Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 4/10/09
April 10, 2009
There’s nothing like capping off an extremely long week by having your baseball team’s newly acquired closer blow the game in the 9th. Yea, go Cubs. In more relevant news, today’s batch of posts include commentary on big corporations hiring smaller law firms and whether or not to ‘go niche’ with your law firm marketing. Enjoy the weekend everyone.
- Merchants Beware: Protect Your Customers and Company from Credit Card “Skimming” – Washgintong, DC lawyer John McGuinness of Kelley Drye & Warren on the firm’s Consumer Finance Law Blog
- European Regulators Eye Private Equity – New York attorney Geoffrey Parnass at his blog, the Private Equity Law Review
- Be Careful What the EPA Administrator Wishes For: Is a Legislative Fix to Rapanos on the Horizon? – Boston lawyer Seth Jaffe of Foley Hoag on the firm’s blog, Law & The Environment
- Salmonella shouldn’t be a sign of spring – Scott Weese at the University of Guelph’s Centre for Public Health and Zoonoses in their Worms & Germs Blog
- Big Corporations Hiring Smaller Law Firms – Legal marketing expert Larry Bodine at his Law Marketing Blog
- Striking Of Expert For Failure To Timely Disclose In Accordance With Scheduling Order Not A “Sanction” – Birmingham attorney Ivan B. Cooper of Lightfoot Franklin White in the firm’s Alabama Appellate Watch Blog
- To Niche or Not to Niche: An Essential Question in Law Firm Marketing – Small business coach Stephen Fairley of The Rainmaker Institute in The Rainmaker Blog
- New Law Would Require ISPs to Retain User Logs and Subscriber Records for Two Years – Boston lawyer Stacey Anderson of Foley Hoag on the firm’s blog, Security, Privacy & The Law
- Helio Castroneves Closing Arguments – Georgia attorney Tom Withers of Gillen, Withers & Lake in his Federal Criminal Defense Blog
- RAT Board to monitor spending of stimulus dollars for fraud, waste and abuse – Los Angeles lawyer Mary Carter Andrues of Howrey on the firm’s Global Climate Law Blog
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