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The Researching Paralegal

Category Archives: FastCase

Power Online Legal Research Tools

26 Friday Nov 2021

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Bloomberg Law, FastCase, LexisNexis, Research, Westlaw

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Legal Research, Terms and Connectors

Basic Legal Research – Terms and Connectors Searching, by Northern Illinois University College of Law, David C. Shapiro Memorial Law Library

https://libguides.niu.edu/basic-legal-research

When you do online legal research, do you have the luxury of time to poke around or do you have to get in, find what you need, and get out as fast as you can? I often feel as if I have limited time to dig as deep as I want. Usually, basic connectors – within the same sentence or paragraph and with parentheses – quickly help me find whatever I want, but not always. I am always looking for tips and tools that get the best results as quickly as I can, which is what drew me to this link. I hope it helps you too.

If you have a tip or tool that helps make you a master researcher, please share. -CCE

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The Common Flaw With Legal Database Providers.

29 Tuesday May 2018

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Bloomberg Law, Casemaker, FastCase, Google Scholar, LexisNexis, Research, Westlaw

≈ Comments Off on The Common Flaw With Legal Database Providers.

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Algorithms, Headnotes, Joe Hodnicki, Law Librarian Blog, Legal Research, Lexis, Westlaw

The Algorithm as a Human Artifact: Implications for Legal {Re}Search, by Joe Hodnicki, Law Librarian Blog

https://bit.ly/2GVxQzz

Susan Nevelow Mart is a law professor at the University of Colorado’s Law School. Her article has earned significant attention and recognition, and for good reason.

Most lawyers and paralegals learn legal research using Westlaw and Lexis, with an emphasis on using headnotes to research relevant law. Because humans write the headnotes and the search algorithms, there is a considerable variation in the results in our legal research.

[W]hen comparing the top ten results for the same search entered into the same jurisdictional case database in Casetext, Fastcase, Google Scholar, Lexis Advance, Ravel, and Westlaw, the results are a remarkable testament to the variability of human problem solving. There is hardly any overlap in the cases that appear in the top ten results returned by each database.

Hardly any overlap? Imagine how this affects cases argued by the parties and decided by the courts. But, there’s more. The percentage of relevant sources differs for all providers.

One of the most surprising results was the clustering among the databases in terms of the percentage of relevant results. The oldest database providers, Westlaw and Lexis, had the highest percentages of relevant results, at 67% and 57%, respectively. The newer legal database providers, Fastcase, Google Scholar, Casetext, and Ravel, were also clustered together at a lower relevance rate, returning approximately 40% relevant results.

Professor Mart reminds us that thorough legal research has always involved redundancy. We already know that different search terms give us new results to investigate. She recommends using multiple resources with multiple searches, and calls for more accountability by legal database providers.

We cannot change what the legal database providers have already done. We do have control over the thoroughness of our research and our search strategies. -CCE

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LexisNexis’ Next-Generation Solution Means End of Lexis.com.

21 Wednesday Dec 2016

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in FastCase, LexisNexis, Westlaw

≈ Comments Off on LexisNexis’ Next-Generation Solution Means End of Lexis.com.

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Fastcase®, LexisNexis, Robert Ambrogi, Westlaw

It’s Last Rites for Lexis.com, As LexisNexis Sets Date for Shutdown, by Robert Ambrogi, LawSites Blog

http://www.lawsitesblog.com/2016/12/last-rites-lexis-com-lexisnexis-sets-date-shutdown.html

“Prepare last rites for Lexis.com. The legacy legal research service will be leaving this world at the end of 2017.

This week, LexisNexis began notifying Lexis.com customers that it will be shutting down the service over the next 12 months and moving them to the newer Lexis Advance research platform.”

Continue reading →

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Casemaker and Fastcase – Why Can’t We All Get Along?

29 Tuesday Mar 2016

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Casemaker, FastCase, Research

≈ Comments Off on Casemaker and Fastcase – Why Can’t We All Get Along?

