Friday, February 28, 2014

Life In Jail For Failing To Pay Tolls?

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Does it really matter how many tolls we’re talking about? [2,362!] Or how much money is involved? [$558,000]. Apparently it does, per a court in China, which is now reconsidering its life sentence. As reported by xinhuanet.com:

A court in central China’s Henan Province said Friday it would retry a farmer convicted of fraud and sentenced to life imprisonment for evading millions of yuan in expressway tolls.

The verdict may change because the defendant has indicated he had accomplices, said Liu Penghua, director of the political department of the Pingdingshan Municipal Intermediate People’s Court.

Shi Jianfeng was convicted of fraud Tuesday for evading 3.68 million yuan (558,000 U.S. dollars) of expressway tolls.

“Shi said during an inquiry Thursday night he was manipulated by a relative,” said Liu.

Hmm. “Manipulated?”

Shi used fabricated military drivers licenses and mounted fake military license plates on his two trucks, the Pingdingshan Municipal Intermediate People’s Court said.

The case drew attention and controversy on the Internet, with some saying the life-imprisonment sentence was too harsh and that expressway tolls are exorbitant. Tollgate records show Shi’s two trucks used to transport sand and gravel avoided tolls 2,362 times in the nine months between May 2008 and Jan. 2009. The average toll each time would have been 1,558 yuan (236 dollars).

$236? Does that come with a massage? Here’s the source.

Source: http://rss.justia.com/~r/LegalJuiceCom/~3/BmaiJh-mCes/adsf.html

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NLRB's recent significant decisions

The NLRB this week made public a number of significant decisions, most reached in the final days of the term of Member Brian Hayes, which ended on December 16. The Board continues with three members, Chairman Mark Gaston Pearce and Members Richard F. Griffin, Jr. and Sharon Block.

The decisions touch on a variety of issues including social media postings, charter school jurisdiction, backpay awards, the chargeability of certain union lobbying expenses, and an employer’s responsibility to continue dues collection after the expiration of a contract.

Hispanics United of Buffalo
The Board found that the employer unlawfully fired five employees because of their Facebook posts and comments about a coworker who intended to complain to management about their work performance. In its analysis, the Board majority applied settled Board law to the new world of social media, finding that the Facebook conversation was concerted activity and was protected by the National Labor Relations Act. Member Hayes dissented.

Alan Ritchey, Inc.
In a unanimous decision that resolved the last of the two-member cases returned following the 2010 Supreme Court decision in New Process Steel, the Board found that where there is no collectively-bargained grievance-arbitration system in place, employers generally must give the union notice and an opportunity to bargain before imposing discipline such as a discharge or suspension on employees. Member Hayes was recused.

Latino Express
In a decision that will affect most cases in which backpay is awarded, the Board decided to require respondents to compensate employees for any extra taxes they have to pay as a result of receiving the backpay in a lump sum. The Board will also require an employer ordered to pay back wages to file with the Social Security Administration a report allocating the back wages to the years in which they were or would have been earned. The Board requested briefs in this case in July 2012. Member Hayes did not participate in the case.

Chicago Mathematics & Science Academy
Rejecting the position of a teachers’ union, the Board found that it had jurisdiction over an Illinois non-profit corporation that operates a public charter school in Chicago. The non-profit was not the sort of government entity exempt from the National Labor Relations Act, the Board majority concluded, and there was no reason for the Board to decline jurisdiction. Member Hayes dissented in part.

United Nurses & Allied Professionals (Kent Hospital)
The Board, with Member Hayes dissenting, addressed several issues involving the rights of nonmember dues objectors under the Supreme Court’s Beck decision. On the main issue, the majority held that, like all other union expenses, lobbying expenses are chargeable to objectors, to the extent that they are germane to collective bargaining, contract administration, or grievance adjustment. The Board invited further briefing from interested parties on the how it should define and apply the germaneness standard in the context of lobbying activities.

WKYC-TV, Gannet Co.
Applying the general rule against unilateral employer changes in terms and conditions of employment, the Board found that an employer’s obligation to collect union dues under a check-off agreement will continue after the contract expires and before a bargaining impasse occurs or a new contract is reached. Member Hayes dissented.


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Source: http://www.lawmemo.com/blog/2012/12/nlrbs_recent_si.html

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Fewer Lawyers Working Part-Time, New Report Says

The percentage of lawyers working part-time dipped slightly in 2013, according to new data from the National Association for Law Placement, which tracks employment figures.

