Friday, November 30, 2012

So You're Telling Me Those Cars In The Showroom Aren't Filled Up With Gas?

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Rule number one: Make sure the getaway car has enough gas to get away! Rule number two: Don't commit your crime in full view of surveillance cameras. A man in Albany, Georgia broke both rules, and will no doubt pay a hefty price. As reported by WALB:

An Albany car dealership has a big mess to clean up. Thanksgiving night a man broke in to the Five Star Nissan showroom, stole a vehicle, and shattered glass windows as he drove right out the building.
You already know how he was caught.
He ran out of gas in Early County though [and was hanging out by the car!] and is now in police custody.
To read more (a fair amount) click here.

Source: http://rss.justia.com/~r/LegalJuiceCom/~3/6Gpl-ZujSwA/post_536.html

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Two More Judges Challenge Retirement Provision as Unconstitutional

Two more trial judges are challenging the Pennsylvania constitutional provision that mandates members of the judiciary retire at the end of the year in which they turn 70. Earlier this month, six judges also filed a lawsuit challenging the provision. The latest suit directly asks the court to overturn prior precedent that is adverse to their claims.

Source: http://www.law.com/jsp/law/sign_me_in.jsp?article=http://www.law.com/jsp/pa/PubArticlePA.jsp?id=1202579688133&rss=newswire

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Praise the Lord and Judge Norman

Who doesn't love a humble man? And Mike Norman is, if nothing else, humble, as demonstrated by his words:
 “I feel like church is important,” he said. “I sentenced him to go to church for 10 years because I thought I could do that.”

As for the constitutionality of his ruling, Judge Norman said, “I think it would hold up, but I don’t know one way or another.”

How many judges would admit to such wholesale ignorance of the law? Humble. The posterboy for humility. Oklahoma Judge Mike Norman is a very humble man. As reported in the New York Times, Norman was constrained to impose a sentence, and did what he thought was best.

The 17-year-old defendant, Tyler Alred, was prosecuted as a youthful offender, giving the judge more discretion than in an adult case. Mr. Alred pleaded guilty to manslaughter for an accident last year, when he ran his car into a tree and a 16-year-old passenger was killed.

Although his alcohol level tested below the legal limit, because he was under age he was legally considered to be under the influence of alcohol. Mr. Alred told the court that he was happy to agree to church attendance and other mandates — including that he finish high school and train as a welder, and shun alcohol, drugs and tobacco for a year. By doing so, he is avoiding a 10-year prison sentence and has a chance to make a fresh start.

As is often the case, the defendant was probably pretty darned happy with being sentenced to church for ten years.  For one thing, it beats the hell out of prison. For another, there are cute girls in church, and you never know when one is going to take a shine to you.  And of course, certain pockets of our fine God-fearing Christian nation believe that it's good for one's soul.

But what if Tyler Alred decides a couple of years from now that he prefers to pray to Mohammed instead of Jesus?  Worse still, what if he decides that there is no zombie deity at all?  Ten years is a long time, and 17-year-olds sometimes change their mind about things like religion. It can happen.

The unconstitutionality of a judge sentencing a person to religious adherence seems too obvious for discussion. Regardless of whether you believe that a stint in church won't do this young man any harm, likely because you happen to embrace its teachings and thus see no pragmatic problem, the constitutional thingy, the Establishment Clause, that prohibits a secular government from forcing religion upon anyone, gets in the way.  You can't make the choice prison or Jesus, no matter how willing the penitent is to accept the latter or how strongly you believe that it's a good deal.

That humble Mike Norman doesn't seem to have much of a grasp of this issue, however, is disturbing.  Norman is a judge.  As a judge, he has the authority to make decisions that affect people's lives.  No matter how much you appreciate humility in a man with power, you also need to be able to believe that he's not, well, clueless.  From what he says, it's hard to believe that of Mike Norman.

In fairness, Norman didn't specify the religion to which he sentenced Alred.

Judge Norman did not specify which religious denomination Mr. Alred must follow. But he also said: “I think Jesus can help anybody. I know I need help from him every day.”

I bet Judge Norman needs Jesus' help every day.  Probably numerous times a day. But Norman's choice of deity isn't the bar by which the law measures constitutionality or judicial competence. 

The trend toward alternative sentences, punishment that doesn't require a person to go to jail or prison, and seeks another way to achieve the legitimate goals of a sentence, is generally a good one. Given our American love of imprisonment, offering judges an option that won't increase the prison population is certainly something that should be considered and applauded. 

Yet, the alternatives that judges come up with too often reflect their peculiar personal vision of propriety, whether to carry a sign that says she's an "idiot" or to pray to God they don't get caught again.  It seems impossible to believe that these judges have no appreciation of the limits of their authority, or their ability to impose bizarre sentences that either humiliate people for fun or violate the Constitution.

Humble is a good thing, in a person and even more so in a judge.  But clueless is not.  While alternatives to incarceration is also a good thing, commending a defendant to the hands of God is way outside a judge's authority.  How is it possible that the people in whom we repose our secular legal faith don't know this?



© 2012 Simple Justice NY LLC. This feed is for personal, non-commercial & Newstex use only. The use of this feed on any other website is a copyright violation. If this feed is not via RSS reader or Newstex, it infringes the copyright.

Source: http://blog.simplejustice.us/2012/11/24/praise-the-lord-and-judge-norman.aspx?ref=rss

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2011 Intellectual Property Year in Review and Outlook for 2012 – Part I: Patents

IP Counsel host, Attorney Peter Lando, partner at the firm of Lando & Anastasi, LLP, welcomes Craig Smith, partner at Lando & Anastasi, to discuss important patent cases and court decisions in 2011 from the United States Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit covering a wide range of issues, including patentable subject matter, inventor rights, inducement of patent infringement, damages, and inequitable conduct. Peter and Craig also discuss major cases on the dockets of the Supreme Court and Federal Circuit in 2012 that will be followed closely by practitioners and the business community.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/ip-counsel/2012/02/2011-intellectual-property-year-in-review-and-outlook-for-2012-part-i-patents/

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Structured Settlements and NSSTA’s 2012 Mission

NSSTA stands for National Structured Settlements Trade Association - the largest gathering of top professionals in the country taking the a lead in the structured settlement industry. On Ringler Radio, host Larry Cohen welcomes Eric Vaughn, Executive Director of National Structured Settlements Trade Association, to discuss what’s ahead for NSSTA 2012. Eric addresses everything from NSSTA’s Annual Meeting to its Take the Hill initiative with Congress, and the steps individuals of retirement age should take to ensure a better financial future.

