Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 7/29/08
By Rob La Gatta
July 29, 2008
From urban condominiums to nursing home protests, we’ve got a wide range of legal news to highlight this afternoon. If you haven’t commented on a blog yet today, why not make it one of the 10 listed below? Nothing makes a blogging lawyer smile like a comment to show that folks are engaging with the material they’re churning on a near-daily basis…
- Tower condominiums and mixed-use condominiums – Seattle attorney Daniel Zimberoff of Barker Martin in the firm’s Northwest Condo & HOA Law Blog
- Better living through chemistry? Dead wrong – Dallas lawyer Angel Reyes of Heygood, Orr, Reyes, Pearson & Bartolomei in his Angel Reyes Blog
- Update: deep discussion of DPI – Washington, D.C. attorney Brendon Tavelli of Proskauer Rose in the firm’s Privacy Law Blog
- Be sure to perfect your appeal of major discipline within the alloted twenty (20) day time period – New Jersey lawyer Frank Crivelli of Arpaia & Crivelli in his New Jersey Public Safety Officers Law Blog
- Greatest American Lawyer’s rejoinder to The Well Drafted Retainer – Washington, D.C. attorney Carolyn Elefant at her blog, My Shingle
- Nursing home workers protest over safety concerns – Illinois lawyer Jonathan Rosenfeld of Strellis & Field in the firm’s Chicago Nursing Home Lawyer Blog
- Extreme Makeover: Foreclosure Edition – New York real estate broker Douglas Heddings in is blog, True Gotham
- California’s DLSE will immediately follow Brinker decision – The blogging lawyers & attorneys at Carlton DiSante & Freudenberger in the firm’s California Labor & Employment Law Blog
- NLRB issues new guidelines on employee political activity – Portland attorney Dennis Westlind of Stoel Rives in the firm’s World of Work Blog
- The origin of the Federal Tort Claims Act – Texas lawyer Christopher McKinney in his San Antonio Injury Law Blog
Also worth noting: New York attorney Peter Mahler of Farrell Fritz, who runs the New York Business Divorce Blog, was featured by the Wall Street Journal yesterday in their “Breaking Law Stories From Around the Web” section.
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