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2014/02/27/fewer-lawyers-working-part-time-new-report-says/?mod=WSJBlog

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Assaulted With … A Box Of Iced Tea

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No offense to all of The Juice’s white Mercedes-Benz-driving readers out there, but, given the headline, is it any surprise that the perp drove away in a white Mercedes-Benz? Out of the 62nd Precinct (Bensonhurst—Bath Beach via brooklynpaper.com:

A disgruntled customer battered a cashier with a box of Lipton Iced Tea at a New Utrecht Avenue supermarket after she refused to ring up his purchases on Feb. 10, police stated.

The victim told cops she closed the line at her register at the store between 81st and 84th streets at 5:30 pm and told the would-be patron that she would be unable to check him out.

The entitled shopper pitched a fit and began cursing and screaming at the worker, then pulled out the box of tea and hit the worker in the face with it repeatedly, cops said. The crazed caffeine consumer then ran out of the store, jumped into his white Mercedes-Benz, and sped away, police said.

You poor dear! Oh the humanity!

Source: http://rss.justia.com/~r/LegalJuiceCom/~3/kl_N9XTE0L8/asfd.html

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LawBiz® Legal Pad On the Road!: Compensation Model for Small Firms

When you're hiring another attorney, don't think about how much bringing him or her on will COST. Instead, think about what revenues he or she will bring in. Take a look at this week's clips for more...

Source: http://feeds.lexblog.com/~r/LawBizBlog/~3/3U1vL9bXxXc/

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XCOM: Enemy Unknown (Xbox 360) (Albuquerque Journal)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/law/video/359659431?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Former Germany president cleared of corruption charges

[JURIST] A German court on Thursday cleared former president Christian Wulff [official profile; JURIST news archive] of corruption charges that sprang from allegations that he had accepted bribes in exchange for political favors. Judge Frank Rosenow informed the court [Reuters report] of Wulff's acquittal, saying that there was insufficient proof that the former president had accepted illegal payments. Wulff, who has insisted on his innocence since his resignation in 2012, chose to clear his name at trial rather than settle...

Source: http://jurist.org/paperchase/2014/02/former-german-president-cleared-of-corruption-charges.php

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Punishment for former Tax Court Judge George Perez stands

The Minnesota Supreme Court agreed with the Board on Judicial Standards. Former Tax Court Judge George Perez should be censured and his case should be forwarded to the Wisconsin Office of Lawyer Registration.

The Supreme Court also said it would supervise any future application Perez submits to the Minnesota Bar.

In November 2012, the BJS filed a disciplinary petition against Perez alleging that he failed to issue his opinions in a timely manner, falsified court records to show he had no cases pending, refused to accept new cases and demonstrated a “pattern of delay” in issuing decisions

Chief Justice Lorie Gildea appointed a three member panel to hear the case. That body ruled the BJS proved two of the claims by “clear and convincing evidence”, but did not prove two others.

Among other findings, the panel concluded Perez made “a substantial number of false certifications over an extended period of time.”

For punishment, the panel recommended a nine month suspension, a prohibition on serving out the rest of the term and for Perez to submit monthly status reports on his pending cases. The BJS pushed to have Perez removed from office, effectively ending his judicial career.

None of that mattered however because Perez was up for reappointment. In the waning days Gov. Mark Dayton recommended he not be confirmed. The Minnesota Senate vote was unanimous and Perez’s tenure as a Tax Court judge ended.

But Perez appealed the panel’s decision arguing it was moot because he was no longer a Tax Court Judge and secondly, he argued the BJS did not prove its case. He also claims the damage has been done. He also argues that any discipline should be mitigated because since January 2012, the time when he engaged with the BJS’ investigation, all of his decisions were decided within the three month deadline.

“Judge Perez argues we should not discipline him. He contends his removal from office… and the news media coverage of the panel’s findings constitute sufficient discipline for his misconduct.”

The Supreme Court disagreed with Perez and affirmed the discipline handed down by the panel. Doing so, “protects the integrity of the judicial system and should help restore the public’s confidence.”

Justice David Lillehaug took no part in the decision.

 

 

Source: http://minnlawyer.com/minnlawyerblog/2014/01/15/punishment-for-former-tax-court-judge-george-perez-stands/

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Thursday, February 27, 2014

End of Lifed

As some of you know (and I know you know because you write me angry emails and exasperated twits), Simple Justice hasn't worked well for months now. It takes forever for the posts to load, assuming they load at all.  After trying to find out from my host, GoDaddy, why this is happening, I was eventually told that they had given up on the blogging program I use, stopped doing anything to maintain its efficacy a year ago, and were preparing to "End of Life" their involvement in blogging.