Click the link to see a video snippet of the podcast.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/ringler-radio/2012/03/structured-settlements-and-nsstas-2012-mission/

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NLRB Member Terence Flynn resigns

NLRB Member Terence F. Flynn submitted his resignation to the President and to NLRB Chairman Mark Gaston Pearce on May 26.

[Press release]

His resignation is effective July 24, 2012. He has immediately recused himself from all agency business and has asked that the President withdraw his nomination for Board Member of the NLRB.

The NLRB’s Inspector General recently issued two reports on allegations of improper conduct by Member Flynn during the period when he was serving as a Chief Counsel to Member Peter Schaumber.

Flynn was sworn in as a Board Member on January 9, 2012, following a recess appointment by the President.

Flynn's resignation leaves the Board with four Members - three Democrats and one Republican.

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Source: http://www.lawmemo.com/blog/2012/05/nlrb_member_ter.html

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Ninth Circuit Holds that Allegations a Defendant Should Have Used a Different Statistical Methodology During Drug Trials is not Sufficient to Allege Falsity Under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5

In In re Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Securities Litigation, No. 10-17619, 2012 WL 3858112 (9th Cir. Sept. 6, 2012), the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that disagreements between plaintiffs and defendants over statistical methodology and study design are insufficient to allege a materially false statement for purposes of pleading a securities fraud claim under Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (“Exchange Act”), 15 U.S.C. § 78j(b), and Securities & Exchange Commission Rule 10b-5, 17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5, promulgated thereunder. The Ninth Circuit held that merely because the statistical methodology chosen — and disclosed — by the defendant may not have been the best or most acceptable methodology, use of such an allegedly less-than-optimal methodology does not render statements about the results of the methodology false or misleading for purposes of stating a claim. This is a decision of first impression for the Ninth Circuit.

Defendant Rigel Pharmaceuticals, Inc. (“Rigel”) is a clinical-stage drug development company that discovers and develops novel, small-molecule drugs for the treatment of inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, certain cancers and other diseases. One of those drugs is R788, which Rigel was developing to treat and stop the progression of rheumatoid arthritis. Rigel conducted a Phase IIa clinical trial to evaluate the safety and preliminary clinical efficacy of R788 in patients who were suffering from active rheumatoid arthritis despite therapy with methotrexate.

Plaintiffs, a class of purchasers of Rigel stock, brought a securities fraud action against Rigel and its senior management alleging that the results of Riger’s Phase IIa clinical trials of drug R788 were “false” because they included “statistically ‘false p-values (in clinical trials, p-values usually are used to determine the statistical significance of the results)’” and inaccurate and improper statistical analyses. Plaintiffs also alleged that Rigel should have disclosed more information concerning side effects on the day of the initial press release because the omission of some information related to side effects made the initial statements misleading. The complaint focused on the alleged statements by Rigel and other individuals concerning the results of the R788 clinical drug trial and alleged statements about partnership prospects for Rigel.

The crux of plaintiffs’ allegations of “falsity” was their contention that defendants should have used their chosen statistical methodology rather than the methodology defendants actually used. Plaintiffs alleged that using their proposed statistical methodology would have resulted in different p-values and that these newly calculated p-values were not statistically significant. Therefore, plaintiffs argued, defendants’ statistical results were “false.” Plaintiffs did not allege that defendants inaccurately reported the results of their own statistical analysis. Nor did plaintiffs allege that defendants had chosen or changed their statistical methodology after seeing the unblinded raw data from the clinical trial.

The United States District Court for the Northern District of California dismissed plaintiffs’ Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 claims on the ground that disagreements over statistical methodology and study design are insufficient to allege a materially false statement. The district court also held that plaintiffs failed to allege scienter. Plaintiffs appealed.

The Ninth Circuit affirmed. The Court held that in order to allege falsity, a plaintiff must plead facts explaining why the difference between the defendants’ statements and what plaintiffs believe was the truth “is not merely the difference between two permissible judgments, but rather the result of a falsehood.” Because plaintiffs did not allege that defendants misrepresented their own statistical methodology, analysis and conclusions, but instead only criticized the statistical methodology employed by defendants, the Court held that plaintiffs did not adequately plead falsity.

Plaintiffs also contended that the district court erred when it ruled that they failed adequately to plead falsity with respect to defendants’ initial statements about certain safety-related results from the clinical trial, arguing that defendants should have disclosed more information about side effects in the initial press release. The Ninth Circuit, however, held that the press release clearly identified its table of results for certain side effects as “key safety results,” not “all safety results” or even just “safety results.” Thus, the Ninth Circuit held, defendants never claimed that these were all of the safety results or that these results included every occurrence of every possible side effect. Accordingly, the Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court’s holding that plaintiffs did not adequately allege that the statements related to possible side effects were false or misleading.

Neither the United States Supreme Court nor the Ninth Circuit had addressed the question of whether statements concerning statistical results of a clinical trial may be considered false or misleading under Section 10(b) and Rule 10b-5 based upon the assertion that the statistical methodology that produced those results was not the best or most acceptable methodology. The Ninth Circuit’s decision here confirms that the courts will not impute an implied representation or warranty that a statistical methodology chosen and disclosed by the issuer is necessarily the best or most acceptable, and is consistent with district court decisions that have addressed the issue.

For further information, please contact John Stigi at (310) 228-3717 or Taraneh Fard at (213) 617-5492.

Source:
http://www.corporatesecuritieslawblog.com/securities-litigation-ninth-circuit-holds-that-allegations-a-defendant-should-have-used-a-different-statistical-methodology-during-drug-trials-is-not-sufficient-to-allege-falsity-under-section-10b-and-rule-10b5.html

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Making Selling Easier for Lawyers

Why is selling so hard for lawyers and what can you do about it? On this September edition Jared Correia, the host of The Legal Toolkit and Senior Law Practice Advisor with Mass. LOMAP, joins Stephen Seckler, principal of Seckler Legal Consulting and Coaching, to talk about selling vs. marketing, how important referrals are for attorneys and some of the key things that get in the way of attorneys successfully generating work.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/legal-toolkit/2012/09/making-selling-easier-for-lawyers/

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Thursday, November 29, 2012

Inside the Gerry Spence Trial Lawyers College

Structured settlement brokers have the pleasure of working side by side trial attorneys to help structure the best settlements for the injured and the less fortunate and many of these lawyers credit their success to special training that they received at the Gerry Spence Trial Lawyers College. On Ringler Radio, host Larry Cohen welcomes colleague and co‑host, Bill Wright from the Atlanta office of Ringler Associates and guest Attorney Joseph A. Fried, of Fried Rogers Goldberg, to talk about his experience and how he applies what he has learned to his law practice.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/ringler-radio/2012/01/inside-the-gerry-spence-trial-lawyers-college/

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UF launches human rights collaboration in Colombia

The U.S. Agency for International Development has allocated $757,200 for the University of Florida Levin College of Law to help establish the Colombian Caribbean Human Rights Center, which will promote research and community service.

