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A Court Inflamed and $3.2 Million, Up in Smoke
The case of the near-fatal torching of Lonnie Paige inside a fiery furnace in a church basement has its own intricate layers of hellishness. The horribly injured plaintiff's Conn. lawyer Vincent M. Musto doesn't mention the anguish of winning a $3.2 million jury verdict at trial up through a close Supreme Court test. In a rehearing, the victory turned into defeat. Musto speaks of his client: "The Supreme Court sustained his verdict, he's ecstatic, and now they change their mind. Two severe tragedies."Plant Explosion Spurs Law Firms' Online Efforts
An explosion last month at a Middletown, Conn., construction site has lawyers turning to 21st century outlets such as YouTube and Google to seek out clients. Trantolo & Trantolo is trying something that may be a first in Connecticut legal advertising. Vincent Trantolo hired a publicist to produce a series of YouTube videos aimed specifically at victims of the blast. And another firm, RisCassi & Davis, has a sponsored link that appears when people perform a Google search for "Middletown explosion."Family Law: Child Support And The Demise Of Judicial Discretion
For more than 20 years now, family lawyers and trial judges have relied on the Connecticut Child Support and Arrearage Guidelines to determine appropriate child support amounts.Looking North For Insight Into Foreclosures
In a time when the economy and the housing market in the U.S. lacks stability and confidence, our neighbors to the North continue to thrive. Canada's dollar has continued to see its strongest performance in over a decade. From a record low of 62 cents on the U.S. dollar in January 2002, the currencies are now nearly equal in value.Conn. Justices Knock Snow-Tubing Waiver Off Course
The snowy slopes of a Connecticut ski resort emerged as a battlefield for significant principles of contract and tort law last week. The state Supreme Court, in a razor-thin victory for an injured snow tuber, left no room for recreational facilities to maneuver their way around future liability for their own negligence. The decision brings snow tubing in line with skiing and snowboarding: Participants assume the risk of injury inherent in the sport, but not the risk of operator negligence.Corporate Transparency Act Resource Kit
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Revenue, Profit, Cash: Managing Law Firms for Success
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Law Firm Operational Considerations for the Corporate Transparency Act
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The Ultimate Guide to Remote Legal Work
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