Mind you, this didn't stop GoDaddy from taking my money to use their program, but I digress.

Over the past couple of months, I have been involved in an effort to move SJ to a new platform over at WordPress with a new host. It had a few hitches along the way. My initial efforts involved some of the turnkey opportunities for blawgers, one of which involved spending huge sums of money because their business model is based on dopey law firms who buy into the "every lawyer needs a blawg or will die" vision of the future.

Since this isn't a marketing tool or money maker for me, there was no way I was going to throw thousands of dollars into this hole. My basic premise is that I write and people get to read, if they want, for free. While I am happy to provide the content for my own purposes, if not yours, I am not happy to pay through the nose to amuse readers.

Another wanted me as part of their stable of law blogs, which wouldn't have been so awful except that they quickly reneged on the deal offered when they saw the volume of traffic here.  Reneging isn't something I can live with.

Lacking the mad computer skillz to make this happen on my own, a few people who had significant computer skills and enjoyed SJ offered to lend a hand and make a move happen.  One gave me a lead on the big issues, but was too high on the pay grade to do the dirty work. Another was happy to make the nuts and bolts of a change happen. 

After being well on the way, he suffered some personal problems and, well, disappeared on me. As in, went dark. I grew far more concerned about his welfare than I was about moving this blog. Some things are real, like a good person's well-being, and to this moment, I have no clue whether he is dead or alive. I hope he gets in touch with me soon. I'm still deeply concerned.

It wasn't easy stuff. GoDaddy's system was proprietary, and didn't play nice with anyone else's system. While GoDaddy had developed an export feature to move content to WordPress, they found out that it wasn't particularly "robust," and that my rather extensive content crashed the system. It could handle about 100 blog posts. I had well over 5000. Nobody at GoDaddy anticipated someone as prolific as me.

But when their general counsel explained that I probably wasn't a great choice of people to piss off, they put some developers on the task of creating a means of moving my content. It took a couple of weeks, but they eventually managed to pull it off. It was a decidedly less than perfect solution, as they were able to include my posts and the comments, but they couldn't manage to get the contents to thread (or nest, if you prefer) at WordPress. Bear this in mind later, so no one bitches at me about the comments. It just couldn't be done.

Many people have suggested their hosts, web designers, programs, whatever, to fix the disaster of using GoDaddy. While I appreciated the concern, it wasn't really helpful after the first few thousand suggestions. Most of my griping had to do with prodding GoDaddy to keep SJ working, at least minimally, until a move could be completed.  This wasn't a bleg for suggestions, but deliberate effort to poke GoDaddy by a wee bit of public shaming for their inability to do what they took money to do.

Finally, I was hooked up with a guy who, for a fee, would do what was needed to finish the move. We were on the same page, and although it irks me that I have to pay someone to do the work, I wasn't ready to let SJ die and didn't want to see the content created over the past seven plus years disappear when SJ went dark. But my new guy developed some personal issues that pulled his attention away from making the move happen, I began to think I was a curse to computer people (or maybe computer people were a curse to me?). 

It appears that we're are all getting on the same page now, and provided an alien invasion, healthcare crisis or zombie Armageddon doesn't happen in the next couple of days, I anticipate that SJ will move to its new home.

It's not yet clear to me how easily I will accommodate to WordPress. I know, tons of you have told me how easy it is, but I'm an old dog and new tricks come hard. Heck, it took me a few hours to figure out how to use the "intuitive" wheel of an iPod. Yes, I can be that clueless.

I anticipate that there will a day or two, maybe more, when nothing will appear at SJ. It's not that I've quit or gone fishing. I'm not dead yet. It's just that there will be down time while all this happens, while the internet figures out that I've moved to a new home and redirects you to the right address.

There will be problems in the future as well. Images will be missing. Links will be broken. Formatting will get all screwed up do to differences in coding between GoDaddy and WordPress. It will be annoying to you. Me too, probably more so. But short of going back over the more than 5000 posts and cleaning up the mess by hand, there isn't much I can do to prevent the problems. I am not inclined to spend my time that way. Sorry, but we will all have to suck it up.

I hope this makes things a little clearer for readers, and I apologize for the problems, delays and frustration caused by GoDaddy's sucking. I've been working on it for months now, and I hope we've come to the end of the nightmare. In any event, it's better than being End of Lifed by GoDaddy.