Source: http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202579637192&rss=rss_nlj

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Judge Scheindlin’s Collection Case and Florida E-Discovery Amendments

One of the attributes that makes for a great e-discovery lawyer is the ability to wade through the digital mire that separates preservation from collection. The ESI Report’s Michele Lange, Attorney and Director of Thought Leadership at Kroll Ontrack joins e-discovery expert David Kearney, Director of Technology Services at Cohen & Grigsby, to discuss Judge Shira Scheindlin’s recent opinion in the case, National Day Laborer Organizing Network et al. v. United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency, et al. On the Bits & Bytes Legal Analysis segment, Kroll Ontrack Legal Correspondent, Elliot Westman analyzes recent e-discovery amendments to the Florida Civil Procedure Rules.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/esi-report/2012/08/judge-scheindlins-collection-case-and-florida-e-discovery-amendments/

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Do NOT Cut And Paste In The Phillipines

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Especially if you're doing it with a random nude body and your ex-girlfriend's head. Rustan Ang now knows this. As reported in the Philippine Daily Inquirer:

The Court of Appeals has affirmed a four-year prison term, P100,000 fine ($2,470 U.S.) and mandatory psychiatric treatment for a man who threatened to spread a pornographic picture with his ex-girlfriend's face on it after she rebuffed his attempts to rekindle their relationship.
... On June 5, 2005, Ang sent her a picture through her cell phone of a nude woman with her legs apart. The face was hers. The day before, Ang, who is married, asked her to be his textmate but she refused.She said her face was apparently lifted from a photo taken with Ang when they visited Baguio during their three-month relationship.
Ang warned her in a subsequent text message that it would be easy to post the pornographic picture on the internet, and asked if she wanted him to send more lewd pictures of her.
So she went to the police, and Ang was busted. He was found guilty of violating the Anti-Violence Against Women and Children Act. Four years in prison! To read more (just a little) click here.

Source: http://rss.justia.com/~r/LegalJuiceCom/~3/vThgBIDMIYg/post_539.html

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Where Nobody Knows Your Name

The Texas Tornado, Mark Bennett, writes about the significance of hiding in the shadows, a problem with which he's taken issue for a very long time.
I don’t, as a general principle, allow anonymous comments here. Chief among the reasons is that the more anonymous people are, the worse they behave. People do things behind tinted glass on the freeway that they would never do on the sidewalk. They say things from the cover of darkness that they would never say in the light of day.

Despite the fact that he's right, I've chosen to allow anonymous comments. But like hearsay at a suppression hearing, the assertions of anonymous commenters, whether thoughts, feelings or beliefs, aren't given the credit that goes with putting your name and reputation behind them.  You want to hide? Okay, but then don't complain that you aren't treated with the respect you think you deserve. That's the price.

Anonymity on a blog is relatively benign. Sure, it can offer misleading, even dangerous "advice," but I trust that others reading it understand that if the person lacks the guts to put his name to his words, his advice is worth no more than his reputation.

But the same concerns that Bennett has about commenters hiding in the shadows apply to others who, though you know what they're wearing, are similarly anonymous.

Why do TSA goons steal? They steal because they can. They steal from your checked luggage because when you get to Chicago and your cufflinks are missing, there is no way for you to track down the guy in the Atlanta airport who stole them. If TSA wanted to stop its employees stealing from checked luggage, there’d be a simple solution: any TSA employee who opens a bag puts his name in it.

But that would create accountability, and the security state cannot operate if its functionaries are accountable. If screeners knew that their mothers were likely to read on the internet about what they were doing on the job, they would be on much better behavior, which would not aid in the government’s avowed program of unquestioning compliance.

The argument against this is one heard frequently, and used a blanket excuse for any wrong that occurs as an unfortunate by-product of a safe society.  If the functionaries of government could be put in fear for the performance of the job the government demands of them, then we risk their hesitation, their failure to act as the government tells them, and we will all be put at risk and suffer for their fear.  We can't have that, the government says.

The argument is valid, with the caveat that the government imputes good will to the people it pays to do a job.  If no TSA agent ever pulled out a pair of cufflinks from a bag he was checking for bombs that have never been found, then it wouldn't be an issue.  The government assumes that no agent in its service will do wrong, because they aren't supposed to do wrong, and makes rules based on its assumption.

They are sound rules if the assumption proved accurate. It never does, completely. There are always some who violate the authority and trust, and on the rare occasions that they're revealed, the isolated-incident trope is pulled out of safekeeping.

But Bennett's point is not only that it's not an isolated incident (provided you agree that when something happens constantly, isolated isn't a proper characterization), but that if the assumption was true, it need not happen at all.  Why, if our government functionaries are so honorable and trustworthy, should they live in mortal fear?  If they steal nothing from your bag, touch nothing on your body, that would give rise to anger, hatred, fear of publicly outing them to their mother, should they need to conceal their identities?

Thoughts immediately flashed back to the Oakland police preparing to put an end to Occupy Oakland, when the first thing they did after strapping on their battle gear was cover their nameplates in black tape. In a bit of total irony, my post about this included a video posted by Carlos Miller, which has since been removed because, according to the Youtube message:

The You Tube account associated with this video has been terminated due to multiple third-party notifications of copyright infringement.

If you're not aware, Carlos has been at the forefront of recording police, making sure the light (if not sun, then klieg) shines on their conduct, and they absolutely hate him for it.  Copyright infringement?  Not likely.

The black tape didn't appear on their shields by magic. It didn't sneak into their closets at night and affix itself to their nametags. The Oakland cops made an affirmative decision to conceal their identities, since the only description anyone could provide about them aside from their names is that they looked like Federation Storm Troopers in black.  And the only answer back would be, "we would love to help, but without knowing whose club broke your skull open, there's nothing we can do."

Anonymity is the refuge of coward and scoundrels.  It's where evil can have its way. It's the means by which the psychological forces that prevent our worst angels from taking control of our thoughts and actions are swept away, and we devolve into our most vicious, malevolent selves.

