Showing posts with label Legal News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Legal News. Show all posts

Monday, December 7, 2009

DUI Holiday Crackdown

"Police nationwide will begin a crackdown on drunken driving Dec. 16, the U.S. Department of Transportation announced today.

A $7.5 million advertising campaign will try to discourage drinking and driving during the holiday season. In Pennsylvania, the Operation Safe Holiday program is in effect this month, with state police and 600 municipal forces participating in an effort to curb drunken driving, speeding and aggressive driving.

The organization Drive Safe Pa. pointed out that a DUI citation costs more than $1,000 plus court costs.

Last year, 11,773 people died nationally in crashes involving a driver whose blood alcohol level was 0.08 or higher. That represented a 9.7 percent decrease compared with 2007.

DUI deaths also declined in Pennsylvania, from 504 in 2007 to 496 last year. Those deaths made up 34 percent of crash fatalities in the state.

The nationwide crackdown continues through Jan. 3."

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Supreme Court Debates Beach Ownership/Access

Florida property owners asked the U.S. Supreme Court to decide if that state's efforts to restore eroded beaches was a challenge to their property rights. The case has widespread implications for coastal communities nationwide that confront beach erosion.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/23/AR2009112303930.html


Listen to the story:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=121030772

--------------------------------------------------

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

25 Greatest Legal Shows of All Time

The ABA Journal has put together a list of the 25 greatest legal shows of all time. Who is #1? Click on the following link to find out!

http://www.abajournal.com/magazine/the_25_greatest_legal_tv_shows/

-------------------------------------------------

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

"White" Paper Explanations for Legal Technology Questions

We discovered a great website that hosts "white" paper explanations to a host of legal technology questions, including software, hardware, IT support, and more.

http://www.law.com/jsp/legaltechnology/whitepapers.jsp

-----------------------------------------------

Monday, August 3, 2009

China Detains Leading Human Rights Attorney

(reprinted from the link below)

Rights groups urged China's government Thursday to disclose the whereabouts of a leading human rights lawyer who was detained by police in a dawn raid and has not been heard from since.

Xu Zhiyong, a Beijing-based legal scholar with the Gongmeng rights group, was taken from his home by police early Wednesday, the group said on its Web site. The group has since been unable to contact Xu and another staffer, Zhuang Lu.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5g-_vME84yrmjeXlS6VRuoGfJt6uwD99OP7L00

------------------------------------------------

Thursday, July 30, 2009

US Congress to Ban Driving and Texting?

While the Pennsylvania State Senate is getting closer to banning texting while driving...

http://cbs3.com/local/Senate.Bill.Cell.2.1080560.html

...a few U.S. Senators may beat them to the punch:

http://news.lp.findlaw.com/ap_stories/a/w/1153/07-29-2009/20090729042001_03.html

--------------------------------------------------

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

The Dangers of Downloading Music

Vivendi Wins $1.9 Million Award From Woman Who Swapped Songs

A Minnesota woman accused of swapping music over the Kazaa Internet service was ordered by a jury to pay Vivendi SA’s Universal Music Group and other record labels $1.9 million after a retrial.

A federal jury in Minneapolis said Jammie Thomas-Rasset, 32, of Brainerd, Minnesota, should pay $80,000 for each of the 24 songs that were posted on the site so others could download them, including “Iris” by the Goo Goo Dolls and “Welcome to the Jungle” by Guns ‘n Roses. The first time the case went to trial, in 2007, a jury awarded $9,250 per song, or $222,000.


Full article here: http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601085&sid=a9y16Zokxk90

------------------------------------------------

Thursday, April 30, 2009

ABA Journal: How Law Practice Will Become Like Off-the-Rack Suits

The following article was authored by Debra Cassens Weiss and reprinted from the March 2, 2009 online site of the ABA.

Law practice in the future will involve the mechanization of legal tasks into standard systems, creating job losses for lawyers who don't evolve, Richard Susskind argues in his new book The End of Lawyers?

Today law practice is like a custom-made suit—it is crafted to an individual client’s needs. But in the future, Susskind argues, standard legal tasks will be performed by software or done in a lower cost manner—they will be commodities like off-the-rack suits, explains a book review in The Lawyers Weekly.

Complex legal issues will be broken down into individual tasks, and lawyers will identify the best way to perform them. One this is accomplished, Susskind argues, these tasks may be handled by paralegals, by lower cost law firms or specialized overseas companies.

In this evolution, the “dominant species” of lawyer will be legal knowledge engineers who organize complex legal content and processes that will need to be analyzed and distilled into standard practice and computer systems, according to the book review.

“Adapt or die,” the review says. “That’s the stark option Susskind offers lawyers. The coming seismic shift in legal services will result in the demise of many law firms, the extinction of many legal fields, and will force many lawyers to scramble to find new lines of work.”


-------------------------------------------------


Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Second Amendment Absent in Supreme Court Gun Ruling

(the following was authored by Tony Mauro and article appears on Law.com)

In spite of its recent support for an individual right to bear arms, the Supreme Court on Tuesday adopted an expansive reading of the federal law that bans possession of firearms by those who have been convicted of felonies or of "a misdemeanor crime of domestic violence."
The meaning of the phrase about misdemeanors was the issue in United States v. Hayes, decided by a 7-2 vote in a decision available here.