© 2007-13 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/2013/07/10/end-of-lifed.aspx?ref=rss

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Court Grills SEC Over Costly Conflict Minerals Rule

One of the most controversial — and costly — rules in U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission history is under scrutiny by a panel of federal appellate judges, who questioned whether the requirement that publicly traded companies disclose the use of certain minerals from the war-torn Democratic Republic of the Congo violates the First Amendment.

Source: http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202636876934&rss=rss_nlj

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Comity Prompts Court’s Deferral 

A Richmond Circuit Court denies plaintiff’s motion to add party defendants, and says these proposed defendants are the same ones named as defendants in a companion case pending before another judge of this court and it appears plaintiff is seeking an end run around an adverse ruling by another court. Since the issue of whether ...

Source: http://valawyersweekly.com/2014/01/02/comity-prompts-courts-deferral/

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Egypt court convicts members of alleged terrorist group

[JURIST] Egypt's Cairo Criminal Court convicted 26 people on Wednesday charged with forming a terrorist group with the intent to attack the Suez Canal [official website]. The group was charged with planning attacks on ships in the Suez Canal as well as security buildings, foreign tourists, Christians and police. Most of the defendants received [AP report] death sentences and tried in absentia, but it is likely they will receive a retrial when arrested. One of the present defendants was younger...

Source: http://jurist.org/paperchase/2014/02/egypt-court-convicts-alleged-terrorist-group.php

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How Bad Ideas Grow Legs

Last January, Instapundit lawprof Glenn Reynolds wrote a short essay that became the darling of many folks who take an interest in criminal justice issues entitled Ham Sandwich Nation: Due Process When Everything is a Crime. To be kind, it was a simplistic rehash of long-time, discredited silver-bullet solutions to complex problems. The only virtue was that it came from Reynolds, who was a law professor and thus credible by definition even though he was dabbling at the edges of an area of law about which he knew nothing.

It was excoriated here. Gideon beat it up at A Public Defender as well. Unlike Reynolds, this wasn't a theoretical exercise for us. We lived with the problems, and would wind up living with whatever inane solution seemed like a cool idea to an academic.  Whereas Reynolds' mantle of scholarly credibility was an asset for others whose interest came from a distance, ours was nuts and bolts, from living with the detritus of bad ideas in the trenches.

Radley Balko took us to task for being critical of Reynolds. The Agitator offered a homily of cooperation, arguing that we ought to work with luminaries like Reynolds rather than saying mean things like their ideas aren't fabulous. After explaining what was horribly wrong with a particular idea promoted by Reynolds that Radley found especially interesting (loser pays in criminal litigation), I wrote:

Radley also questioned by twit why I wasn't more open to embracing the ideas proffered by Glenn Reynolds and Conor Friedersdorf, "And it's probably more productive to engage, persuade new allies than to shun and mock them."  Since I hate to be a shunner or mocker, and I try to be relatively informative as reflected in this response to Radley's query, I look forward to Reynolds and Friedersdorf, our new allies, engaging. Engage away, guys. Your turn.

Of course, I was shunning and mocking, just as Radley said. But then, I had no plan to suck up to Reynolds in an effort to gain him as an ally anymore than I planned to teach a pig to sing. As players in punditry go, Reynolds is a major player,* and he enjoys his importance. He doesn't swim with minnows like Gid and me. At most, he eats us for a snack. Radley may have been well-intended, but didn't really appreciate the pecking order.

Of course, there was nothing to stop Reynolds, either before or after he published his Ham Sandwich essay, from speaking with people who were actually knowledgeable about criminal law, whether that was Gid and/or me, or some other trench lawyers, who could explain why good ideas on paper don't play as well in the courtroom.  But no. He didn't. Since it was his essay being published to enlighten the world, it was his duty to get a clue, and his choice not to.

My point to Radley at the time was the when loud voices with ascribed credibility write something like this, bad things happen. Bad ideas are taken more seriously. Other people will mistakenly assume that Reynolds, lawprof and all, has a clue what he's talking about and his ideas must have merit. After all, lawprofs could never be wrong about lawstuff.  And now that Reynolds had rung the bell, it could not be unrung.