You want to be anonymous when you comment on a blog?  Big deal. Say something stupid and that's how you'll be treated. Ideas can be dangerous, but by hiding in the shadows, everyone knows you aren't to be taken seriously. You render yourself worthless by choice, and your cries that you don't want to suffer the consequences of your spewing are a joke for the rest of us to laugh at.

But this can't be said for agents of the government, who bask in anonymity to avoid accountability. The excuse that they can't do their job if they're afraid is a lie, no matter what court, agency or official perpetuates it. Their attempt to conceal themselves is, alone, a wrong perpetrated by an agent of the government on the public, as clearly as the Oakland cops who put tape over their names. And it is incumbent on good people to get the names of those who hide in the shadows and utter them so they don't get away with it.





© 2012 Simple Justice NY LLC. This feed is for personal, non-commercial & Newstex use only. The use of this feed on any other website is a copyright violation. If this feed is not via RSS reader or Newstex, it infringes the copyright.

Source: http://blog.simplejustice.us/2012/11/19/where-nobody-knows-your-name.aspx?ref=rss

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The LinkedIn Lawyer

Are you on LinkedIn? Un-Billable Hour host Attorney Rodney Dowell, Executive Director at Lawyers Concerned for Lawyers and Director of LCL’s Massachusetts Law Office Management Assistance Program chats with Dennis Kennedy, lawyer and co-host of The Kennedy-Mighell Report and Allison Shields, author of Legal Ease Blog, about their recently published book, LinkedIn in One Hour for Lawyers. Dennis and Allison talk about how attorneys are using LinkedIn, and the key features that make LinkedIn a valuable networking and client development tool without consuming all of an attorney’s time.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/un-billable-hour/2012/06/the-linkedin-lawyer/

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Evaluating and Negotiating Workers’ Compensation Claims

Closing a workers’ compensation claim involves a two-step process: evaluation and negotiation. On Ringler Radio, host Larry Cohen joins colleague, Teddy Snyder, Esq. and Attorney Sylvia Lopez from Bakersfield, California, to talk about closing workers’ compensation claims. They explore the risks and advantages to a claimant and employer in closing a workers’ compensation claim, the importance of rated age and how a structured settlement can give injured workers the best of both worlds.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/ringler-radio/2012/05/evaluating-and-negotiating-workers-compensation-claims/

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Despite Talk, Immigration Overhaul Not A Guarantee

Key Republicans, including House Speaker John Boehner, say it's time to find common ground in revising the nation's immigration laws, but conservatives in the House could be a firewall against a bipartisan deal.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2012/11/25/165653196/despite-talk-immigration-overhaul-not-a-guarantee?ft=1&f=1070

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Language is Everything

A gentle hint at Whoa Nellie's Deli in Lee Vining, CA, entrance to Yosemite Park !
 

Source: http://feeds.lexblog.com/~r/LawBizBlog/~3/_hIdKCRnitA/

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Firms Gear Up for Argentine Bond Battle

The stage is now set for a critical three-way showdown in the Argentine bondholder litigation, as the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit decides whether to intervene ahead of Argentina's looming deadline to pay its creditors. The legal cast involved includes heavyweights from Cleary Gottlieb, Gibson Dunn, and Boies Schiller.

Source: http://www.law.com/jsp/law/sign_me_in.jsp?article=http://www.americanlawyer.com/digestTAL.jsp?id=1202579528914&rss=newswire

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Obamacare on Trial

The fate of President Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is now in the hands of the United States Supreme Court. But did lawyers for the Obama Administration convince the justices this historic healthcare initiative conforms to the U.S. Constitution? Lawyer2Lawyer co-hosts and attorneys, Bob Ambrogi and Craig Williams, along with Professor Ilya Somin from the George Mason University School of Law and Professor Geoffrey Stone of The Law School of the University of Chicago, discuss the constitutionality and possible outcomes of this landmark Supreme Court case.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/lawyer-2-lawyer/2012/04/obamacare-on-trial/

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Class Action Suit Says Toys 'R' Us Used Bait-and-Switch Online Ads

A putative class action claims that Toys "R" Us promised free gifts with online purchases and then substituted items of lesser value. The retailer's practice "constitutes a modern bait and switch scheme," in which the company makes pledges it never intended to keep, according to the suit, which seeks damages on behalf of a nationwide class of website shoppers.

Source: http://www.law.com/jsp/law/sign_me_in.jsp?article=http://www.law.com/jsp/nj/PubArticleNJ.jsp?id=1202579453402&rss=newswire

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Defending a Serial Killer

What is it like to defend one of America’s most infamous serial killers? Lawyer2Lawyer hosts Bob Ambrogi and Craig Williams join retired judge and lawyer, Sam L. Amirante, and retired lawyer, Daniel J. Broderick, to discuss their new book, John Wayne Gacy: Defending a Monster, and the constitutional right to a defense.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/lawyer-2-lawyer/2012/10/defending-a-serial-killer/

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The Impact of BU Law’s LL.M. Programs

BU Law has offered a post-graduate legal education leading to the Master of Laws degree for more than 125 years. In this BU Law podcast, host David Yas, a BU Law alum, former publisher of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly and a V.P. at Bernstein Global Wealth, welcomes John N. Riccardi, BU Law’s assistant dean for Graduate and International Programs and director of the Office of Graduate and International Programs, to take a look at the School’s graduate programs for international lawyers. Later in the program, David is joined by former student Johan S. Ellefsen, who talks about his experience with the LL.M. program and where he is today.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/boston-university-school-of-law/2012/03/the-impact-of-bu-laws-ll-m-programs/

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From the Courtroom to the Comedy Club

Lawyers are very often the brunt of jokes, but there is a group of attorneys that has turned the tables and is making people laugh with them instead of at them. Lawyer2Lawyer co-hosts and attorneys, Bob Ambrogi and Craig Williams, share the stage with two of the Comedians At Law. Alex Barnett and Matt Ritter explain how they transitioned from lawyers to comics and how they now make people laugh at the lighter side of the law.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/lawyer-2-lawyer/2012/08/from-the-courtroom-to-the-comedy-club/

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Dewey Docket, Thanksgiving Edition: Estate Files Chapter 11 Plan

In keeping with Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP’s apparent fondness for filing major bankruptcy papers on or around national holidays, the failed law firm submitted its Chapter 11 liquidation plan to the courts on Wednesday evening.

