Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter for Wednesday June 11, 2014:
- BC lawyers vote against religious school
- Microsoft Protests Order for Email Stored Abroad- NY Times
- Proposed Canada cyberbullying law to let police ‘remotely hack into computers, mobile devices, or cars'
- Ted Cruz, possible 2016 U.S. presidential contender, keeps promise to give up Canadian citizenship
- Law firms can’t call nonlawyers ‘CEO’ or ‘chief technology officer,’ Texas ethics opinion says
- What Hot and What’s Not in the Legal Profession
- Prostitution law changes have chance of surviving court challenge
- Public Online Dispute Resolution… Could There Really Be Such a Thing?
- Manitoba judge quashes residential school form-filling fees
- B.C. lawyers to debate religious law school
- Walmart, Tesco and Costco questioned over slavery in Thailand’s seafood export sector
- Former Judge In West Virginia Sentenced In Political Corruption Case After Wrongly Imprisoning A Man
- Florida juror is accused of making Facebook trial comments and lying about it; contempt hearing scheduled
- Top Law School Dean Says We Haven’t Reached The ‘Bottom Of The Market’ Yet
- 6 attorneys fired by GM after law firm ignition-switch probe are reportedly identified
- Why did prostitution bill go off the rails?: Mallick
- Privacy watchdog calls on government to split ‘cyberbullying’ bill
- Residential school survivors say feds withholding documents
- Citizenship bill will withstand constitutional challenge, Chris Alexander says
- Canada grants asylum to US woman sentenced to 30 years for having sex with teen
- St. Louis archbishop claims he wasn’t sure it was illegal for priests to have sex with kids
- I am a candidate who signed the Pledge for Action on Climate Change via Nancy LeBlanc
- Rachel Spence, Law Clerk
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