a waste of time until the appellate record includes a deposition that was never admitted into evidence or a crucial piece of evidence is overlooked by the court clerk who assembled record for the appeal. No one is perfect; mistakes can happen.

Too often, counsel ignore this simple step. Personally, I would make sure the person you send to check the record put the trial exhibits together and/or was part of the trial team. Or to put it another way – how do you explain to a client that you couldl have avoided the appeal’s fatal flaw if you had checked the record before it was sent up on appeal? -CCE

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Legal Writing Faculty – It’s Okay To Sweat The Small Stuff.

16 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Bad Legal Writing, Citations, Education, Legal Writing, Legalese, Paralegals/Legal Assistants, The Bluebook

≈ Comments Off on Legal Writing Faculty – It’s Okay To Sweat The Small Stuff.

Tags

Above the Law (blog), Joe Patrice, Legal Assistants, Legal Writing, Legal Writing Course, Legal Writing Prof Blog, Local Rules, Louisa Heiny, NYU, Paralegals, S.J. Quinney College of Law, Santa Clara Law Professor Ray Bernstein, University of Utah, Yale

A Law Professor’s Detailed, Thoughtful, and Comprehensive ‘Local Rules’ for Class: A Response to “Above the Law,” Legal Writing Prof Blog (guest post from Louisa Heiny, Adjunct Professor of Law at the S.J. Quinney College of Law of the University of Utah, responding to recent post at Above The Law Blog)

http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/legalwriting/2014/02/atl.html

I used to teach Legal Writing and Legal Analysis to paralegals. Students had to work hard to earn a good grade in those classes. Some students appreciated the emphasis on grammar and punctuation, adhering strictly to court rules and the Bluebook, the eradication of legalese, and the insistence that details matter. Regrettably, not every student felt the same way, and missed the point. There was a reason why the bar was set high for my students. I wanted them to succeed once they were on the job.

If I learned anything from teaching, it was that the majority of students, when challenged, will work hard to meet high standards and expectations set for the class. If a teacher’s expectation are low, the work turned in will be mediocre at best. Both law and paralegal students face tough competition upon graduation. Quality matters more than ever.

It is nice to see that there are still legal writing faculty who set insist on quality. -CCE

I admit it: I read Above the Law. I read it every day. It’s even on my Facebook feed. It’s sometimes snarky, often witty, and has published some of the most ridiculously funny cease and desist letters I’ve ever seen. I use material from Above the Law in class to show students what not to do.

I’ll also admit that when I read the headline in Above the Law, ‘A Law Professor’s Detailed, Ridiculous, Condescending ‘Local Rules’ For Class,’ I panicked. There was a serious possibility that I was about to read my own syllabus. I’m an adjunct, so there was also a possibility that I was about to be fired.

After a moment’s relief that I was not the target of ATL’s ire, I read the article. Written by Joe Patrice, the post skewers the ‘local rules’ created by Santa Clara Law Professor Ray Bernstein for his legal writing class. While my own syllabus isn’t as detailed, Professor Bernstein has created a detailed, thoughtful, and comprehensive set of local rules designed to put students on notice of class requirements, as well as prepare them for the practice of law. . . .

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Federal Court Rejects Portland’s Panhandling Ordinance.

15 Saturday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Constitution, First Amendment, Municipal Code, Municipal Law, Panhandling

≈ Comments Off on Federal Court Rejects Portland’s Panhandling Ordinance.

Tags

Anti-Camping, First Amendment, Homeless, Mayor Charlie Hales, Muncipality, Oregon, Panhandlers, Portland, U.S. Constitution, U.S. District Judge George Z. Singal

 Our View: Rejection Of Median-Strip Panhandling Ban Right Call For Portland, Portland Press Herald

http://tinyurl.com/l6o3gdp

It is estimated that 4,000 homeless people sleep on Portland’s streets. Portland’s Mayor Charlie Hales has been taking various measures since last summer to address with Portland’s homeless situation. Mayor Hales has said he wants to crack down on homeless camps by increasing homeless shelters, but has not set any specific amount for pay for shelters.

The Mayor’s anti-camping law allows police to “sweep” homeless  on sidewalks. In a “sweep,” the police discard the homeless’ few possessions, including warm clothing and blankets, in spite of the number of homeless who have frozen to death.

Mayor Hales says this law is not about homelessness but about lawlessness. Unfortunately for Mayor Hales, his actions have galvanized grass roots protesters to head this week towards City Hall with – literally – pitchforks and torches.