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2012/11/23/dewey-docket-thanksgiving-edition-estate-files-chapter-11-plan/?mod=WSJBlog

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Tuesday, November 27, 2012

Maximize Your Technology Investment

All too often, law departments underestimate the powerful impact that training can have on a software implementation project. In fact, as a key driver of user adoption, training can be the difference between a project’s ultimate success or failure. In this edition of Tech Experts, join Kevin Gaudet, Director of Instruction and Training Development at Datacert, as he guides you through best practices for planning and executing an effective training and knowledge transfer strategy that will drive user adoption of your new system and help maximize your return-on-investment.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/tech-experts/2012/08/maximize-your-technology-investment/

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NLRB Member Terence Flynn resigns

NLRB Member Terence F. Flynn submitted his resignation to the President and to NLRB Chairman Mark Gaston Pearce on May 26.

[Press release]

His resignation is effective July 24, 2012. He has immediately recused himself from all agency business and has asked that the President withdraw his nomination for Board Member of the NLRB.

The NLRB’s Inspector General recently issued two reports on allegations of improper conduct by Member Flynn during the period when he was serving as a Chief Counsel to Member Peter Schaumber.

Flynn was sworn in as a Board Member on January 9, 2012, following a recess appointment by the President.

Flynn's resignation leaves the Board with four Members - three Democrats and one Republican.

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Source: http://www.lawmemo.com/blog/2012/05/nlrb_member_ter.html

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Inside BU Law’s Housing, Employment, Family and Disability Clinic

Law students who participate in the Civil Litigation Program's Housing, Employment, Family and Disability Clinic work for credit under the supervision of four full-time BU clinical faculty. They can represent anyone from tenants in eviction defenses in housing court, to parties in divorces in probate court. Host David Yas, a BU Law alum, former publisher of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly and a V.P. at Bernstein Global Wealth, sits down with Professor Robert G. Burdick, director of the Civil Law Clinical Program, to talk about how the clinic works, and the real life training that students gain by participating in this clinic.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/boston-university-school-of-law/2012/07/inside-bu-laws-housing-employment-family-and-disability-clinic/

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In Fairness To The TSA

Amy Alkon, who writes the syndicated newspaper column, the Advice Goddess, and a blog of the same name, hasn't been treated well by the TSA, in incidents ranging from Thedala Magee's official insertion to the latest, where she was refused the TSA supervisor's name, the subject of Mark Bennett's post and foundation for my follow-up

Do you ever wonder whether the TSA reads about such things? I certainly do.  And courtesy of TSA's "Blogger Bob," whose real name is Bob Burns and who feeds his family on the public teat, we now know that they do.  Burns commented to Amy's post, and wrote a post of his own based on the same comment:
Here we go again…  TSA seems to be a frequent and a convenient subject on Amy Alkon's blog. The writer’s language characterization towards TSA and our employees is offensive to say the least. Name calling, insults, the whole gamut...

In her latest screening incident, she’s angry because a supervisor wouldn’t give her the name of an officer who had just screened her. An officer who – by the way -  by all accounts other than Ms. Alkon’s, did her job by the book. It is more likely that she wanted this information so she could post the officer’s name on her blog as she’s done before with other incidents. In fact, she named and publicly accused one of our officers of rape after a routine pat-down in an earlier allegation.

The old Reagan ploy, "here we go again."  That mean Amy Alkon, calling us mean names and saying mean things about what we do.  "Offensive to say the least."  Why won't she be nice to us? Why must she offend us? Why?

Blogger Bob acknowledges that a supervisor refused to give Amy the name of an "officer" who works for the government and, in the course of his her "duty," touched her.  Though in Burns' world, his people say it was by the book, and only the one person who doesn't get a TSA paycheck disagrees. Since that makes it the TSA's word against Amy's, where popular vote seems to carry the TSA day, Amy loses.  But what of the refusal of the officer whose name couldn't be read, or the supervisor who refused to give it up?

Blogger Bob, despite his lengthy rant against the evils of mean Amy, never gets back to that detail.

Instead, Burns goes on to point out all the things Amy does that darken his TSA heart.

Ms. Alkon says all sorts of things in this post, but what Ms. Alkon doesn’t tell you is that from the moment she entered our checkpoint, she began making statements such as “TSA gets paid to molest passengers and touch their private areas.” Does that sound like somebody who wants to get through the checkpoint smoothly? No, it sounds like somebody who makes a living by agitating situations and writing about them.

Does Amy sound like an Agitator? Maybe, if agitator is someone who questions and challenges things that government functionaries do to her that they shouldn't. To claim she makes a living at it is a bit peculiar, but given that Bob feeds off the tax rolls, his concept of how people who work for a living earn an income is probably a bit skewed.  Government employees assume nobody would lift a finger unless they were getting money out of it, since that's how they roll.  Kinda makes them sound like marketeers, now that I think about it.

But Burns, still never returning to the concealment of the identity of the TSA guy whose fingers found Amy's private parts, decides to provide a civics lesson rather than explain why it's cool with the TSA that their people hide in the shadows.

We understand that not everybody likes or agrees with TSA’s policies and procedures. Part of what makes this country great is that we can openly complain on blogs such as this one, but I think it’s only fair that the blogger in question should be fair and accurate about what they write about and also consider the privacy of the individuals involved. After all, these individuals are doing the job the way they’ve been trained to do it. They show up to work daily with the intent of protecting our Nation’s transportation network.

Hidden within this flag waving is this little gem: "These individuals are doing the job the way they've been trained to do it."  So Bob, you train your "officers"  to conceal their identities?  You train your supervisors to conceal identities too? Is there a class on it in TSA school, Concealing Identities 101?

Rather than put Amy Alkon in her place, Burns' embarrassing effort gives her the chance to directly respond:

"TSA gets paid to molest passengers and touch their private areas." Does that sound like somebody who wants to get through the checkpoint smoothly?

No, it sounds like someone who wants to defend our constitutional rights.

You, Bob Burns, are terrible person. You take money in order to support the violation of our rights. Being a prostitute would be a far more noble profession. In that case, consenting adults remove their clothes in a consenting exchange.

Got a problem with that constitutional thingy Bob? Well, you asked. But then, Amy unloads.

Caught one single terrorist, Bob?

Ouch. That must hurt. After all, nobody wants to have their nemesis point out that at the end of the day, they're just a cog in the wheel of such a  worthless failure. So many touchings. So many Americans offended. So many constitutional rights sacrificed, and not a single terrorist caught. 

The efficacy of the TSA's efforts isn't much in debate. Millions of Americans have removed their shoes, been exposed to radiation, had parts of their children's bodies touched that no one is ever supposed to touch, all so that they can catch a terrorist. But they haven't.  And no, the argument that these methods have kept the bad guys away doesn't fly any more than it proves the existence of space aliens, who similarly haven't been caught.

