Best in Law Blogs : The LexBlog Network : March 15, 2011
March 15, 2011
These Twitter/social media lawsuits keep getting more and more interesting. News comes today from DuetsBlog that the AP and one of its reporters is being sued because he tweeted saying that an NBA referee promised and then delivered a make-up call for the Minnesota Timberwolves. Interesting stuff. Total posts on The LexBlog Network today: an even 130.
- Use of DSM in the Law: the Doctors Need to Recognize this Reality in DSM-V – Criminal law attorney Terry Lenamon blog on his blog, Terry Lenamon on the Death Penalty
- HealthNet breach affects 1.9 million individuals – Washington DC lawyers Steve Fox and Vadim Schick of Post & Schell on the firm’s Health IT Law Blog
- New ED CA Decision is a Feast of First-Party and Third-Party Insurance Coverage and Bad Faith Principles – Los Angeles attorney Eric Schindler of McKennon Schindler on the firm’s California Insurance Litigation Blog
- Associated Press Sued in Minnesota Over Krawczynski Twitter Tweet – Minneapolis lawyer Steve Baird of Winthrop & Weinstine on the firm’s Duets Blog
- How Satisfied Are Your Clients? Ask Them – Legal marketing expert Tom Kane, principal owner of Kane Consulting, Inc., on the Legal Marketing Blog
- The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), D&O Insurance and the People’s Republic of China – Oh, My! – New York attorney Joseph Monteleone of Tressler on the firm’s blog, The D&O E&O Monitor
- Sher v. Raytheon Co. – The Necessity of Picking a Winner – Virginia lawyer Andrew Trask of McGuireWoods on the firm’s blog, Class Action Countermeasures
- This is a Collect Call from The Department of Justice – Miami attorney Greg Bates of Squire Sanders on The Anticorruption Blog
- Medical Malpractice Filings in Pennsylvania Are Dwindling, Taking Civil Justice And Patient Safety With Them – Philadelphia lawyer Max Kennerly of The Beasley Firm on his blog, Litigation & Trial
- Florida, Michigan, and Montana Follow National Trend and Consider Banning the Use of Applicant Credit History Background Checks in Hiring Decisions – Orlando attorney Lillian Moon of Jackson Lewis on the firm’s Workplace Privacy, Data Management & Security Report
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