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Features

The Virtual Lawyer Image

The Virtual Lawyer

Samuel Fineman, Esq.

Law and Policy in Cyberspace

Features

Getting Wired Is Part Of Research Image

Getting Wired Is Part Of Research

Damon C. Anastasia

Just a few years ago, attorneys and their staff did a lot of waiting - waiting for papers to be served, or rulings to come in the mail, and for librarians to research and find relevant case information. The time lag created questions and the questions resulted in more client inquiries and multiple trips to the courthouse. Then technology came to the practice of law, and, as most attorneys who are "in the know" now recognize, there are plenty of options beyond PACER in the world of online case research technology. To get off the waiting line, technology-conscious partners should make it a point to stay abreast of the latest trends in the world of online case and docket research.

Features

Going Wireless On The Web: WiFi Is Liberating, But Beware The Security Risks Image

Going Wireless On The Web: WiFi Is Liberating, But Beware The Security Risks

Matt Kelly

By now many lawyers have probably heard about it from friends, seen it at the coffee shop or watched someone doing it at the airport: surfing the Internet on Wireless Fidelity, better known as WiFi.

Where Pundits Gather These Lawyers' Sites Touch On The Law ... And More Image

Where Pundits Gather These Lawyers' Sites Touch On The Law ... And More

Robert J. Ambrogi

When Trent Lott resigned as Senate Republican leader, several political observers attributed his downfall to the criticism leveled at him through a hitherto little-noticed medium: Web logs, or, as they are more commonly called, blogs.

Features

New Punitives Ruling Means New Battles Image

New Punitives Ruling Means New Battles

Marcia Coyle

The Supreme Court's April 7 ruling on punitive damages, greeted with relief and enthusiasm by corporate defendants, opens new battlegrounds in litigation seeking those awards. The ruling significantly expanded the High Court's prior attempts to guide lower courts and lawyers on when punitive damages awards may run afoul of the Constitution. <i>State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Campbell</i>, No. 01-1289.

Investigating Fraudulent Claims, Part 2 (This article is part of an ongoing series) Image

Investigating Fraudulent Claims, Part 2 (This article is part of an ongoing series)

Anthony J. Golowski II

The first article in this series (<i>Insurance Coverage Law Bulletin</i> Volume 2, Number 1, February 2003) provided an overview of upcoming articles, and addressed the issue of fraud at the inception of an insurance claim. This second installment focuses on insurance carriers' analysis of fraudulent claims and the use of forensic experts to defend against claims. It also addresses the issue of fraudulent enhancement of otherwise valid claims.

Features

Can the Innocent Survive Rescission? The Innocent-Insured Exception to the Wrongful-Acts Exclusion Image

Can the Innocent Survive Rescission? The Innocent-Insured Exception to the Wrongful-Acts Exclusion

Donald R. McMinn

Professional liability policies typically exclude coverage for claims arising out of an insured's knowing, wrongful acts, but, in recognition of the fact that a single policy may extend coverage to multiple insureds working together in association, insurance companies sell the policies with language reinstating coverage for innocent insureds, those of the insureds who had no knowledge of the allegedly wrongful acts of their colleagues. Recently, this innocent-insured coverage has received scrutiny.

Case Briefs Image

Case Briefs

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Highlights of the latest insurance cases from around the country.

Practice Tip: Maximizing Jury Questionnaires to Your Client's Advantage Image

Practice Tip: Maximizing Jury Questionnaires to Your Client's Advantage

Julie A. Blum

In the weeks before trial of a product liability case, you will presumably begin to focus more significantly on jury selection, perhaps the most important stage of any jury trial. One way to maximize the <i>voir dire</i> process is to use juror questionnaires &mdash; a series of written questions that are given to the prospective jury panel and answered in writing by each prospective juror prior to voir dire.

Features

Online Image

Online

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Attorneys litigating suits involving everything from vaccines to the safety of the air on jetliners, or those who simply need scientific information about research and policies, can visit <i>www.national-academies.org</i>, the Web site for the National Academies of Science and Engineering, the Institute of Medicine and the National Research Council. Areas covered on the site include: biology, chemistry, engineering, environmental issues, behavioral and social science, education, health and medicine, and business and economics.

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