But Bob, what about your people concealing their names?  A thousand words murdered to tell us how mean Amy Alkon is, but you never tell us why it's okay with the TSA that their nametag wearing officers are allowed, taught, to conceal their identities?  Is it really because they're scared that Amy Alkon will write something mean about them?

It does make America great that we can openly complain on blogs about the TSA, Bob. America would be greater still if functionaries like you didn't work so darn hard to whine about how mean those complaints can be, and instead explained why your people hide their identities from the public to prevent their being held accountable for misconduct.  It's only fair, Bob.




 



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Source: http://blog.simplejustice.us/2012/11/21/in-fairness-to-the-tsa.aspx?ref=rss

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The Impact of BU Law’s LL.M. Programs

BU Law has offered a post-graduate legal education leading to the Master of Laws degree for more than 125 years. In this BU Law podcast, host David Yas, a BU Law alum, former publisher of Massachusetts Lawyers Weekly and a V.P. at Bernstein Global Wealth, welcomes John N. Riccardi, BU Law’s assistant dean for Graduate and International Programs and director of the Office of Graduate and International Programs, to take a look at the School’s graduate programs for international lawyers. Later in the program, David is joined by former student Johan S. Ellefsen, who talks about his experience with the LL.M. program and where he is today.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/boston-university-school-of-law/2012/03/the-impact-of-bu-laws-ll-m-programs/

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Obamacare on Trial

The fate of President Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is now in the hands of the United States Supreme Court. But did lawyers for the Obama Administration convince the justices this historic healthcare initiative conforms to the U.S. Constitution? Lawyer2Lawyer co-hosts and attorneys, Bob Ambrogi and Craig Williams, along with Professor Ilya Somin from the George Mason University School of Law and Professor Geoffrey Stone of The Law School of the University of Chicago, discuss the constitutionality and possible outcomes of this landmark Supreme Court case.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/lawyer-2-lawyer/2012/04/obamacare-on-trial/

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Germany prosecutors charge former Nazi for 1944 killing

[JURIST] German prosecutors on Monday charged 91-year-old former member of the Nazi Waffen SS [USHMM backgrounder] Siert Bruins with the murder of a Dutch resistance fighter in 1944. The Dortmund prosecutor [official website, in German] accused Bruins of executing [AP report] captured Dutch Nazi-opposition fighter Aldert Klaas Dijkema in September 1944 outside the town of Appingedam. Bruins and an accomplice, who has since died, are accused of taking Dijkema, a prisoner at the time, to an isolated location and then...

Source: http://jurist.org/paperchase/2012/11/germany-prosecutors-charge-former-nazi-for-1944-killing.php

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Something We Can All Agree On: Rules

A mechanism that usually helps to reach consensus is to start out with things upon which "we can all agree."  There aren't many of them, and even what we perceived as being wholly uncontroversial can give rise to disputes. They may be minor, even trivial, but still, it's hard to find real common ground.

But one would have to think that this proposition is shared by all: A person who everyone (and by that, I mean everyone) agrees is innocent and committed no crime, but was wrongfully convicted and imprisoned, should be immediately released.  Whether he should be given a deep apology and a subway token can be the subject of vicious argument, but release?  No argument there.

And yet, there is. 

Disagreement didn't come from some crazy outlier hate group. It didn't come from some fringe pundit. It didn't come from some man-hating absolutist advocacy group. No, it came from the Attorney General of the State of Virginia, Ken Cuccinelli.  From the Washington Post:

The man is Jonathan Montgomery, age 26. In 2007, a then-teenage girl named Elizabeth Paige Coast accused Mr. Montgomery of having molested her six years earlier, when she was 10 and he was 14. It wasn’t true.

Despite the flagrant miscarriage of justice in Mr. Montgomery’s case — a stain on Virginia’s criminal justice system — no one in a position of authority has moved to set him free. The trial judge who convicted Mr. Montgomery vacated the verdict and the sentence and ordered him released. But the release was blocked over the weekend by Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli II’s office, which said the state’s Court of Appeals must first declare him innocent. That could take weeks, even months.

Jeff Gamso explains the rules that Cuccinelli found so compelling that he had to, he just had to, step in to stop this grave miscarriage of justice refusal to follow the rules:

The problem is that it's been more than 21 days since Montgomery was convicted.  Which means he has to stay in prison even though he's innocent, even though there was no crime.

"Virginia law will not allow the immediate release of Mr. Montgomery, and the attorney general is obligated to follow the law," said Brian Gottstein, the attorney general's director of communication. "Our research shows that the order from the trial court to vacate the three and a half year-old conviction appears void on its face, as the trial court does not have jurisdiction to enter the order according to Virginia's 21-day rule. Authority to get around the rule -- to pardon or commute the sentence -- does not rest with the attorney general."

Rules, after all, are rules. I mean, think what might happen if Virginia started letting innocent people out of prison right and left just because they're innocent? 

Divestiture of jurisdiction after a conviction is final is certainly a rule. So too are rules about trial readiness, about disclosure of exculpatory information, being forthright with the court.  We are system filled with rules, drowning in rules, each of which exists to serve a purpose. And on occasion, a rule exists which applies even when it serves no purpose, or serves to undermine a greater purpose.

There is a little game we play in the courtroom. We play it all the time. We agree to waive rules.  We stipulate. We rid ourselves of the yoke of a rule that serves neither party's interest and move forward to the things that matter, the issues in dispute. 

Sometimes we do this as a courtesy to our adversary. Sometimes we use it as a bargaining chip. Sometimes we do it just to avoid a waste of time that the rule would impose when neither side feels any compulsion to let the formalities swallow our lives.  In fact, some rules exist and are never used. There is a rule that at the time of arraignment, the charges must be read publicly so that the defendant is assured of knowing the allegations against him. In 30 years, I remember this being one a grand total of once. Everybody waives the reading.

So what makes this rule, the one keeping an innocent 26-year-old Jonathan Montgomery imprisoned, so much more important than any other rule in the legal system? 

The chief prosecutor in the city of Hampton, Anton Bell, agreed with Mr. Montgomery’s request that his conviction and sentence be thrown out. Hampton Circuit Court Judge Randolph T. West, who presided over Mr. Montgomery’s trial in 2008, said he was mortified to learn of Ms. Coast’s deception. “You will never forget this, and God knows, I will never forget it,” the judge told Mr. Montgomery in a hearing last week.

Clearly, the prosecutor on the case didn't demand adherence to the rule.  The judge ignored the rule and did what he had to do to right this unquestionable wrong.  Both did precisely what one would hope they would do upon learning that there was no crime, never a crime, committed by a young man in prison. Both did what any human being would do, would want to do, upon learning of this terrible wrong.

