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The Researching Paralegal

~ Articles and Research for Legal Professionals

The Researching Paralegal

Monthly Archives: March 2014

Jury Verdit in Synthetic Marijuana Case.

21 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Criminal Law, Drug Possession, Jury Persuasion, Trial Tips and Techniques

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Forensic News Daily, Jury Verdit, Marijuana, Mary Drier, Michigan State Police, Synthetic Cannabinoids. State of Michigan, Synthetic Marijana, Tuscaloa Today, Tuscola County Prosecutor Mark Reene

Jury Returns Guilty Verdicts in Synthetic Marijuana Case. by Mary Drier, Tuscaloa Today, Forensic News Daily

http://tinyurl.com/n8tqxx6
“A year-long investigation by several law enforcement agencies and a five-day trial results in guilty verdicts against two Michigan residents from incidents involving the sale of synthetic cannabinoids.. . .”

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Law Student Invents App To Write Case Briefs.

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apps, Case Briefs, Headnotes, iPad, IRAC, Legal Analysis, Legal Technology, Legal Writing

≈ Comments Off on Law Student Invents App To Write Case Briefs.

Tags

Case Analysis, Case Briefs, David Lutz, Legal Writing, Robert Ambrogi, Robert Ambrogi’s LawSites, The University of Michigan Law School

‘BriefCase’ App Automates Creation of Case Briefs, by Robert Ambrogi, Robert Ambrogi’s LawSites Blog

http://perma.cc/YXN4-HN3W

 

It will be interesting to see legal writing professors’ take on this. Please note that this App only works on iPads. -CCE

A third-year student at The University of Michigan Law School has created an iPad app, BriefCase, that automates the creation of case briefs.

The student, David Lutz, found it cumbersome to have to print out PDFs of cases, annotate them, and then type all the annotated information into a brief. The app lets you do all that on an iPad. (There are no iPhone or Android versions.) . . . .

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Jury Nullification Secret Sneaking Out Of The Bag.

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Jury Instructions, Jury Persuasion, Jury Selection, Litigation, Trial Tips and Techniques

≈ Comments Off on Jury Nullification Secret Sneaking Out Of The Bag.

Tags

CGP Grey video, Dr. Ken Broda-Bahm, Juries, Jury Trials, Litigation, Nullification, Persuasive Litigator Blog, The Law You Won't Be Told, Trial Tips & Techniques

Treat Nullification as a Known Option, by Dr. Ken Broda-Bahm, Persuasive Litigator

http://perma.cc/HWG4-PKHK

Jury nullification is treated as a deep and dangerous secret. The idea that a jury can decide to follow its own moral guidance instead of following the law, is the legal doctrine that dare not speak its name, at least not anywhere near a courtroom. It’s been used as ammo in the war against the drug war, led to accusations of jury tampering, and even served as the basis for a criminal indictment of a retired professor who made it a practice to hand out pamphlets about nullification in front of courthouses. As stories like these become more well-known, the official secret of jury nullification might be turning into something more like an open secret. Based on the viral success of a recent video by CPG Grey — more than 1.5 million viewers in the first month it’s been up — the knowledge of nullification might be well on the way to becoming more common than ever. . . .

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Civil Rights Litigation Clearing House.

16 Sunday Mar 2014

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

≈ Comments Off on Civil Rights Litigation Clearing House.

Tags

Civil Rights, Civil Rights Litigation Clearing House

Civil Rights Litigation Clearing House, University of Michigan Law Center

http://www.clearinghouse.net/index.php

The Civil Rights Litigation Clearinghouse collects documents and information from civil rights cases in specific case categories across the United States. It is available to scholars, teachers, students, policymakers, advocates, and the public, to allow greater understanding of civil rights litigation in this country.

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Using Logical Groupings In Legal Writing.

16 Sunday Mar 2014

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

≈ Comments Off on Using Logical Groupings In Legal Writing.

