Best in Law Blogs : LexBlog Network : May 4, 2010
May 4, 2010
The total number of posts dropped down slightly to 109 but the quality of content may have increased. As I’ve said in the past, I’m always glad when attorneys on the LexBlog Network relate major current events to their subject matters. So, today’s roundup is loaded with quality posts on the legal side of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.
- Ponzi and Check Kiting Schemes by Georgia Mortgage Broker Cost Victims $23 Million – Georgia lawyer Anthony Lake of Gillen, Withers & Lake in the firm’s Federal Criminal Defense Blog
- Don’t Let Your Wellness Program Make Your Company “Sick” – New York attorney Keith McMurdy of Fox Rothschild on their Employee Benefits Legal Blog
- Tribes Voice Sovereignty Concerns Regarding Arizona Immigration Law – Seattle lawyer Greg Guedel of Foster Pepper on the firm’s Native American Legal Update
- Senators Hope to Raise Oil Pollution Act Liability Cap to $10 Billion for Gulf Oil Spill Victims – Mississippi personal injury attorney Philip Thomas on his MS Litigation Review & Commentary
- Gulf Oil Spill: The Impact of Damage Caps Will Be Felt By Tens of Thousands – Tennessee lawyer John Day of Day & Blair at his blog, Day on Torts
- New Incentives to Retire Early – Government will offset Employers Paying Continued Health Care Costs – New Jersey attorney Deirdre Wheatley-Liss of Fein, Such, Kahn & Shepard on her New Jersey Estate Planning & Elder Law Blog
- The Many Ways To Sue BP, Halliburton, Transocean and Cameron For Polluting The Gulf Coast With Oil – Philadelphia lawyer Maxwell Kennerly of The Beasley Firm at his blog, Litigation & Trial
- Turning the Keys over to Johnny: Letting your Child Drive – Florida attorney Phil Chanfrau on his Palm Coast Injury Law Blog
- Same Sex Divorce- Available in New York, Questionable Elsewhere – New York lawyer Daniel Clement at his blog, the New York Divorce Report
- FM Analog Translator Can Rebroadcast FM Digital Multicast Programming – Opportunities for New Signals in Local Markets – Washington, D.C. attorney David Oxenford of Davis Wright Tremaine in the firm’s Broadcast Law Blog
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