But Cuccinelli would hear nothing of it.

There has been no statement by the Attorney General explaining why, why, this had to be done. In some cases, prosecutors who learned of exoneration by DNA persisted in their belief that the defendant was guilty, despite scientific evidence to the contrary.  In other cases, they argued that despite his not having committed this crime, he was a bad and evil man who deserved to be in prison, if not for this crime then for something else.

In this case, however, the only rationale offered is the rule.  One can almost hear Cuccinelli saying, "well, I would sure like to let him free, and he sure deserves to be free, but I just can't let it happen because, well, we got rules, and without rules, it would just be an awful rule-free society. We can't let that happen. Rules are all the distinguish us from the beasts, and we must honor our rules."  Rules.

Weird how the adoration of rules pops up its ugly head only when they serve to work against the individual, even when, as here, they don't do a damn thing to serve the state.  Had Cuccinelli turned his head the other way, let Montgomery walk free as was agreed by the prosecutor, judge and defense attorney, no one would have thought ill of him for letting this violation of the rules slide. 

No state interest would have been jeopardized, nor any precedent set that would come back later to bite him in the butt.  Nothing bad would have happened at all.  And yet, some sick compulsion made him step forward to stop the freeing of an innocent man. Because of a rule?

H/T Radley Balko



© 2012 Simple Justice NY LLC. This feed is for personal, non-commercial & Newstex use only. The use of this feed on any other website is a copyright violation. If this feed is not via RSS reader or Newstex, it infringes the copyright.

Source: http://blog.simplejustice.us/2012/11/19/something-we-can-all-agree-on-rules.aspx?ref=rss

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Monday, November 26, 2012

Recommendations for a Social, Mobile and Global Legal Profession

The ABA Commission on Ethics 20/20 has released its latest recommendations so that the rules and ethics of the legal profession keep up with the incredible pace of technology. Lawyer2Lawyer co-hosts and attorneys, Bob Ambrogi and Craig Williams, get the details from the ABA Commission’s Chief Reporter, Professor Andrew Perlman, and debate these suggestions with Attorney Bradley Shear.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/lawyer-2-lawyer/2012/06/recommendations-for-a-social-mobile-and-global-legal-profession/

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Tough Turkey: People Have A Harder Time Getting Pardons Under Obama

Every year, the president pardons a turkey in a lighthearted Thanksgiving tradition. But while the business of pardoning humans is more serious, it's also increasingly rare. President Obama has granted just 1 pardon for every 290 applications — a much lower rate than other recent presidents.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2012/11/20/165587441/tough-turkey-people-have-a-harder-time-getting-pardons-under-obama?ft=1&f=1070

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Video Conferencing for Lawyers

Video conferencing can be a very effective and economical tool for law firms and corporate law departments, as long as the correct choices are made. Find out how to choose the correct video conferencing technology for you when Monica Bay, host of Law Technology Now and editor-in-chief of ALM’s Law Technology News, interviews Steven Levy, principal of Seattle-based Lexician.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/law-technology-now/2012/05/video-conferencing-for-lawyers/

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Lawyers' fiduciary responsibility to partners

Yesterday, I watched the Richard Gere film, Aribtrage. The film portrays a successful billionaire's moral decline as he attempts to save his failing company from his poor decisions. He "cooks" the company books by borrowing money that is not shown on the books as such in order to keep up appearances in order to complete a sale of the company, falsifies investors reports and otherwise plays "loose" with the truth. This is a man in trouble, but Gere continues to exude confidence in order to reach his goal.

Coincidentally, in today's Wall Street Journal, reporters once again discuss the Dewey & LeBoeuf LLP demise. Prosecutors are still questioning whether there was deception about the financial condition of the firm in the last few months. Were partners told the truth, were they given accurate financial reports, and were the firm obligations to pay down outstanding debt on behalf of terminated partners honored? And, were the transgressions that did occur a matter of a struggling business doing what it could to survive or a matter of criminal and/or civil fraud?

As a matter of "black letter law," it's clear that management (managing partner and management committee members) owe a fiduciary duty to others -- investors, lenders and partners. Did they breach this duty? How close to Arbitrage did the leaders of Dewey come?

Source: http://feeds.lexblog.com/~r/LawBizBlog/~3/OHm0WYbr8hM/

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Police Perjury: Is The Tide Turning?

It's not that police testifying to whatever it is they need to accomplish the greater good of convicting people they decide deserve convicting is new.  But even when caught lying, there was always an excuse, an apology, a rationalization to cover it. And life went on.

This is what makes the conviction of two Los Angeles cops different. They got caught lying and they were prosecuted.  Not only were they prosecuted, but they were convicted. They were convicted of perjury.  From Southern California Public Radio:

Officer Richard Amio and former officer Evan Samuel testified that they chased a man into his apartment in Hollywood in 2007 and immediately saw him toss a black object that contained cocaine. A surveillance video showed it actually took four officers more than twenty minutes to find the drugs. 

LAPD Chief Charlie Beck said in a statement the officers actions were unacceptable.

Unacceptable? I can live with that. Reprehensible might have been better, but we take what we can get.

"I am truly saddened by the events that led to the perjury conviction of a current and a former Los Angeles Police Officer," Beck said int he statement. “As I said when the charges were filed, I do not believe their intent was evil, just extremely misguided. The character of our organization is defined by the conduct that we condone. These actions were entirely unacceptable."  

Unacceptable again? Fair enough.  As Chief Beck notes in his attempt to minimize the nature of the wrong and distinguish his cops from "real" criminals, "their intent was [not] evil, just extremely misguided."  What he means is that they only lied to get the bad guy.  Yet again, the late Murray Kempton's words ring true: "There they go again, framing the guilty."

Aside: A quick search of the Kempton quote revealed that an old post of mine where I used it was copied in its entirety and posted by Ademo Freeman at Copblock without attribution, or even a link back to the original. While I'm happy he thought the post worthy of taking, I'm not as happy about my content being stolen.  How about a little integrity, guys? It would be nice of you to ask first, but posting without attribution as if you wrote it isn't cool.

There isn't much explanation or discussion needed about the fact of perjury.  Cops believe that trials, testimony, swearing to tell the truth, is a game that's played to give the impression that there is a legal system so the natives don't get terribly bent out of shape. As long as citizens believe we have a system, they sleep well at night.  They also sleep well at night knowing that their brave officers keep the streets safe from murderers and rapists by putting the bad guys in prison. All is well with the world.