Tags

Kenneth F. Oettle, Legal Writing, New Jersey Law Journal

In Legal Writing, Dross Disappears and Points Emerge as Groupings Improve, by Kenneth F. Oettle, New Jersey Law Journal

http://perma.cc/PRC7-2629

Kenneth Oettle is on my list of top legal writers. His legal writing book, “Making Your Point: A Practical Guide to Persuasive Legal Writing” is well worth the price. -CCE

Legal writing is all about groupings — sets and subsets, and categories. These are the building blocks of logic. Accurate sets and subsets (accurate categories) increase the efficiency with which information is delivered, and the process of shaping sets and subsets forces a writer to confirm that the message is on point. Regrettably, the kind of precise grouping that typically takes place late in the editing process (e.g., rearranging items in sentences and short paragraphs) is sometimes skipped in the rush to get product out the door. . . .

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Embassies and Consulates Directory & Search Engine

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Embassies and Consulates

≈ Comments Off on Embassies and Consulates Directory & Search Engine

Tags

Consulates, Database, Embassies, EmbassyWorld, International Law, Maps, Passports, Travel

EmbassyWorld – Embassies & Consulates Of The World

http://

Serving the diplomatic community and the online community since 1996, EmbassyWorld is designed to provide a comprehensive list of contact resources for all of the world’s diplomatic offices.  Our goal is to provide an easy-to-navigate directory that is clearly laid out and fully cross-indexed. Our database is searchable via a bi-lateral search engine to search both host location and hosted embassy from dual query boxes.  It is our intention to make finding an embassy easy.  Whether your intent is to travel, renew a passport, seek consulate assistance, or relocate to another nation, we aspire to provide the information you are seeking. We have maps, a growing database of tools to make variance in international standards easily convertible or accessible, as well as information on international relocation, including relocation reports.

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FAA Appeals Commercial Use of Drones for Aerial Photographs.

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Aerial Photographs, Aviation Law, Drones, Federal Aviation Administration, Government, National Transportation and Safety Board, Privacy

≈ Comments Off on FAA Appeals Commercial Use of Drones for Aerial Photographs.

Tags

Aerial Photographs, Aviation, Commercial Drones, Drones, FAA Modernization and Reform Act, Federal Aviation Administration, Model Aircraft, National Transportation and Safety Board, Privacy, Raphael Pirker

The Federal Aviation Administration Appeals Most Recent Drone Ruling, by Charles D. Tobin, Holland & Knight LLP

http://perma.cc/ED68-NEUC

The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has appealed this month’s ruling by an administrative law judge striking down a fine against a paid photographer who had strapped cameras to a model airplane and photographed the University of Virginia.

The case, now pending before the National Transportation and Safety Board (NTSB), could alter the flight path of the current development of regulations and laws that will affect newsrooms’ abilities to use drones to gather news. . . .

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Does Document Review Qualify As The Practice of Law?

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Discovery, Document Review, E-Discovery, Employment Law, Fair Labor Standards Act, Overtime

≈ Comments Off on Does Document Review Qualify As The Practice of Law?

Tags

Contract Attorneys, Discovery, Document Review, Matthew Green, Overtime, Practice of Law, Skadden Arps/Tower Legal, The Posse List Bog

The Contract Attorney Overtime Case Against Skadden, Arps/Tower Legal Has A New Twist, posted by mrposse, The Posse List Bog

http://perma.cc/BQB7-NU7W

This is a legal question that has not yet been completely resolved. As noted in the post, bar examiners have stated that document review is not the practice of law. Contract attorneys who often perform this work want to know whether it qualifies for overtime. This will be one to watch. -CCE

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Social Media Is Admissible Evidence, But Must Be Authenticated.

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Admissibility, Authentication, Discovery, Evidence, Relevance, Social Media

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Dave Stafford, Discovery, Evidence, Facebook, Judge David Shaheed, Judge Tanya Walton Pratt, Lyn Mettler, Marion Superior Court Master Commissioner David Hooper, Relevancy, Social media, Step Ahead Social Research, The Indiana Lawyer.com

Social Media Sleuths Find Evidence, But Admissibility Requires Authentication, by Dave Stafford, The Indiana Lawyer.com

http://perma.cc/N638-D84L

What happens on Facebook stays on Facebook – forever – and attorneys conceivably run into risk if they fail to investigate pertinent posts, a judge suggested during a recent presentation about social media evidence. . . .

