Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter for Monday, August 13, 2012:
- 19 incredible Apple secrets revealed in court via Fortune Magazine
- Australia judge makes first ruling defining conception
- Reminder: Resource: WiseLii – a Mobile Legal Research Tool via Judicial Philosophy
- Paul Ryan on Crime Issues
- Judgment time for ‘America’s Toughest Sheriff’ Joe Arpaio
- Wired reporter hack reveals perils of ‘the cloud’
- How to lose followers on Twitter – a helpful guide for lawyers and legal journalists | The Lawyer
- $31 parking ticket grows to $70,000 bill after broken-meter lawsuit tossed
- Scalia Sets Out the Canons of Originalism
- Google to bump down pirate sites in search results
- ACLU asks judge to reject Michigan law denying health insurance to same-sex partners
- Congrats Drew Hasselback (
@vonhasselbach): CBA recognizes Legal Post editor for journalism excellence - Google fined a record $22.5M US over privacy violations
- How Technology is Transforming the Legal Field
- Free Webcast on Change Management at Law Firms
- B.C. woman keeps exemption from doctor-assisted suicide ban
- Precedent: Toronto Life article argues for U.S.-style licensing program instead of articling
- Employee Constructively Dismissed, but No Damages Awarded Because of Failure to Mitigate
- Survey: Judges Are Less Freaked Out By Facebook, Twitter - Law Blog - WSJ
- Ontario cop gets 20-day sentence for sex with girl, 15 - Sun News Network
- The snail's pace of legal discipline - Globe and Mail
- CSIS accused of breaching lawyer-client privilege - CTV News
- Delaware doctor accused of waterboarding daughter
- Colorado theater shooting suspect ‘mentally ill’: lawyer
- MPs named to help choose new Supreme Court justice - CTV News
- First nation bid to close fish farms may reach Supreme Court of Canada - Vancouver Sun
- Justice Dept. says it won't prosecute Goldman Sachs or its employees in financial fraud probe (AP)
- A Facebook court battle: Is 'liking' something protected free speech? (Justin Jouvenal/Washington Post)
- Rachel Spence, Law Clerk
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