Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter:
- Carding ‘wrong and illegal,’ says Ontario ombudsman
- MD claims WSIB fired her over medical opinion | The Toronto Star
- NDP would not pursue niqab issue at Supreme Court - CTV News
- Professor Tanina Rostain has her students developing access-to-justice apps
- ‘Happy Birthday’ song is in the public domain, judge rules
- Swiss attorney general opens criminal investigation against FIFA’s Sepp Blatter
- DA: Evidence tampering claim in NHLer case a 'bizarre hoax'
- Opening of the Courts brings together Ontario’s justice community
- Guindon v Canada -SCC on $546,747 penalty against lawyer for tax avoidance opinion: It’s just a fine
- B.C. bestiality case heading before SCC could ‘legalize forms of sexual abuse of animals’ | National Post
- Jonathan Zittrain: Fighting ‘link rot’ in court opinions and legal scholarship
- Scalia says he ‘wouldn’t be surprised’ if SCOTUS overturns the death penalty
- The tyranny of fake birthday songs is over: Menon
- Stephen Harper waging phony jihad on the niqab: Siddiqui
- Evidence bag tampered with in Patrick Kane investigation, lawyer says
- Court lays out alternative for enforcing money judgments
- Ontario tables new patient privacy law
- Face-Coverings and the Canadian Citizenship Oath: The Federal Court of Appeal Decides Ishaq v Canada
- Appeal court upholds rejection of claim over statements on lawyer’s web site
- French regulators reject Google’s attempts to limit the scope of European privacy ruling
- “Outrageous,” “cheap” and “mean” employer ordered to pay terminated employee $100,000 in punitive damages
- Toronto Real Estate Board seeks to prevent judge from hearing competition case | Financial Post
- Student legal aid clinics get funding boost - Canadian Lawyer Magazine
- A Judge’s Place Is on the Bench . . . Not in the Political Arena
- Some law professors blame student quality for continued drop in bar exam scores
- When employees must smoke pot at work: Employers need to confront reality of medical marijuana
- Rachel Spence, Law Clerk
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