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Basic Bluebook Guide.

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Citations, Legal Writing, The Bluebook

≈ Comments Off on Basic Bluebook Guide.

Tags

Bluebook, Cornell Legal Information Institute, Georgetown University Law Center, Legal Citation Format, Peter Martin

Bluebook Guide, Georgetown Law Library

http://perma.cc/8TZR-WN43

This guide was designed for law students in the Georgetown University Law Center. It covers the Bluebook’s organization and how to cite to the most common legal citations. It is not as thorough and complete as Peter Martin’s Cornell Legal Information Institute’s resource at: https://researchingparalegal.com/2013/10/31/peter-martins-introduction-to-basic-legal-citation-an-alwd-and-bluebook-cheat-sheet/.

This guide does not explain how to use certain types of lesser used legal sources. But, if you want a resource for case law, statutes, and other basic legal resources, this will work. -CCE

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8th Circuit Decision Raises Evidence Questions.

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Child Molestation, Criminal Law, Evidence, Federal Rules of Evidence, Rule 403, Rule 412, Rule 413, Rule 414, Sexual Assault, Speker evidence

≈ Comments Off on 8th Circuit Decision Raises Evidence Questions.

Tags

Child Molestation, Criminal Law, Evidence, Federal Rules of Evidence, Rule, Rule 403, Rule 412, Rule 413, Rule 414, Sexual Abuse, Sexual Assault, Speker evidence

Reversal of Fortune: Should Suspects be Able to Introduce Reverse 413/414 Evidence?, by Colin Miller, Editor, Evidence Prof Blogger

 http://perma.cc/V3UM-C98B

[I]n United States v. Thunder, 2014 WL 944752 (8th Cir. 2014), the defendant was charged with sexual abuse of a minor and sexual abuse of a person incapable of consenting. At trial, the defendant sought to introduce the prior sexual abuse conviction of an alleged alternate suspect, but the district court deemed the evidence inadmissible under Rule 412(c)(1). This prompts two questions: (1) Why did the Eighth Circuit mention Rule 412; and (2) Is there such a thing as reverse Rule 413/414 evidence? . . . .

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How Target Missed Malware Alarms and Blew It.

14 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, Consumer Law, Credit Repair, Criminal Law, Finance and Banking Law, Identity Theft

≈ Comments Off on How Target Missed Malware Alarms and Blew It.

Tags

Bangalore, Bloomberg Businessweek, FireEye, Gregg Steinhafel, Hackers, Internet Security, Jim Walter. McAfee, Malware, Nieman Marcus, Target, Technology, U.S. Department of Justice, Verizon Enterprise Solutions

Missed Alarms and 40 Million Stolen Credit Card Numbers: How Target Blew It, by Michael Riley, Ben Elgin, Dune Lawrence, and Carol Matlack, Bloomberg  Businessweek Technology

http://tinyurl.com/njsy4rm

The biggest retail hack in U.S. history wasn’t particularly inventive, nor did it appear destined for success. In the days prior to Thanksgiving 2013, someone installed malware in Target’s (TGT) security and payments system designed to steal every credit card used at the company’s 1,797 U.S. stores. At the critical moment—when the Christmas gifts had been scanned and bagged and the cashier asked for a swipe—the malware would step in, capture the shopper’s credit card number, and store it on a Target server commandeered by the hackers.

It’s a measure of how common these crimes have become, and how conventional the hackers’ approach in this case, that Target was prepared for such an attack. . . .

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If Your Copier Has A Hard Drive, Is Its Stored Data Susceptible to E-Discovery?

09 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Confidentiality, Databases, Discovery, E-Discovery, Law Office Management, Legal Ethics, Legal Technology, Litigation Hold, Metadata, Native Format, Office Procedures, Preservation, Sanctions, Technology

≈ Comments Off on If Your Copier Has A Hard Drive, Is Its Stored Data Susceptible to E-Discovery?