George Will, certainly one of this country's leading conservative intellectuals, heard the peal of Reynolds' bell this week. In an otherwise excellent column on Senators Leahy and Rand's efforts to provide a backdoor to mandatory minimums (which raises the question of why they aren't seeking to end mandatory minimums through the front door, but we'll take it anyway they offer it), Will goes from the sublime to the ridiculous:

The House Judiciary Committee has created an Over-Criminalization Task Force. Its members should read “Three Felonies a Day: How the Feds Target the Innocent,” by Harvey Silverglate, a libertarian lawyer whose book argues that prosecutors could indict most of us for three felonies a day. And the task force should read the short essay “Ham Sandwich Nation: Due Process When Everything Is a Crime” by Glenn Harlan Reynolds, a professor of law at the University of Tennessee. Given the axiom that a competent prosecutor can persuade a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich, and given the reality of prosecutorial abuse — particularly, compelling plea bargains by overcharging with “kitchen sink” indictments — Reynolds believes “the decision to charge a person criminally should itself undergo some degree of due process scrutiny.”

He also suggests banning plea bargains: “An understanding that every criminal charge filed would have to be either backed up in open court or ignominiously dropped would significantly reduce the incentive to overcharge. . . . Our criminal justice system, as presently practiced, is basically a plea-bargain system with actual trials of guilt or innocence a bit of showy froth floating on top.”

While Instapundit is a Big Kahuna on the interwebz and among academics, George Will has a soap box that dwarfs Reynolds. And he's taken Reynolds' "ideas" mainstream, not only crediting Reynolds for his position as an academic, but taking for granted that he's got criminal law chops.  It's unlikely that George checked Reynolds out at Tennessee Law School, where he teaches Administrative Law, Constitutional Law, Law, Science, and Technology, Space Law, Internet Law. See criminal law in there? See anything in his past to suggest even a passing familiarity with the actual practice of criminal law? Me neither.

Yet, I look forward to some fine senators extolling the virtue of a dangerous and hare-brained reform of the law, citing to Glenn Reynolds' Ham Sandwich essays as the font of practical criminal law brilliance.  Because the myth has now been created and George Will gave it legs.

And this is how we end up with monumentally bad ideas being enshrined in law.


* For those who aren't familiar with Instapundit, this from Reynolds' Wikipedia page

Much of Instapundit's content consists of links to other sites, often with brief comments. (His frequent use of "heh," "indeed," and "read the whole thing" have been widely imitated and are often parodied by other bloggers.) Reynolds encourages readers to explore the wider blogosphere and to fully read articles and posts to which he links.
And that's the foundation for being a major player on the internet.




© 2007-13 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/2013/07/10/how-bad-ideas-grow-legs.aspx?ref=rss

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UN rights chief condemns attacks by Yemen armed forces

[JURIST] UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay [official website] on Wednesday condemned [news release] attacks in Al Dhale Governorate by Yemeni armed forces, which are disproportionately affecting civilians. Pillay reported that since December, these attacks have killed more than 40 individuals, four of whom were children. Also of concern is the fact that buildings such as hospitals, clinics and schools have been shelled during some of these attacks. Although Yemeni forces have claimed that they have been attacked...

Source: http://jurist.org/paperchase/2014/02/un-rights-chief-condemns-attacks-by-yemen-armed-forces.php

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Top Legal Stories of 2013

In this edition of Lawyer2Lawyer, hosts Bob Ambrogi and J. Craig Williams invite Allen Pusey and Molly McDonough of the ABA Journal to recap the past year’s legal news. Consider this a crash course on news stories such as Edward Snowden, gun control, and Obamacare. The discussion will not only cover the top stories of the year but also find the common themes in this year’s news and foretell what to keep an eye on in 2014.

Pusey has been with the ABA Journal since 2007 and was named editor and publisher in 2011. Prior to the ABA Journal, he worked for 26 years at the Dallas Morning News as an investigative reporter, feature writer, special projects editor, and U.S. Supreme Court correspondent.

McDonough is the deputy managing editor of the ABA Journal. She currently oversees online operations and special projects, including the Legal Rebels series and the annual Blawg 100. Molly has covered the courts and the legal profession for more than 20 years. She has been a reporter and editor for the National Law Journal, as well as a reporter for many other news sources.

Special thanks to our sponsor, Clio.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/lawyer-2-lawyer/2013/12/top-legal-stories-of-2013

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High Court Refuses Ariz. Abortion Appeal, and More (Wall Street Journal)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/law/video/359796026?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Hiring of Law Grads Improves for Some; States Escalate Fight Over Religious Rights

The AM Roundup: Law Blog rounds up the morning's news.

