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August 13, 2007 |

Internet Sources: Authentication & Admissibility

With such daily reliance on Web sites, the substance of which may not be verifiable, it is not surprising that issues of evidentiary authentication and admissibility of Internet sources under the Federal Rules of Evidence are coming under judicial review. The reliability of information contained on a large number of sites and the ability of sites, whether completely accurate or not, to shape certain perceptions have given rise to questions about dependability in a legal context.
9 minute read
November 24, 2008 |

Aim Before Firing: Apply Principled Compassion to Termination Decisions

We think we shape life. That's wrong. Life shapes us. All readers know how they first learned this. Here's my story, one that will help corporate counsel when it comes to deciding whether to impose the equivalent of capital punishment in employment: termination.
5 minute read
July 19, 1999 |

Thinking Out of The Jury Box

It's "twelve angry men" with a twist: A lawyer on a murder trial jury, convinced that the defendant is innocent, helps deadlock the panel and secure a mistrial. But when the case is retried, that same attorney winds up on the defense team and helps win an acquittal. That essentially is what happened this spring in New Orleans.
10 minute read
May 04, 1999 |

Sneak Attack

A California congressman slipped an anti-Delaware provision into a federal bankruptcy bill that would threaten Delaware's thriving bankruptcy practice by sharply paring away the corporate reorganizations that could be filed in the state. Delaware's influential congressional delegation is already riding to the rescue and expected to carry the day before the bill becomes law. The provision arose last month during the House Judiciary Committee's bill-drafting session on revising the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
5 minute read
December 28, 2005 |

Immigration Law

Stanley Mailman, of counsel to Satterlee Stephens Burke & Burke, and Stephen Yale-Loehr, of counsel at True, Walsh & Miller, write that the House of Representatives has fired the first major salvo in the legislative battle to reform our nation's immigration laws. On Dec. 16, 2005 the House passed H.R. 4437, a tough immigration enforcement bill, by a vote of 239-182. Among other things the 257-page bill would criminalize the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants currently living in the United States.
9 minute read
August 15, 2007 |

Computer Law

An increasing number of people are trading traditional research methods for their computers and the Internet, where the World Wide Web can readily provide them with access to Web sites through which they can study almost any topic imaginable. With such daily reliance on Web sites, the substance of which may not be verifiable, it's not surprising that issues of evidentiary authentication and admissibility of Internet sources under the Federal Rules of Evidence are coming under judicial review.
9 minute read
June 04, 2008 |

Lessons From a Hotel Lobby: Ask Wise Questions Before Terminating Employees

In 1975, Michael Maslanka dropped out of college and worked as a hotel desk clerk. Maslanka is an employment lawyer now, but he's never forgotten the lessons he's learned from his hotel boss. Here's one of the lessons that will help corporate counsel when it comes to deciding whether to impose the equivalent of capital punishment in employment: termination. It starts with what Maslanka calls "principled compassion" and the questions to ask to find if termination is warranted.
5 minute read
August 13, 2007 |

Computer Law

Richard Raysman and Peter Brown, partners at Thelen Reid Brown Raysman & Steiner, write that as the Internet has gained greater acceptance and become more relied upon in society at large, it is no surprise that Fed. R. Evid. 901 is finding its way into federal courtrooms, as it provides attorneys with new territory in which to invoke the rule on authentication.
9 minute read
June 02, 2008 |

Lessons From a Hotel Lobby: Ask Wise Questions Before Terminating Employees

We think we shape life. That's wrong. Life shapes us, says Michael Maslanka. All readers know how they first learned this. Here's his story, one that will help corporate counsel when it comes to deciding whether to impose the equivalent of capital punishment in employment: termination.
5 minute read
December 21, 2004 |

Foskey Tapped to Lead Nassau Family Court

6 minute read

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