Law Firm Bulletin - Small Law Firm News


US appeals court: Lawsuit by detained Canadian was properly dismissed
Monday, 02 November 2009 17:45   
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Law Firm Bulletin - Small Law Firm News
NEW YORK — A federal appeals court says a Canadian engineer cannot sue the United States after being mistaken for a terrorist when he was changing planes in America a year after the 2001 terrorist attacks.

The full 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled Monday regarding Maher Arar. The Syrian-born Ottawa man was detained as he tried to switch planes in New York in 2002.

The Center for constitutional Rights, which represented the Ottawa resident, said its lawyers had not seen the ruling and could not immediately comment.

Arar was detained in New York in September 2002 and shipped abroad by U.S. authorities. He wound up in a Damascus cell where he was beaten into giving false confessions about terrorist links.

Three years ago, a Canadian inquiry headed by Justice Dennis O'Connor found the RCMP passed misleading, inaccurate and unfair information to the Americans that likely led to Arar's arrest and deportation to face torture at the hands of Syrian military intelligence.
 
DUI Lawyer Los Angeles
Monday, 19 October 2009 16:44   
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Law Firm Bulletin - Small Law Firm News

Los Angeles DUI Lawyer

Michael Bialys, a Los Angeles DUI lawyer, is the former managing partner of a large criminal defense firm. In his time in that role, he saw many mismanaged DUI cases and realized his true calling was to go into DUI defense. Mr. Bialys’s philosophy is that everyone should be able to get a comprehensive and aggressive defense, and with that ideal in mind he opened up his own DUI defense law firm.

Mr. Bialys prides himself on offering client oriented services, focusing on one-on-one personal relationships with his clients. He has a full understanding of the long term effects of criminal records on areas of life such as employment opportunities and knows how important it is to get records expunged. If you have been in a related accident and wish to be fully and comprehensively defended by a premier Los Angeles DUI lawyer, call Michael Bialys today at 1-888-DUI-1-GUY.

 
Plaintiffs Firm Disqualified After Hiring Former Counsel
Monday, 24 August 2009 23:00   
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Law Firm Bulletin - Small Law Firm News

Codefendants who cooperate with one another to share costs and protect common interests do not waive the attorney work-product privilege, an appellate court ruled Wednesday. The decision resulted in the disqualification of a plaintiffs firm that hired a lawyer who previously represented one of 17 defendants in a toxic tort case.

The unanimous opinion, authored by 2nd District Court of Appeal Justice Patti Kitching, clarifies key principles of client confidentiality in California and was hailed by one legal ethics expert.

"This is an excellent result because it protects the confidentiality and duty of loyalty owed to the original client," said Richard Zitrin, a lawyer who teaches ethics at Hastings College of the Law.

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Attorney to Plead Not Guilty to Grand Larceny Charges
Wednesday, 19 August 2009 22:13   
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Law Firm Bulletin - Small Law Firm News

The investigation into a $50 million mortgage fraud scam involving three lawyers, a Manhattan dominatrix club and dozens of Long Island properties is expected to grow larger today with additional charges and additional defendants, a spokesman for Suffolk County District Attorney Thomas J. Spota said.

The operation allegedly recruited straw buyers at the dominatrix club Arena Studio to obtain fraudulent home mortgages.

In an interview, Guldi, a Westhampton Beach, N.Y., solo practitioner, said he would plead not guilty to grand larceny charges at his arraignment today, adding that he plans to continue his run to regain his lawmaker slot despite the ongoing criminal case, which he claims is politically motivated. Guldi is set to be arraigned before County Court Judge James F.X. Doyle in Riverhead, Suffolk County.

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Law Firm Done With Paper
Wednesday, 19 August 2009 15:27   
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Law Firm Bulletin - Small Law Firm News

Linarducci & Butler is a busy small law firm, helping clients navigate through the Social Security disability benefit process. Our firm typically has 600 to 800 client cases open at any given time, and client folders for each claim have a minimum of 250 pages of paper -- including medical records and correspondence. It was not unusual in the past for our client files to grow to over 1,000 pages.

Over time, the document volumes from open and closed cases have placed a strain on our firm’s on-site filing system with the office reaching the point where we needed more space to store files. These document volumes also led to the costs associated with document storage becoming our firm’s largest monthly office expense.

But we had more than a document storage problem -- our firm also had a document access issue. Client folders contain information our attorneys and legal assistants need to access quickly in response to telephone inquiries from clients and the Social Security Administration. Too often, people would go to the file room and the folder they were looking for was not there. And this would trigger a time-consuming search around the office to locate the missing information.

As one possible solution for reducing the amount paper in the office, the firm looked into document scanning outsourcing for some files but found those services to be costly. Plus, we did not want to have client documents unavailable while out of the office for scanning in case the documents were needed to address an inquiry.

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