Tags

Adolph J. Levy, Copiers, Digital Devices, Discovery, Document Retention, E-Discovery, Fax Machines, Hard Drives, Out-Of-The-Box Lawyering Blog, Requests for Production

Be Aware: Copying Machines Can Have Hard Drives And Store Copies – That’s Potential Out-Of-The-Box Discovery, by Adolph J. Levy, Out-Of-The-Box Lawyering Blog

http://tinyurl.com/mmpkd5h

Did you know that some copying machines have hard drives and store digital copies of the copies they have made? Or that the hard drives could even contain 25,000 copies that have been made? Copier + Hard Drive: A Dangerous Combination.

Lawyers are used to discovering e-mail, but now what about using discovery to find copies that a opposing party made over time? Wouldn’t you like to be at your opponent’s office and see the originals of all the copies that were being made?

Well, now, fortunately — or unfortunately — you might be able to. . . .

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Time Management Tips From Jim Calloway.

09 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Apps, Emails, iPad, iPhones, Law Office Management, Legal Ethics, Legal Technology, Malpractice, Microsoft Office, Office Procedures, Outlook, Tablets

≈ Comments Off on Time Management Tips From Jim Calloway.

Tags

David Allen, Deadlines, Docketing, Email Management, Inbox Zero, Jim Calloway, Jim Calloway's Law Practice Tips Blog, Microsoft Outlook, Remember the Milk, Stephen Covey, Things, Time Management, Timothy Ferriss, Toodledo, Trello

Time Management by Buckets and Lists, by Jim Calloway, Jim Calloway’s Law Practice Tips Blog

http://tinyurl.com/lbgd94z

How much time is wasted prioritizing ever-changing deadlines, projects, and e-mail? As always, Mr. Calloway provides common sense approach to time management, including management of e-mail, to-do lists, and more. -CCE

Time management is a challenge for us all these days. There are so many more distractions and so many more electronic avenues for assignments to come our way. It is a constant struggle to maintain productivity and a constant goal to improve. Missing a calendar entry can be critical in a law firm, so we live by our calendars. But making certain that critical tasks are completed promptly is equally important. Many lawyers put critical to-do items or deadlines on their calendars, even though they should be in a task list.

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A Guide to Legal Conflict of Interests.

09 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Conflict of Interest, Legal Ethics, Malpractice

≈ Comments Off on A Guide to Legal Conflict of Interests.

Tags

Conflict of Interest, Consents, Legal Ethics, Malpractice, Waivers, William Freivogel

Freivogel on Conflicts – A Guide to Conflicts of Interest for Lawyers

http://www.freivogelonconflicts.com/home.html

This Guide is a good place for your research. Of course, you should update any research you find on the Internet. As in all legal research, please verify that no rules, regulations, case law, or other controlling legal authority has made any changes to what you find here. – CCE

This guide is built around the categories listed in the Table of Contents below. The What’s New page contains very recent decisions and opinions on those categories. It is updated several times a week.  Before using these materials, please read the “Ground Rules and Tips for Using this Site,” by clicking here.

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Like Us, Judges and Juries Get the “Munchies.”

08 Saturday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Judges, Closing Argument, Cross-Examination, Defense Counsel, Direct Examination, Exhibits, Experts, Federal Judges, Judges, Jury Persuasion, Law Clerks, Litigation, Making Objections, Opening Argument, Oral Argument, Plaintiff's Counsel, Trial Tips and Techniques, Voir Dire, Witnesses

≈ Comments Off on Like Us, Judges and Juries Get the “Munchies.”

