March 07, 2018 | The Legal Intelligencer
In Focus: A Practical Primer on Interviewing WitnessesPart of your practice—whether it focuses on civil or criminal litigation, internal investigations or even business transactions—will involve interviewing witnesses who will inform your matters. Here are a few tips, gleaned from my experience in speaking and listening to witnesses in offices, roadside diners and detention facilities, for conducting effective interviews.
By Douglas E. Roberts
5 minute read
February 07, 2018 | The Legal Intelligencer
Embrace Criticism in Order to Learn to Become a Better LawyerBefore becoming a lawyer, I earned a graduate degree from a fiction writing workshop. I say “earned” not because I emerged with a novel, or even a great story, but because the program was difficult—far more challenging, at least form a psychological standpoint, than law school was.
By Douglas E. Roberts
4 minute read
May 31, 2016 | The Legal Intelligencer
A Primer on Federal and Pa. Electronic Surveillance LawRecently, news broke that not one but two former high-ranking Pennsylvania state officials—former Treasurer Rob McCord and John Estey, the one-time top aide to Gov. Ed Rendell—secretly recorded conversations, potentially thousands of them, with political and business leaders at the behest of federal law enforcement. These revelations bring focus on the regulations concerning electronic surveillance and wiretapping: Under what circumstances do they permit the interception of seemingly private conversations? Can law enforcement officers or cooperators record seemingly private conversations without permission? How about private citizens? And do persons who learn their communications have been intercepted without their permission have any recourse? What follows is a primer on this complex and highly technical area of the law.
By Kevin E. Raphael and Douglas E. Roberts
13 minute read