West Virginia resident Randy Hayes was prosecuted under that section of the law in 2005. The predicate crime that triggered the law in his case was a 1994 state conviction on charges of battery, where his victim was his wife.

But Hayes claimed that since the crime was simple battery, and was not specific to battery against a family member, it should not have triggered the firearm possession law. Hayes lost at the district court level, but the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reversed, finding that the law comes into play only when the predicate crime has "as an element a domestic relationship." In other words, even though Hayes' victim actually was his wife, the appeals court said it does not count as a predicate crime because the crime was not specific to domestic violence.

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, writing for the majority, said the 4th Circuit's approach would "frustrate Congress' manifest purpose" in including domestic violence crimes among the crimes that would result in loss of firearms. "If the Fourth Circuit were right in its analysis of the controlling legislation," Ginsburg said in announcing the ruling from the bench, "Congress' enactment would have been a dead letter in the majority of states from the very moment of its passage." Congress added the domestic violence provision in 1996.In dissent, Chief Justice John Roberts Jr., joined by Justice Antonin Scalia, said that "right off the bat," the law should be read to require that a domestic relationship be an element of the predicate offense. Roberts also said that implementing the majority's view will entail "significant problems," requiring prosecutors to research the relationships in past crimes, rather than simply going by the category of the crime.The case drew interest in part as a test of the strength of the right to bear firearms in the wake of D.C. v. Heller, last year's landmark declaration of an individual right to bear arms. The Second Amendment Foundation filed a brief in the Hayes case, urging the Court to adopt the narrower interpretation and to allow states leeway in defining crimes.

But, as Ohio State University law professor Doug Berman points out on his Sentencing Law and Policy blog, neither Heller nor the Second Amendment played a role in Hayes. "The Second Amendment and Heller do not even get mentioned by the dissenters, even though the majority's ruling would seem to provide a green light to jurisdictions looking for pretty easy ways to functionally work around the rights supposedly championed in Heller."

The Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence applauded the decision. "In its first gun case since the landmark Heller decision, the Court wisely upheld this reasonable restriction, said center president Paul Helmke. "Today's ruling is the right one for victims of domestic abuse and to protect law enforcement officers who are our first responders to domestic violence incidents."


http://www.law.com/jsp/law/LawArticleFriendly.jsp?id=1202428547434

This article first appeared on The BLT: The Blog of Legal Times.

-------------------------------------------------

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Global Law Firm Begins LEED Renovations at Downtown Pittsburgh's One Oliver Plaza

Leading global law firm K&L Gates has begun construction and renovation work on its new offices at Downtown's One Oliver Plaza.

In February 2008, the firm signed one of the year’s largest leases in the region. In 2010, K&L Gates will occupy 251,000 square feet of space in the 37-story office tower located at 210 Sixth Ave.Work will involve a build-out of 14 floors in the office tower, which will serve as K&L Gates' new Pittsburgh offices. Designed by Washington, D.C.-based Deborah Lehman-Smith, the LEED-certified project calls for a state-of-the-art conference facility and landscaping by Pamela Burton & Company of Los Angeles.

Additional improvements will include a renovation of the building’s lobby, façade and plazas. In 2010, K&L will move 710 employees from its current space in Downtown’s Oliver Building. “We’re taking an existing building and re-imagining it. This great site will give Pittsburgh a new plaza and hub,” says Lehman-Smith. “What’s more green than taking something and giving it a new use for the city of Pittsburgh?”

Designed to house 850 employees, the refurbished space will allow K&L Gates to consolidate some of its East Coast and global administrative functions in Pittsburgh. The international firm employs 1,700 lawyers in 28 offices in North America, Europe and Asia

As part of the project, One Oliver Plaza will be renamed the K&L Gates Center. In addition, the firm’s name will be placed on the top of the building, replacing the existing Ariba signs.

(Article written by Jennifer Baron and originally published by Pop City Media on October 15, 2008.)

http://www.popcitymedia.com/developmentnews/oliverplz1015.aspx

Friday, September 19, 2008

Free Private Dances Land Chicago Attorney in Hot Water

A DeKalb lawyer was suspended for 15 months Thursday for arranging to have a female client perform nude dances for him in exchange for credit on her legal fees, a state commission said.

Scott Robert Erwin, a lawyer since 1980, will begin his suspension Oct. 7, according to the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission, a branch of the state Supreme Court that conducts investigations into attorney misconduct.Erwin, with offices at 211 N. 1st St., has not been charged criminally.Erwin represented the female client and several of her family members on several different types of cases.

The relationship began in 2001 at Heartbreakers, a Compton, Ill., strip club where, after Erwin talked to an exotic dancer, both realized they had talked to each other over the telephone about some pending legal matters, according to the commission's report of the allegations.

Erwin agreed to represent her on several legal matters, and they mutually agreed that she perform nude dances for him in his office as a way to cut down on the legal fees, according to the report.

Click here for the full article.