Tags

Dr. Ken Broda-Bahm, Judges, Juries, Lunch and Snack Breaks, Persuasive Litigator Blog, Persuasive Trial Strategy, Rocket Science Blog, Trial Tips & Techniques, Trials

Time Your Arguments to the Judge’s Lunch Breaks (and Adapt to All Decision Makers’ “Cognitive Load”), by  Dr. Ken Broda-Bahm, Persuasive Litigator  Blog

http://tinyurl.com/lebleml

It comes as no surprise that a hungry person, be it the judge or members of a jury, find it difficult to concentrate and focus on your client’s case. Long stretches of testimony and argument are hard enough to follow, especially if the case is complex with numerous exhibits and witnesses. Regardless how comfortable the chair, sitting for long periods trying to listen carefully to a case is hard work.

There is more than one way to consider your audience at a trial or hearing. Persuasive argument is one. Excellent trial preparation using technology is another. Considerate and well-timed rest and meal breaks are another tool that can be used to your advantage.

The Rocket Science Blog mentioned in this post can be found at http://tinyurl.com/3dg5e8n. – CCE

Anyone who argues in front of judges knows that human factors can weigh as heavily as the law in determining your judge’s decisions.  But it is still possible at times to be surprised at the degree of influence, as well as the banality of those human factors.  Case in point: lunch and snack breaks.  Recent research discussed in the excellent Not Exactly Rocket Science blog appears to show that judges’ decisions vary as a direct effect of the proximity of their morning snack or lunch break.  In case you are using your morning break or lunch hour to read this post, I’d like to make it worth your while by applying the study findings to the more general issue of your decision-makers’ mental work load and offering some recommendations for anyone who needs to make arguments to a potentially fatigued audience. . . .

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High Tech Thieves Looking Forward to Windows XP Deadline.

06 Thursday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Disaster Preparedness, Law Office Management, Technology

≈ Comments Off on High Tech Thieves Looking Forward to Windows XP Deadline.

Tags

BBC News Technology, Mark Ward, Michael Silver, Microsoft, Windows, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows Operating System, Windows XP

XP – The Operating System That Will Not Die, by Mark Ward, Technology correspondent, BBC News

http://www.bbc.com/news/technology-26432473

 An earlier post about the upcoming demise of Windows XP is here:

 https://researchingparalegal.com/2013/12/27/open-season-for-malware-in-april-2014-are-you-ready/

It’s an event that Microsoft has been warning people and businesses about for months. And it is one that hi-tech thieves have been looking forward to as those digital protections start to diminish.

In a bid to get users shifting over to a more modern version of windows, Microsoft has created a website that tells people if they are, or are not, running the software and on 8 March will make a pop-up warning appear on the screens of those who are still using it. . . .

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E-Discovery Federal Rule Amendments and More.

06 Thursday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Bankruptcy Law, Case Law, Court Rules, Discovery, E-Discovery, Federal District Court Rules, Federal Law, Litigation, Mandatory Law, Metadata, Preservation, Primary Law, Regulations, Research, Sanctions, State Law, Statutes, Technology, The Sedona Conference, Trial Tips and Techniques

≈ Comments Off on E-Discovery Federal Rule Amendments and More.

Tags

Bankruptcy Law, Case Summaries, E-Discovery, K&L Gates, Legal Research, Local Rules, Sedona Conference, State Court E-Discovery Rules

Category Archives: FEDERAL RULES AMENDMENTS, by Electronic Discovery, K&L Gates

http://www.ediscoverylaw.com/articles/federal-rules-amendments/

 Notice and analysis of electronic discovery federal rule amendments. You can count on this website to be updated promptly and the information and analysis is accurate. Free subscription by RSS feed.

While you are there, it is worth your time to browse the variety of information published by K&L Gates. They are experts on e-discovery. You will find, among other things:

  • E-Discovery Case Database <http://www.ediscoverylaw.com/e-discovery-case-database/>;
  • State Court Rules on E-Discovery <http://www.ediscoverylaw.com/state-district-court-rules/>; and
  • Case Summaries <http://www.ediscoverylaw.com/articles/case-summaries/>; and
  • Resources <http://www.ediscoverylaw.com/articles/resources/>.

Just poke around. I do not think you will be disappointed. -CCE

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Federal Reserve and Banking Regulations.