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2014/02/24/hiring-of-law-grads-improves-for-some-states-escalate-fight-over-religious-rights/?mod=WSJBlog

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Mark Woods: Super memories and a super future (Florida Times-Union)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/law/video/356444815?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Supreme Court Allows Stanford Ponzi Scheme Suits To Go Forward

The high court agreed with investors who lost billions in a massive fraud perpetrated by tycoon Allen Stanford. By a 7-to-2 vote, the justices allowed their state class action suits to go forward.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2014/02/26/283035544/supreme-court-allows-stanford-ponzi-scheme-suits-to-go-forward?ft=1&f=1070

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Nintendo Wii Mini (Red) (Albuquerque Journal)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/law/video/359659428?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Lawyers for Former BDO Chief Fight for Legal Fees

The criminal trials over what prosecutors described as one of the biggest tax frauds in history is over. The battle over legal fees is still simmering.

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2014/02/21/lawyers-for-former-bdo-chief-fight-for-legal-fees/?mod=WSJBlog

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Automation or Control: Why Attorneys Must Choose

In a world of automatic updates and remote storage, are attorneys still controlling their practices? Are we forgetting valuable information as our machines take over? In this episode of the Kennedy-Mighell Report, hosts Dennis Kennedy and Tom Mighell discuss the pros and cons of trading control for increased productivity.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/kennedy-mighell-report/2014/01/automation-control-attorneys-must-choose/

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Marijuana, Federal Law, and the States: The Great Legal Divide

Federal law bans marijuana nationwide and yet some states have decided to license its trade. So, where does this leave citizens, local government, and attorneys who work in the cannabis industry? On this episode of Lawyer 2 Lawyer, hosts Bob Ambrogi and J. Craig Williams interview Brian Vicente, Dan Riffle and Kathy Haddock to discuss the challenges and liabilities that persist in the void between federal and state drug laws.
Brian Vicente is a Colorado criminal defense attorney and founding partner of Vicente Sederberg. He also serves as Executive Director for Sensible Colorado, chairs the Denver Mayor's Marijuana Policy Review Panel, and coordinates the Colorado Bar Association's Drug Policy Project.
Dan Riffle is a former assistant prosecutor for Vinton County, Ohio who has turned lobbyist on Capitol Hill. He currently serves as the Director of Federal Policies for Marijuana Policy Project and has shepherded 2013 legislation through Illinois making it the second largest medical marijuana state.
Kathy Haddock is the Senior Assistant City Attorney for the City of Boulder, Colorado. She is primarily responsible for advising finance, records, elections, airport, special districts, and special projects including medical and recreational marijuana. She has also been responsible for drafting the laws that license and govern medical marijuana businesses in Boulder, Colorado.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/lawyer-2-lawyer/2014/02/marijuana-federal-law-states-great-legal-divide

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Plaintiff Can Access Police Investigation Records 

In a plaintiff’s suit involving a charge that he failed to make a right-hand turn signal, the Richmond Circuit Court will resolve a discovery dispute by allowing plaintiff discovery of an internal affairs investigation through documents provided by defendant for in camera review. Defendants invoke a provision of the Freedom of Information Act, Va. Code ...

Source: http://valawyersweekly.com/2014/01/02/plaintiff-can-access-police-investigation-records/

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Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Google v. Authors Guild: The 8-Year-Legal Battle Comes to a Close

This landmark case, involving Google’s digitization project of scanning 20-million books to make them searchable through the Internet, was decided in favor of Google. “In my mind, this is a fair-use case that we will never see again,” Andrew Albanese, senior writer for Publisher’s Weekly, said, declaring the case a benchmark for future decisions. It was ruled that Google met the requirements of fair use and all four factors in defense of copyright infringement. In this edition of Lawyer2Lawyer, hosts Bob Ambrogi and Craig Williams chat with Andrew Albanese about the case, whether this constitutes transformative use, and what this case means for the online-media industry as a whole.

Andrew Albanese has been covering Google vs. Authors Guild since it’s inception in 2005. As senior writer for Publishers Weekly, he focuses on copyright wars and how the Internet is changing protected works. His book, The Battle of $9.99: How Apple, Amazon and the “Big Six” Publishers Changed the E-Book Business Overnight, covered the Apple price-fixing case and the introduction of e-books to society.

Special thanks to our sponsor, Clio.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/lawyer-2-lawyer/2013/12/google-v-authors-guild-the-8-year-legal-battle-comes-to-a-close

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Apple Presses Arizona Governor to Veto Bill Aimed at Gays, Businesses

Apple said it has asked Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer to veto a bill that allows the state’s businesses to refuse service to gay customers on religious grounds.