To the Portland Police Department’s credit, it responded to the recent extremely cold conditions by moving people to shelter. The Fire Department also did its part to help. Normally around 1,000 shelter beds are available for the homeless, but various agencies, such as the Red Cross, provided 350 more shelter beds.

This will, I hope, give you an idea of the scope of the homeless situation in Portland, the struggle to address it, and set the stage for the case discussed in this post from the Portland Press Herald.  An ordinance forbidding panhandling purportedly to address “public safety” has been struck down by a federal judge in support of the First Amendment. -CCE

There is something disturbing about seeing men and women standing near the roadway holding signs and asking for help. It’s hard to ignore a median-strip panhandler when you are sitting in a car stopped at a red light. It makes some people feel angry, others threatened.

Moving panhandlers off the median strips did not fix any of the real problems of poverty in Portland, but neither does knocking down the ordinance that banned them. City leaders should keep working to address the real problems of homelessness and extreme poverty.

But that’s not enough to override the First Amendment to the Constitution, according to U.S. District Judge George Z. Singal. In his ruling Wednesday, Singal struck down a Portland ordinance that banned standing in median strips by pedestrians as ‘content-based restriction on free speech.’

Judge Singal saw right through the city’s claim that the goal of the ordinance was to protect public safety, correctly pointing out that the ordinance did not prohibit people from posting campaign signs on the medians, which is at least as dangerous as standing still. . . .

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iPhone J.D.’s Latest “In The News”

15 Saturday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apple, Cell Phones, Google, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology, Mac, Tablets

≈ Comments Off on iPhone J.D.’s Latest “In The News”

Tags

Alan Cohen, Apple, AppleInsider, Brian Chen, Daring Fireball, Good Technology, IDG News Service, Investors.com, iPad, iPhone, iPhone J.D. Blog, Jeff Richardson, Jeffrey Taylor, John Gruber, Juan Carlos Perez, Laptop, Law Technology News, New York Times, Patrick Seitz, Samsung, The Droid Lawyer, Tim Cook, Tom Mighell, Wall Street Journal

In The News, by Jeff Richardson, iPhone J.D. Blog

http://tinyurl.com/kn6r3xt

Another excellent review of legal technology news for the past week. -CCE

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Apple and Google Fighting Patent Trolls In the U.S. Supreme Court.

15 Saturday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Apple, Google, Intellectual Property, Legal Technology, Patent Law, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, United States Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Apple and Google Fighting Patent Trolls In the U.S. Supreme Court.

Tags

Allcare Health Management Systems, Apple, BloombergBusinessweek, Charlene Morrow, Cisco Systems, Facebook, Google, Greg Stohr, Intel, Octane Fitness, Patent Freedom, Patent Infringement, Patent Trolls, Silicon Valley, Susan Decker, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, U.S. Supreme Court, Verizon, Yahoo

The Supreme Court Takes on Patent Trolls, by Greg Stohr and Susan Decker, Technology, BloombergBusinessweek

http://tinyurl.com/mav2rc4

Apple (AAPL) and Google (GOOG) say they’re tired of being slapped with baseless patent suits that cost them millions in legal fees. Now they’re asking the U.S. Supreme Court to let them hit back. The two are leading a group of companies urging the court to make it easier for businesses to recover legal costs when they win a patent infringement suit. In two cases to be argued this month, the justices will hear them out.

More than 100,000 businesses were threatened in 2012 by ‘patent assertion entities.’ Often derided as patent trolls, these companies get most of their revenue from licensing patents and from suing other companies for infringement. They filed 19 percent of all patent lawsuits from 2007 to 2011, according to the Government Accountability Office. . . .

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Keeping It Short and Sweet.

15 Saturday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Criminal Law, Legal Writing, Texas Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Keeping It Short and Sweet.

Tags

Carving Doctrine, Ex parte McWilliams, Good Legal Writing, Presiding Judge Onion, Texas Supreme Court, Tiffany Johnson

Less is More, by Tiffany Johnson, Good Legal Writing

http://goodlegalwriting.com/2014/01/03/less-is-more/

I happened upon this interesting dissent in my research recently.  If you can forgive the biting tone (note the judge’s befitting name), I think the minimalist technique is pretty effective.  It’s not bogged down with preachy legalese.  It doesn’t pontificate or soliloquize. It’s short and (not so) sweet. . . .

