Best in Law Blogs : LexBlog Network : December 7, 2009
December 7, 2009
Total posts on the LexBlog Network today? 130. Not too bad. Of those 130, be sure to check out the following 10, which seem to cover just about everything. We have two interesting posts from the realm of food safety, with Shawn Stevens commenting on the possibility of a beef hamburger without the cow and Bill Marler has insight on Cargill’s continued problems with E.coli and Salmonella.
- Cargill Continues to Struggle with E. coli and Salmonella – Seattle lawyer Bill Marler of Marler Clark on the firm’s Food Poison Journal
- Word to the Wise: Enforce Your Patents Before They’re Rejected – Intellectual property attorney Joshua Heslinga on Troutman Sanders’ Virginia IP Law
- Senate Defeats Effort To Limit Access to the Courthouse by Medical Malpractice Victims – Tennessee lawyer John Day of Day & Blair at his blog, Day on Torts
- Director Disabled By Heart Disease Takes Prudential To Illinois Court After Denial Of Long-Term Disability Benefits – Florida attorney Gregory Dell of Dell & Schaefer on the firm’s Disability Benefit Claims Law Blog
- Texas Unemployment Benefits Can be a Mystery – Texas lawyer Tom Crane on his San Antonio Employment Law Blog
- Self-Regulation Once Again Called into Question by FTC as It Revisits Violence in Music, Movies, and Electronic Games Advertised to Children – Washington, DC attorney John Feldman of Reed Smith on the firm’s blog, AdLaw By Request
- Virginia’s Economic Loss Rule: Products Liability, Part 1 – Arlington lawyer Timothy Hughes of Bean, Kinney & Korman on the firm’s blog, Virginia Real Estate, Land Use & Construction Law
- Fourth Circuit Clarifies Twiqbal; Plaintiffs Despair – Roanoke appellate attorney Jay O’Keeffe of Gentry Locke Rakes & Moore on his blog, De Novo
- Reverse Domain Name Hijacking: An Emerging Negligence Standard? – Minneapolis lawyer Steve Baird of Winthrop & Weinstine on the firm’s Duets Blog
- What’s A Burger Without A Cow? – Milwaukee attorney Shawn Stevens of Gass Weber Mulins on the firm’s blog, Defending Food Safety
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