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Casemaker, Fastcase, Law Sites Blog, Legal Research, Robert Ambrogi

Casemaker Says It Won’t Fight Fastcase Lawsuit Over Georgia Law, by Robert Ambrogi, Law Sites Blog

http://bit.ly/1SvAAF3

Legal publisher Casemaker will not fight the lawsuit filed against it by Fastcase over copyright in Georgia law, its CEO David Harriman told me today. The company agrees that state law should not be subject to copyright and will not file an answer to Fastcase’s complaint, he said. That means that the court could enter a default judgment in Fastcase’s favor. . . .

Continue reading →

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Texas Bar Now Has Fastcase and Casemaker.

29 Sunday Jun 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Casemaker, FastCase

≈ Comments Off on Texas Bar Now Has Fastcase and Casemaker.

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Casemaker, Fastcase, Greg Lambert, HeinOnline, Texas Bar Association, Three Geeks and a Law Blog

Texas State Bar Adds Fastcase Alongside Casemaker, by Greg Lambert, Three Geeks and a Law Blog

http://www.geeklawblog.com/2014/06/texas-state-bar-adds-fastcase-alongside.html

As the saying goes, ’Everything’s bigger in Texas.’ That phrase also applies to the State Bar membership benefits. The State Bar of Texas has agreed to add Fastcase as a member benefit on top of its already existing Casemaker access. This makes it the first Bar in the country to offer both services. In addition to adding Fastcase, the State Bar of Texas increased the level of subscription to Casemaker to include the premium services of Casecheck+, CiteCheck, and CasemakerDigest to the member benefit. That is a major coup for the Bar.

Fastcase’s access will depend upon the size of your firm. For those under 11 attorneys, you will have access to the premium Fastcase database (all states & fed), for those 11+ attorney firms, you will have access to the Texas plan. Everyone will have access to the mobile apps and to the HeinOnline integration for the covered material.

It is a great day for the State Bar of Texas and its members. Read the Fastcase and SBOT press releases below for more information.

To log in to this free benefit, members will visit the State Bar website at http://www.texasbar.com and log in with their bar number and password. The service is also available via the TexasBarCLE website at http://www.texasbarcle.com/.

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The Public Library of Law.

25 Sunday May 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Case Law, Constitutions, Court Rules, FastCase, Internet, Law Libraries, Mandatory Law, Primary Law, References, Regulations, Research, State Law, Statutes

≈ 1 Comment

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Case Law, Civil Appeal State Profiles, Fastcase®, Legal Research, Regulations, Statutes, The Public Library of Law, U.S. Code, U.S. Courts of Circuit Appeals, U.S. Supreme Court

The Public Library of Law

http://www.plol.org/Pages/Search.aspx

The Public Library of Law is free. Actually, it’s one of the largest free law libraries on the Internet. It gives you access to case law from the U.S. Supreme Court, all U.S. Circuit Courts, case law for all states (from 1997 to date), the United States Federal Code (federal statutes), states for all 50 states, regulations, court rules, state and federal constitution, and more.

One of the more interesting things about PLoL is that it provides free links to paid content on Fastcase®. If you are not familiar with Fastcase®, check it out at http://www.fastcase.com. If you need help learning how to use it, you will find free tutorials at http://www.fastcase.com/support/. -CCE

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Shopping for Legal Research Software, But Don’t Know Which One To Pick?

28 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Bloomberg Law, FastCase, LexisNexis, Research, Westlaw

≈ Comments Off on Shopping for Legal Research Software, But Don’t Know Which One To Pick?

Tags

Bloomberg Law, Casemaster, Fastcase, LexisNexis Advance, Research Software Comparison Chart, Westlaw Next

Research Software Comparison Chart (with hat tip to Bill Statsky!)

http://tinyurl.com/pqob8ty

Compares LexisNexis Advance, Westlaw Next, Bloomberg, Casemaster, and Fastcase. -CCE

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