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2014/02/25/apple-presses-arizona-governor-to-veto-bill-aimed-at-gays-businesses/?mod=WSJBlog

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Same-Sex Parenting Goes On Trial In Detroit

Michigan's ban on same-sex marriage goes on trial today in Detroit, and Michigan Public Radio's Rick Pluta is there. A lesbian couple wants to settle the doubts over same-sex parenting.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2014/02/25/282589121/same-sex-parenting-goes-on-trial-in-detroit?ft=1&f=1070

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Russia enacts law enabling 'snap inspections' of NGOs

[JURIST] Russian President Vladimir Putin [official website, in Russian; JURIST news archive] signed a measure into law Monday expanding the reasons for which non-governmental organizations (NGOs) can be subject to unscheduled audits, or "snap inspections." These reasons include [UPI report] allegations of extremism and suspected violations of the law, and the inspections may be ordered by the heads of authorized agencies, or requested by prosecutors and election commissions. According to the Russian Ministry of Justice [official website, in Russian], of...

Source: http://jurist.org/paperchase/2014/02/russia-enacts-law-enabling-snap-inspections-of-ngos.php

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Industry Challenges EPA's Greenhouse Gas Rules In High Court

The case focuses on the Clean Air Act permitting required of companies that want to build or modify facilities expected to emit a lot of gases. Critics call the requirement costly and time-consuming.

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Source: http://www.npr.org/2014/02/24/280944702/industry-challenges-epas-greenhouse-gas-rules-in-high-court?ft=1&f=1070

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Public University Professors Don’t Have the Right to Evangelize, Judge Rules

Public university professors don't have a First Amendment right to preach their faith to their students, a federal judge has ruled.

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2014/02/24/public-university-professors-dont-have-the-right-to-evangelize-judge-rules/?mod=WSJBlog

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California Court of Appeal Makes It Easier to Add Business Owners to a Judgment

Individuals form limited partnerships, limited liability companies and corporations to limit their personal liability.  These legal structures encourage entrepreneurs to take risks.  The California Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, however, has made it easier to add a business owner to a judgment that initially was entered only against the corporate or limited partnership entity he or she owns.  In Relentless Air Racing LLC v. Airborne Turbine Ltd Partnership (Dec. 31, 2013) 2d Civil No. B244612, the Second Appellate District reversed the trial court’s finding that the business owner could not be added to the judgment under an “alter ego” theory.  The Court of Appeal required the limited partners, as well as current and former general partner entities to be added to the judgment against the limited partnership.

In order to add a party to a judgment, the plaintiff must show that:

  1. the parties to be added as judgment debtors had control of the underlying litigation and were virtually represented in that proceeding,
  2. there is such a unity of interest and ownership that the separate personalities of the entity and the owners no longer exist, and
  3. an inequitable result will follow if the acts are treated as those of the entity alone.

Greenspan v. LADT LLC (2010) 191 Cal.App.4th 486, 508, 509, 511.  The first two elements were easily established in the Relentless case.  The only issue on appeal was whether recognizing limited liability would lead to an inequitable result.

Relentless obtained a $180,000 judgment against Airborne for breach of contract.  The Plaintiff could not collect the judgment because Airborne had no assets.  Airborne was a limited partnership.  The limited partners were a husband and wife, Wayne and Linda Fulton.  The initial general partner during the time period in question was Airborne Turbine, Inc. (“ATI”).  The Fultons were the sole shareholders and officers of ATI.  During the trial of the Relentless case, the Fultons changed Airborne’s general partner from ATI to Paradise Aero, Inc. (“Paradise”).  The Fultons were the sole shareholders and officers of Paradise.  The Fultons directed and controlled Airborne’s defense of the Relentless case.

The Fultons and their entities operated their business from the Fultons’ home.  The Fultons had partnership and shareholder meetings “several times a day” but kept minutes only of their annual meeting once a year.  The Fultons used funds from Airborne to pay ATI’s utility bills in lieu of rent based on an “oral agreement”.  The Fultons used Airborne’s money to pay the Fulton’s personal bills by deciding to take a draw from Airborne “when the bills came up”.  There was no formal meeting before deciding to take a draw.  The Fultons were the sole officers, members, shareholders, owners, and operators of the business entities.  The Fultons freely transferred money from the businesses to the Fultons and there was some disregard for the legal formalities.  The Court had no problem finding that there was a unity of ownership and that the separate personalities of the entities and owners no longer existed.

