Top 10 in Law Blogs: Right to Match, Keystone XL Eminent Domain, Student Loan Debt
June 4, 2013
Since the Supreme Court’s ruling came down yesterday that police can take a DNA sample at the time of arrest, without a warrant, I’ve been waiting for one of our LexBlog Network authors to rip in it. And Rob McKinney is the first to do so, as he calls it “the first step toward a police state.” On LXBN TV, Fasken Martineau’s Kareen Zimmer joins me to explain the findings of their survey on social media use in mergers and acquisitions. Total posts on the LexBlog Network today: 165.
- A Right to Match Can Provide Multiple Benefits – Boston lawyer Shep Davidson of Burns & Levinson on the firm’s blog, The In-House Advisor
- Cyber Breach Disclosures and the Impact on Companies’ Share Prices – Ohio attorney Kevin LaCroix of RT ProExec in his blog, The D & O Diary
- Hart v. EA: Attempting to Balance Expression, Commerce and Sports – Philadelphia lawyer Sekou Campbell of Fox Rothschild on the firm’s blog, Sports Law Scoreboard
- FDA Letter to Mobile App Developer Signals Regulatory Scheme – Erin M. Bosman, Aramide O. Fields and Julie Y. Park of Morrison Foerster on the firm’s blog, SociallyAware
- Natural Gas: Should It [All] Stay or Should It Go? – New Orleans attorney Justin Lemaire of Stone Pigman Walther Wittmann on the firm’s blog, Environmental & Energy Law Brief
- The First Step Toward A Police State – Nashville lawyer Rob McKinney on his Nashville Criminal Law Report
- The High Price of Higher Education and Student Loan Debt – LA attorney Christine Wilton on her blog, Los Angeles Bankruptcy Law Monitor
- DOJ Criminal Division Chief Addresses “Too Big to Jail” Criticism – Richmond, VA lawyer Michelle Baudinet of McGuireWoods on the firm’s blog, Subject to Inquiry
- Keystone XL Can Take Land Before Appeals are Exhausted – Dallas lawyer Charles Sartain of Looper Reed & McGraw on Energy And The Law
- Canadian and EU regulators negotiating to allow Canadian fund managers to continue to market in the EU – The blogging lawyers and attorneys at Stikeman Elliott on their blog, Canadian Structured Finance Law
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