Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter for Friday, October 25, 2013:
- In the Skakel Case, 2 Women on 2 Sides in an Endless Vigil
- F. Lee Bailey and Kenneth Fishman on Excellence in Cross-Examination
- Legal paper maps out conservative plan to abolish pornography
- Articling — Where Do You "Fit In"?
- Third Circuit rules warrant needed to attach GPS tracker to vehicle
- Trial for Texas lawyer accused of conspiring to launder up to $600M for Mexican drug cartel
- California judge charged with battery over dog-waste dispute near his home
- San Diego lawyer agrees to disbarment for abdicating law firm to nonlawyers
- Guantanamo inmates pursuing claims under global torture treaty
- FTC orders ‘rent-to-own’ computer store to stop spying on ‘intimate activities’ of customers
- Harsh new Texas voter ID law almost blocks woman judge from voting
- Texas judge forced to resign after caught texting instructions to assistant DA during trial
- Court interprets employment contract to prevent commercial absurdity
- Police may have watched Gawker ‘crack video’ meeting
- Loblaw to pay compensation to victims of Bangladesh factory collapse
- Justice of the peace should be fired for lying to police, review panel rules
- Quebec court rejects Conservative government Senate reform plan
- UPL suit against LegalZoom must go to arbitration, Arkansas Supreme Court says
- LSUC budget moderates .8% fee increases for lawyers — no increase for paralegals
- New Jersey judge denies state's motion to halt same-sex marriages
- Canada failing to meet 2020 emissions targets
- Biglaw Memo From Top Firm Advises That Women ‘Don’t Giggle,’ Don’t ‘Show Cleavage’
- LawPro: Seeking information for law enforcement on bad cheque frauds allegedly by Joe Mathewson
- New Snowden leak: NSA monitored calls of 35 world leaders
- LSUC plans to reinstate articling evaluations
- Ex-client in $2.2M law firm chair-collapse case wins reinstatement of ‘substantial’ verdict
- Twitter Seeks $1.4 Billion in Biggest Web IPO Since Facebook
- Unpaid intern’s Canada Labour Code claim against Bell for wages rejected
- When Google changed its search algorithm, this lawyer lost referrals
- Hazel McCallion awarded $170,000 in costs in dismissed conflict case
- Rachel Spence, Law Clerk
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