The trial court, however, found that there was not sufficent evidence to show that an unjust or inequitable result would occur if Airborne was treated as separate from the Fultons, ATI and Paradise.  The trial court appeared to rely heavily on the fact that there was no evidence that the Fultons transferred assets for purposes of avoiding payment of a judgment.

The Court of Appeal held that a plaintiff need not prove that a defendant acted with “wrongful intent,” i.e., with a purpose of avoiding payment of a judgment.  According to the Court of Appeal, the defendant’s intent is irrelevant as the only issue was whether recognizing the corporate form would lead to an inequitable result.  The Court then held that “it would be inequitable as a matter of law to preclude Relentless from collecting its judgment by treating Airborne as a separate entity.”  Stated differently, the Court stated that “there is an inequitable result if the Fultons, ATI and Paradise are not added as judgment debtors” because the judgment would not be collected otherwise.

However, the only time a plaintiff would need to add business owners to a judgment would be if the judgment were not otherwise collectible.  In this way, the Court of Appeal’s holding could be construed as effectively eliminating the third “alter ego” element.  In this way, the Relentless case could make it somewhat easier to meet the requirements of adding business owners to a judgment against the entity they own.  This is particularly true for entities whose owners control the operations of the business.  So, what lessons can we learn from Relentless?

  • Business owners can be added to a judgment after it is entered even if they were not named as parties throughout the case.  This is not new, but it is useful to remember.  The Fultons wrongly assumed they could not be personally liable.  Had they appreciated their personal exposure, they might have handled the case differently.
  • Member-managed limited liability companies, closely held corporations, wholly owned subsidiaries, and limited partners with few limited partners who control the general partner may not have the liability protection they assume they have.  In these situations, the first element of control over the litigation may be easy to prove.
  • Business owners should create at least the appearance of separateness by having separate physical space for business operations, separate books and records, formalized agreements between commonly held business entities (particularly if costs are to be shared), separately documented shareholder/member/limited partner meetings, and formal compensation guidelines.  Activity that blurs the distinction between the corporate forms is to be avoided.
  • Business owners should refrain from paying personal bills with a corporate account.
  • Businesses should consider having outside directors or managers.
  • Consider having an outside firm conduct an “alter ego” audit.

Source: http://www.corporatesecuritieslawblog.com/2014/01/california-court-of-appeal-makes-it-easier-to-add-business-owners-to-a-judgment/

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Math and the EPA Greenhouse-Gas Case

Lawyers generally are good with words. But what about math? Some business groups appear to have conflated different sets of Environmental Protection Agency numbers in submitted briefs on the potential impact of a greenhouse gas case pending at the Supreme Court.

Source: http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2014/02/24/math-and-the-epa-greenhouse-gas-case/?mod=WSJBlog

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Monday, February 24, 2014

WILG, MBA, and Attorney Generals: Meet the Lawyers Keeping the Workplace Safe

Are you concerned about workplace safety? Learn how lawyers from the Workers' Injury Law and Advocacy Group, Massachusetts Bar Association, and Office of the Louisiana Attorney General can help. In this episode of Workers Comp Matters, host Alan Pierce interviews Douglas Sheff, Chuck Davoli, and Will Green to reveal how attorneys are making a big impact in workplace safety.
Douglas Sheff is the current President of the Massachusetts Bar Association and the Senior Partner at Sheff Law. He has over 30 years experience in all aspects of personal injury law and is currently serving as the Chairman for both the Massachusetts Bar Association's Workplace Safety Task Force and the Massachusetts Academy of Trial Attorneys' Federal Legislation Committee.
Chuck Davoli is an attorney and sustaining board member for WILG and chairs its Workplace Safety and Occupational Disaster Committee. He is the Managing Partner for Davoli, Krumholt and Price and serves as a labor representative on the Louisiana Governor's Workers' Compensation Advisory Council.
Will Green is currently an Assistant Attorney General assigned to the Louisiana Workforce Commission Office of Workers' Compensation where he assists the Director of the Office of Workers' Compensation in developing and drafting legislation, rules, and policies for workers' compensation. In addition, he serves as general counsel to the Second Injury Board and is the former in-house counsel at Louisiana Workers' Compensation Corporation.

Source: http://legaltalknetwork.com/podcasts/workers-comp-matters/2014/02/wilg-mba-attorney-generals-meet-lawyers-keeping-workplace-safe/

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High Court Refuses Ariz. Abortion Appeal, and More (Wall Street Journal)

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Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/law/video/359796026?client_source=feed&format=rss

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