06 Thursday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Federal Reserve System, Finance and Banking Law, Government

≈ Comments Off on Federal Reserve and Banking Regulations.

Tags

Banking Regulations, Federal Reserve, Foreclosure, Wall Street

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

http://www.federalreserve.gov/default.htm

 This site is about the Federal Reserve and banking regulations. The topics are divided as:

 Recent Developments, About the Fed, News and Events, Monetary Policy, Banking Information and Regulation, Payment Systems, Economic Research & Data, Consumer Information, Community Development, Reporting Forms, and Publications. -CCE

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Whistleblower Comes Clean About Fake Classes for College Athletes.

04 Tuesday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in College Sport Research Institute, Employment Law, Intercollegiate Athletics, NCAA, Race Discrimination, Sports Law, Whistleblower

≈ Comments Off on Whistleblower Comes Clean About Fake Classes for College Athletes.

Tags

Basketball, BloombergBusinessweek, College Sport Research Institute, Football, Intercollegiate Athletics, NCAA Inc., Paul M. Barrett, Phony Courses, Politics and Policy, Recruiting Atheletes, Richard Southall, Sports Law, University of North Carolina, University of South Carolina, Whistleblower, William Friday

In Fake Classes Scandal, UNC Fails Its Athletes—and Whistle-Blower, by Paul M. Barrett, Politics and Policy, BloombergBusinessweek
http://tinyurl.com/m4g76ky

Sitting in Memorial Hall at the heart of the Chapel Hill campus of the University of North Carolina, Mary Willingham wondered what William Friday would want her to do. . . .

*     *     *

In his last decades he’d [William Friday] tried to stir discussion about whether commercialized intercollegiate athletics was distorting higher education. That’s why Willingham had approached Friday in his 92nd and final year. In private conversations, she’d told him about her mounting anxiety that rather than educating its recruited athletes, UNC was playing a shell game to keep them from needing to study at all. She’d told him about basketball and football stars who read at a grade school level. She confessed that she’d helped steer some of these young men—many of them black—into lecture classes that never met. Worst of all, given Carolina’s racial history, the phony courses were offered in the black studies department. . . .

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International Resource Center at LLRX.com.

03 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in International Law, International Law, International Law, Legal Directory, References, Research

≈ Comments Off on International Resource Center at LLRX.com.

Tags

beSpacific Blog., Comparative and Foreign Law, International Law Resource Center, LLRX.com, Sabrina I. Pacifici

Comparative and Foreign Law, International Law Resource Center, LLRX.com

http://www.llrx.com/comparative_and_foreign_law.html

My apologies. I should have thought of going directly to LLRX.com as one of the first places to look for a strong compilation of foreign law materials. If you are not already familiar with LLRX.com, then I strongly recommend that you make this a bookmark and visit it frequently.

Sabrina I. Pacifici is the genius behind this website. She is its founder, editor, and publisher. She also is the author of beSpacific Blog. < http://www.bespacific.com/> This is another blot add to your bookmarks. Ms. Pacifici is a well-recognized expert on legal research, and her work is consistently top notch. Again, both web sites are worth poking around. One never knows what other useful information may pop up. -CCE

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Another Excellent Resource for Researching Foreign Law.

03 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in International Law, International Law, International Law, References, Research

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Foreign Jurisdictions, Mirela Roznovschi, New York University Library

Foreign Collections By Jurisdiction, by Mirela Roznovschi, Webmaster and Editor, New York University Library (last updated March 3, 2014)

http://tinyurl.com/mc2sl7w

This Library provides more foreign jurisdictions (countries) than previously posted at this blog. Please do not think of this resource as merely a place to find foreign jurisdiction. Poke around. “Quick Links” at the top of the page might be a good place to start. Sometimes I stumble over the most interesting things while I am looking for something else.

When researching foreign law, of course you can always use search engines such as Google and Bing. Instead, I recommend looking at law schools’ libraries and legal databases such as HG.org. For Heaven’s sake, please do not include Wikipedia in your search! -CCE

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Craig Ball On Being A Digital Forensic Witness.

