Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 9/28/07
September 28, 2007
The weekend is once again upon us, and it seems some of our bloggers have already taken off; today’s batch of updates is much shorter than what we’ve seen so far this week.
The news for September 28, 2007 includes:
- “Video depositions – the visual advantage” – Charles Perez of Visual Resources, Inc. in his Trial Presentation Blog
- “2008 rate increase approved for Denver Water” – Molly Foley-Healy of Colorado’s HindmanSanchez P.C. in their blog, HOA Legi-Slate
- “Wells Fargo hit with fees and sanctions for stay violations; agrees to order enforceable in any court” – Atlanta attorney Scott Riddle in his Georgia Bankruptcy Law Blog
- “Questions and answers about life settlements” – Chapel Hill lawyer Greg Herman-Giddens in TrustCounsel P.A.’s North Carolina Estate Planning Blog
- “Networking: is shyness getting in your way?” – Marketing expert Tom Kane of Kane Consulting Inc. in his Legal Marketing Blog
- “NNI releases brochure entitled ‘Big Things From A Tiny World’ “ – Washington, D.C. attorney Lynn L. Bergeson of Bergeson & Campbell P.C. in the firm’s Nanotechnology Law Blog
- “Compromise reporter shield bill considered by Senate Judiciary Committee” – The bloggers from the American Constitution Society in their ACS Blog
- “Arkansas Supreme Court upholds electronic games gambling law” – Little Rock lawyer Kevin Lemley in the Allen Law Firm’s Arkansas Business Litigation Blog
- “Is anti-concurrent cause language ‘unethical’?” – Portland attorney David Rossmiller in Dunn Carney Allen Higgins & Tongue LLP’s Insurance Coverage Law Blog
- “Law school IP essay question: are defensive football signals trade secrets?” – Attorney-mediator Victoria Pynchon in the IP ADR Blog
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