Legal News – LexBlogosphere: 4/15/09
April 15, 2009
It’s rare that a YouTube video leads straight to an arrest warrant, but in the case pointed out by Doug Powell at BarfBlog, it makes sense. Other stories from today include Ben Stevens reflecting on ABA TechShow and Obama not even mentioning the Employee Free Choice Act during a major speech on the economy.
- High Court Ponders Reach of Voting Rights Act – The blogging constitutionalists at the American Constitution Society in their ACS Blog
- Domino’s YouTube pizza ‘prank:’ arrest warrants issued – Food safety expert Doug Powell of the International Food Safety Network on their BarfBlog
- When is circumstantial evidence sufficient to create a question of fact as to proximate cause? – Chicago lawyer Doug Allen of Foran Glennon Palandech & Ponzi on the firm’s Illinois Construction Law Blog
- Obama’s Economic Recovery Sermon: Silent on EFCA – The blogging lawyers and attorneys at McKenna Long & Aldridge on the firm’s EFCA Report
- Court of Civil Appeals Dismisses Appeal as Untimely Where Trial Court Failed to Enter Order into SJIS – Birmingham attorney Nikaa Jordan of Lightfoot, Franklin & White on the firm’s Alabama Appellate Watch
- U.S. Eighth Circuit considers mutual fund adviser’s fiduciary duties with respect to fees – The blogging lawyers and attorneys of Stikeman Elliot on their blog, Canadian Securities Law Online
- Sounding the Alarm Bells: Three Reasons Why Most Employers Should Get Their Act Together on the COBRA Subsidy Provisions – Hartford lawyer Daniel Schwartz of Pullman & Comley in his Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- New Medicare Program Aims To Cut Down On Re-Admissions To Hospitals – Chicago attorney Jonathan Rosenfeld of Strellis & Field’s on his Nursing Homes Abuse Blog
- It’s Not All Bad News in Battle Against Mandatory Arbitration – Ohio and Arizona lawyer Ellen Simon on her blog, Employee Rights Post
- The Mac Lawyer at ABA TechShow 2009 – Spartanburg, South Carolina attorney Ben Stevens on his blog, The Mac Lawyer
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