Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 8/13/08
By Rob La Gatta
August 13, 2008
Though a lot of people may take off in August, a quick glance at the state of the LexBlogosphere today would seem to disagree: the content continues to flow in abundance, which leads us to believe that even if our clients are out of town, they’ve brought their computers with them.
- Patent lawsuit filings down in July 2008 – Washington, D.C. attorney Brian Wm. Higgins of Blank Rome in his Maryland Intellectual Property Law Blog
- Plaintiffs stand to gain more from settling? New study suggests so – Los Angeles lawyer Anthony Zaller of Van Vleck Turner & Zaller in the firm’s California Workforce Resource Blog
- Blattmachr on reducing estate and trust litigation – Lancaster attorney Patti Spencer in her Pennsylvania Fiduciary Litigation Blog
- Learning from a sex discrimination suit – part II – New York lawyer Angelo Tartaro of Rogers & Tartaro in the firm’s Business Litigation Blog
- Un-parking those death care trusts: diversification – Kansas attorney Bill Statler of Statler Legal Services in his Death Care Compliance Law Blog
- Subprime litigation: something old, something new? – Ohio lawyer Kevin LaCroix of OakBridge Insurance Services at his blog, The D & O Diary
- New York, other states, move forward with metering programs – San Francisco journalist Dennis Pfaff at Thelen’s Climate Law Update
- Production of ESI in paper format does not comply with rule 34 option to produce ESI in reasonably usable form; court orders re-production of certain ESI in native format – The blogging lawyers & attorneys at K & L Gates in the firm’s Electronic Discovery Law Blog
- A res ipsa case to remember – Tennessee attorney John Day of Day & Blair at his blog, Day on Torts
- Seeking Appellate Advocate authors – Austin lawyer D. Todd Smith in his Texas Appellate Law Blog
Also worth noting: Hartford attorney Daniel Schwartz of Pullman & Comley, author of the Connecticut Employment Law Blog, is the latest LexBlog client to have his work featured at the Wall Street Journal‘s website: yesterday, Dan’s post on the Justice Department hiring scandal was featured at the publication’s Stories From Around The Web section.
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