03 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Affidavits, Cross-Examination, Depositions, Direct Examination, Discovery, E-Discovery, Evidence, Exhibits, Expert Witness Report, Expert Witnesses, Experts, Forensic Expert Witness, Hearsay, Legal Technology, Legal Writing, Trial Tips and Techniques

≈ Comments Off on Craig Ball On Being A Digital Forensic Witness.

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Affidavits, Ball In Your Court Blog, Craig Ball, Depositions, E-Discovery, Evidence, Expert Witness Report, Forensic Expert Witness, Trial Tips & Techniques

Becoming a Better Digital Forensics Witness, by Craig Ball, Ball In Your Court Blog

 http://tinyurl.com/kgm8epj

I love to testify—in court, at deposition, in declarations and affidavits—and I even like writing reports about my findings in forensic exams.

I love the challenge—the chance to mix it up with skilled interrogators, defend my opinions and help the decision makers hear what the electronic evidence tells us.  There is a compelling human drama being played out in those bits and bytes, and computer forensic examiners are the fortunate few who get to tell the story.  It’s our privilege to help the finders of fact understand the digital evidence.[1]

This post is written for computer forensic examiners and outlines ways to become a more effective witness and common pitfalls you can avoid.  But the advice offered applies as well to almost anyone who takes the stand. . . .

. . .

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Fifth Circuit Ignores Forensics Scandal.

03 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, Criminal Law, Forensic Evidence, Mississippi Innocence Project

≈ 2 Comments

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5th Circuit Court of Appeals, Bite Marks, Kennedy Brewer, Levon Brooks, Louisiana, Medical Examiner, Michael West, Mississippi Innocence Project, National Association of Medical Examiners, Steven Hayne, Tavares Flaggs

The Fifth Circuit Turns Its Back on Forensics Scandal in Mississippi, by Radley Balko, The Washington Post, reposted in Forensic Magazine

http://tinyurl.com/m7b5hak

With a curt, three-page ruling late last month, a three-judge panel from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit denied the post-conviction petition of Tavares Flaggs, a Mississippi man currently serving a life sentence for murder.

Flaggs was convicted in large part because of the testimony of Steven Hayne, a medical examiner who for about two decades was able to monopolize the autopsy business in Mississippi. This story should really be one of the bigger criminal justice scandals in recent U.S. history. It potentially affects thousands of cases, both criminal and civil. It involves wrongful convictions, and people let off who should be behind bars. Several of the people convicted based on flawed testimony from Hayne are still on death row, in both Mississippi and in Louisiana. Flaggs’ petition, filed by the Mississippi Innocence Project, was the most comprehensive summary of what happened in Mississippi yet to get before a federal court. The Fifth Circuit panel brushed it aside in just four paragraphs. . . .

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New Mandatory Cover Sheet for U.S. District of Arizona.

03 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Appellate Law, E-Filing, Local Rules, U.S. District Court of Arizona

≈ Comments Off on New Mandatory Cover Sheet for U.S. District of Arizona.

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Civil Cover Sheet, E-Filing, ECF, Local Court Rules, Newsletter, U.S. District Court of Arizona

Notice of New, Automated Civil Cover Sheet (JS-44), from Newsletter, U.S. District Court, District of Arizona

Effective Monday, March 3, 2014, it will be mandatory for registered users of ECF to complete the new, automated Civil Cover Sheet (JS-44) when opening a civil case.

This automated form allows for the entry of multiple party and attorney names, provides drop-down lists for many categories and radio buttons to select the appropriate Nature of Suit. The final version includes only the selected information, resulting in a clean, easy to read document.

The automated Civil Cover Sheet (JS-44) is located in the Forms section of our website or by clicking the link below. http://www.azd.uscourts.gov/forms/js-44-civil-cover-sheet

If you have questions about ECF, take advantage of the experience of others by browsing our Frequently-Asked Questions by clicking on the link below, or copy and paste into your browser: http://www.azd.uscourts.gov/faqs/ecf.

[Emphasis added.]

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