Top 10 in Law Blogs: FMLA, Secret Service BYOD, Legal Industry Embezzlement
November 14, 2014
Before we jump into today’s Top 10 (and head out into the weekend), a couple LXBN notes: Brian Smith joined me today on LXBN TV to discuss what the midterms meant for immigration reform, and Zosha writes on the government reminding people to mind HIPAA and patient privacy—even in abnormal situations like an Ebola outbreak. Total posts on the LexBlog Network today: 194.
- Cross-Border Data Transfers: Cutting Through the Complexity – Eric Packel and Patrick Haggerty of BakerHostetler on the firm’s Data Privacy Monitor
- Buy-Sell Agreements Between Family Members May Create Unintended Transfer Tax Liability for the Seller – Bellevue lawyer G. Matthew Loftin of Davis Wright Tremaine on the firm’s Family Business Resource Center
- FMLA = “Fraudulent Medical Leave Act”?!! – Baltimore lawyer Fiona Ong of Shawe Rosenthal on the firm’s blog, The Labor & Employment Report
- Does the Secret Service Need a BYOD Policy? Addressing Personal Device Usage in the Workplace – Minneapolis lawyer V. John Ella of Jackson Lewis on the firm’s Non-Compete & Trade Secrets Report
- Divorce Assets in Bankruptcy? Oh Yes! – Corporate investigator Philip Segal of Charles Griffin Intelligence on their blog, The Divorce Asset Hunter
- Remedies for Unfair Labor Practices: The NLRB’s Equivalent of a “Red Card” – Columbus lawyer Nelson Cary of Vorys on the firm’s blog, Vorys on Labor
- Embezzlement by Legal Industry Workers Not Just For Law Firms – Jackson, MS attorney Philip Thomas on his Mississippi Legal Malpractice Blog
- Class Actions and Consumer Product Settlements: The Proof is in (the Receipt For) the Pudding – Mary Paterson and Lindsay Rauccio of Osler on the firm’s blog, Class Action Defence
- Overcoming the Distrust Factor – Kenneth Grady of Seyfarth Shaw for the firm’s blog, SeytLines
- Planning your workplace holiday party? Read this first! – 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.
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