Best in Law Blogs : The LexBlog Network : March 23, 2012
March 23, 2012
I promise I’m not trying to beat you over the head with Sackett v. EPA, but we do have another good post on the Supreme Court case in today’s roundup; and, we did have Foley Hoag’s Robert Sanoff come on LXBN TV to discuss it, for those of you who would a quick and easy briefing. Total posts on the LexBlog Network today: 171.
- Requesting Social Media Passwords From Potential Hires is Coercive – Maria Matasar-Padilla of Charles Griffin Intelligence on their blog, The Ethical Investigator
- Change or Die? A General Counsel Panel – Part II – Legal marketing expert Lindsay Griffiths of International Lawyers Network on Zen & The Art of Legal Networking
- U.S. Supreme Court Unanimously Tells EPA its Orders Can be Reviewed – Cleveland lawyer Joe Koncelik of Frantz Ward in his Ohio Environmental Law Blog
- The Affordable Care Act at Two – Caitlin Padula of The Shriver Center on their blog, The Shriver Brief
- Denver Club Owner Fails to Bounce His Partner’s Trade Secrets Lawsuit for Alleged MySpace Friends Theft – Chicago lawyer Scott Schaefers of Seyfarth Shaw on the firm’s blog, Trading Secrets
- The Vikings Were Robbed or Employment Sanctions in the NFL – Arden Hills, Minnesota lawyer Marylee Abrams of Abrams & Schmidt on the firm’s Minnesota Labor & Employment Law Blog
- Who Owns Publicly Filed Documents? – Dallas lawyer Peter Vogel on his InternetInformation Technology & e-Discovery Blog.
- Criminal Defendants Have Right To Competent Plea Bargaining Says Supreme Court – Oregon, Illinois lawyer Don Delbert on his blog, the Illinois Criminal Defender Voice
- My Myriad Nightmare – Washington, DC lawyer Courtenay Brinckerhoff of Foley & Lardner on the firm’s blog, PharmaPatents
- If your job makes you want to kill yourself, you may (or may not) be an ADA “direct threat” – Winston-Salem attorney Robin Shea of Constangy on the firm’s blog, Employment & Labor Insider
For more of the best, check out LXBN, a complete review of the top insight and commentary across the LexBlog Network.
Posted in: