At Malbrough & Lirette in Houma, La., a secretary browses MySpace and Facebook Web sites each day.
She’s not checking the online social networking sites for personal reasons; she is performing one of her job duties.
Lawyers in civil and criminal cases are increasingly finding that social networking sites can contain treasure chests of information for their cases. Armed with printouts from sites such as Facebook and MySpace, attorneys have used pictures, comments and connections from these sites as powerful evidence in the courtroom.
October 17, 2007 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
At Malbrough & Lirette in Houma, La., a secretary browses MySpace and Facebook Web sites each day.
She’s not checking the online social networking sites for personal reasons; she is performing one of her job duties.
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