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Amending the Proposed Amendments

15 Saturday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in In Custodia Legis

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Craig Ball shares his thoughts on comments already made, the extension of the amendment comments deadline, and the comment he intends to make once the submission web page is back up and running. -CCE

craigball's avatarBall in your Court

drawing boardToday was ostensibly the last day for public comment on the proposed amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.  The good news for other procrastinators is that the submission deadline has been extended to accommodate scheduled website maintenance,  The new deadline for submitting public comments is 11:59 PM ET on Tuesday, February 18, 2014.  Over a thousand comments have been submitted, and I’ve been trying to wade through them, unsurprised at the deep division between plaintiffs and corporate interests.  I can’t recall another time when so much has been spent by corporate lobbyists to influence the civil rulemaking process.  Clearly, corporate America expects a bigger payoff from these proposed amendments than I do.

Notwithstanding their strengths, there are aspects of the proposed amendments that should go back to the drawing board.  Many commentators focus on problems with Proposed Rule 26 and it’s efforts to narrow the scope of discovery…

View original post 1,301 more words

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Canada’s Paralegal Licensing Process.

14 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Canada Licensing

≈ Comments Off on Canada’s Paralegal Licensing Process.

Tags

Canada, Entry Level Competencies, Paralegal Licensing Process, Paralegals, The Law Society of Upper Canada

Paralegal Licensing Process, The Law Society of Upper Canada

http://www.lsuc.on.ca/licensingprocessparalegal/

To provide services effectively and in the public interest, Canada’s Paralegal Licensing Process requires candidates to possess the required entry-level competencies. This website sets out the admission qualifications through various options explained at this link.

In your opinion, do these entry-level requirements adequately protect the public and sufficiently define the role of paralegals in Canada? -CCE

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Did 9th Circuit Kill Gun Control In Response to 7th Circuit Case?

14 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Constitution, Second Amendment, United States Supreme Court

≈ Comments Off on Did 9th Circuit Kill Gun Control In Response to 7th Circuit Case?

Did The 9th Circuit Court Just Kill Gun Control?, by Michael McGough, Los Angeles Times – Opinion

http://tinyurl.com/n3t49v9

Last year, after the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals struck down Illinois’ blanket ban on the carrying of “ready to use” guns outside the home, a Los Angeles Times editorial said this:

‘Even if it were affirmed by the Supreme Court, the 7th Circuit’s decision probably wouldn’t threaten most state laws that impose sensible restrictions on the carrying of firearms. (In California, applicants for a ‘carry a concealed weapon’ permit must prove that they are of ‘good moral character,’ have sufficient cause to carry a weapon and have received firearms training.)’

We were wrong — sort of.

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iPad Apps from Tom Mighell’s 2014 Webinar.

14 Friday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apps, iPad, iPhones, Legal Technology, Mac

≈ Comments Off on iPad Apps from Tom Mighell’s 2014 Webinar.

Tags

Apps, iPad, iPads, Legal Productivity Blog, One Hour for Lawyers, Tim Baran, Tom Mighell, Webinar

Roundup of Apps from iPad for Lawyers Webinar (2014), by Tim Baran, Legal Productivity

http://tinyurl.com/mbs5tlor

Tom Mighell, author of iPad Apps in One Hour for Lawyers, put on another widely popular webinar for us. Here’s the much requested list of iPad apps he covered.

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Follow The Money – Campaign Contributions for State and Federal Politics.

13 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Campaign Contributions, Election Laws, Freedom of Information Act, Government

≈ Comments Off on Follow The Money – Campaign Contributions for State and Federal Politics.

Tags

Campaign Contributions, Districts, Follow The Money, Government, Legislators, Political Donations, Politics

Follow The Money, National Institute on Money

http://www.followthemoney.org/index.phtml

Online resource for campaign contributions for state and federal politics. -CCE

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$17 Million – Likely Largest Ever Wrongful Workplace Death Settlement.

13 Thursday Feb 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Damages, Employment Law, Evidence, Government, Litigation, Negligence, OSHA, Settlement, Wrongful Death

≈ Comments Off on $17 Million – Likely Largest Ever Wrongful Workplace Death Settlement.

Tags

Adam Nowak Sr., Crane Accident, EHS Today, Electrician, Grays Ferry, Josh Cable, Litigation, Negligence, OSHA, Pennsylvania County, Robert Mongeluzzi, Safety, Settlement, Steam Plant, Unforeseeable Act, Veolia Energy, Workplace Safety, Wrongful Death

Philadelphia Electrician’s Widow to Receive Record $17 Million in Wrongful-Death Settlement, by Josh Cable, EHS Today

http://tinyurl.com/mx9kqq5

The widow of an electrician who died in a crane accident at Veolia Energy’s Schuylkill steam plant in Grays Ferry, Pa., will receive $17 million, in what is believed to be the largest wrongful-workplace-death settlement in Philadelphia County history. . . .

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