You see, we're naive and silly. The cops understand their job. Rid of us criminals. Only children and defense lawyers think they're actually supposed to tell the truth. They know better. They laugh about it over beers after a day in court.

So when the video conclusively showed these cops to be perjurers, one would expect them to get a very stern lecture from some mid-level supervisor telling them to never get caught again.  Instead, they found themselves on the receiving end of an indictment and, even more surprising, a guilty verdict.

And the Chief of Police called the conduct unacceptable.  Not evil, but misguided. 

Does this mean the rules are changing? Is it unacceptable to lie to make sure the bad guys go to prison?  it's not likely. After all, rarely does a cop get caught.  Even when judges believe the cop is just making up a story to justify the bust, they will never find the cop a liar in the absence of irrefutable proof. Never. Their testimony is credible, even when it falls off the precipice of the absurd, because to do otherwise would destroy a finely tuned system that fools the happy natives and keeps the police unions, district attorneys and supervising judges off their backs.

But this time, the cops were convicted.  Without the video, they wouldn't have been.  Even with video, chances are poor that anyone would face a judge, no less a jury.  There are a bunch of excuses available, including the ubiquitous "we're going to investigate" until everybody forgets about it and moves on to the next scandal. 

Yet, this conviction, particularly in light of some other verdicts in LA and Chicago, suggests that attitudes toward the police, toward their lying, toward their violence, may be changing. Just a little. But changing. It's a start.







© 2012 Simple Justice NY LLC. This feed is for personal, non-commercial & Newstex use only. The use of this feed on any other website is a copyright violation. If this feed is not via RSS reader or Newstex, it infringes the copyright.

Source: http://blog.simplejustice.us/2012/11/16/police-perjury-is-the-tide-turning.aspx?ref=rss

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Law firm PACs focus on states

The top federal political action committees for law firms pumped just as much money into the 2012 election cycle as four years ago, but channelled a larger chunk of their money away from Congress and toward state lawmakers across the country.

Source: http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202579138747&rss=rss_nlj

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Securing Electronic Law Firm Data for Big and Small Firms

Law firms are increasingly being targeted by hackers seeking to access confidential business and personal information. On The Un-Billable Hour, host Attorney Rodney Dowell, Executive Director at Lawyers Concerned for Lawyers and Director of LCL’s Massachusetts Law Office Management Assistance Program welcomes Digital Detectives co-hosts Sharon D. Nelson, Esq., President of Sensei Enterprises, Inc. and John W. Simek, Vice President of Sensei Enterprises, to discuss a variety of issues including: computer security, why attorneys are targeted and malpractice and ethics risks related to having inadequate security.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/un-billable-hour/2012/01/securing-electronic-law-firm-data-for-big-and-small-firms/

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Find Now, Read Later

We can find almost anything on the Internet, but retrieving the results at a later date isn’t as easy. Are there ways to “harvest” the web so we can find and read relevant research at a later time? Kennedy-Mighell Report hosts Dennis Kennedy and Tom Mighell, answer this question by sharing ways to save and keep track of web research, the resources for reading web findings later or offline, and whether techniques like capturing a blog post on a Kindle or iPad really help us with the problem of information overload.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/kennedy-mighell-report/2012/07/find-now-read-later/

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Sunday, November 25, 2012

Pardon the Legal Technology Interruption 2011

What kind of year was 2011 for legal tech? What were the big developments and trends that you need to know? In this episode, Dennis Kennedy and Tom Mighell pay tribute to ESPN's "Pardon the Interruption" and adopt its format for a fast-paced and fun discussion of what transpired in legal technology in 2011. After you listen, be sure to check out Tom & Dennis’ co-blog and book by the same name, The Lawyers Guide to Collaboration Tools and Technologies.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/kennedy-mighell-report/2012/01/pardon-the-legal-technology-interruption-2011/

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The iPad Practice

Do you use an iPad in your legal practice? On The Un-Billable Hour, host Attorney Rodney Dowell, chats with Tom Mighell, the author of three books about the use of iPads, iPad in One Hour For Lawyers, iPad Apps in One Hour For Lawyers, and soon to be released, iPad in One Hour for Litigators, about the explosive growth of the use of iPads in the legal profession, and Tom’s favorite productivity and entertainment apps for the legal iPad.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/un-billable-hour/2012/08/the-ipad-practice/

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Helpful Tips for Women Solo Practitioners

New Solo host, Attorney Kyle R. Guelcher, a solo practitioner and the most recent Chair of the Young Lawyers Division of the Massachusetts Bar Association is joined by Attorney Melissa Conner, from the Conner Law Offices out of Boston, Massachusetts, to spotlight women solos. Melissa shares her recommendations on everything from which organizations female attorneys can join when first starting their office, to the benefits of a women’s bar association to how to find a mentor.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/new-solo/2012/02/helpful-tips-for-women-solo-practitioners/

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UN Security Council condemns piracy off Somalia coast

[JURIST] The UN Security Council [official website] on Wednesday condemned [statement; press release] piracy and acts of armed robbery against vessels off the coast of Somalia. The Security Council urged the international community to develop a comprehensive response to discourage these acts. The Security Council unanimously adopted resolution 2077, which renewed pressure on States and regional organizations to fight sea crimes. The resolution called on member states to enact domestic legislation that criminalizes piracy and to assist Somalia in prosecuting...

Source: http://jurist.org/paperchase/2012/11/un-security-council-condemns-piracy-off-somalia-coast.php

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Helpful Tips for Women Solo Practitioners

New Solo host, Attorney Kyle R. Guelcher, a solo practitioner and the most recent Chair of the Young Lawyers Division of the Massachusetts Bar Association is joined by Attorney Melissa Conner, from the Conner Law Offices out of Boston, Massachusetts, to spotlight women solos. Melissa shares her recommendations on everything from which organizations female attorneys can join when first starting their office, to the benefits of a women’s bar association to how to find a mentor.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/new-solo/2012/02/helpful-tips-for-women-solo-practitioners/

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Essential iPad Apps for Lawyers

Everywhere we go, we see lawyers using iPads. But what are they using them for? There are thousands of Apps available for the iPad - so many that it's hard to know where to begin. Fortunately, Tom Mighell has written a new book called, iPad Apps in One Hour for Lawyers. In this episode, Dennis Kennedy and Tom Mighell discuss the importance of iPad apps for effective use of iPads, Tom's book, and their favorite iPad Apps for lawyers and others.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/kennedy-mighell-report/2012/06/essential-ipad-apps-for-lawyers/

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