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Prisoners' Right to Internet Materials Contested
The Internet age -- and all its legal complications -- has finally come to prisons. Cases about inmates' rights in the digital world have focused on whether prisoners should be allowed to receive correspondence originating from the Internet. Opponents have brought up an array of safety and security concerns, such as the possibility that the materials could include contraband, but prisoners' advocates argue that receiving the material in the mail is a free speech right protected by the First Amendment.Daily Decision Service Alert: Vol. 22, No. 124 - June 27, 2013
Daily decision alert.When friends ask about the law
Most of you reading this are already making monthly payments on your law school loans. But in these economic times, many people are going back to school for more education, and some will undoubtedly ask you if law school is a good idea. Here are some ways they should think about this question-starting with this common view on law school: 'You can do anything with a J.View more book results for the query "*"
Worker's climb to power shows how strong demand is for young workers
A wave of demographic change is likely to benefit younger workers. A generational replacement cycle is taking hold as companies such as GE, Norfolk Southern Corp., Boeing, American Electric Power Co. and Dominion Resources all try to hire skilled younger staff to prepare for a wave of retiring workers.Cops Can't Record Jailed Juvenile, Georgia Court Rules
A Georgia judge ruled a police department cannot record the conversations of an incarcerated juvenile. Murder suspect Heath Meehan allegedly made incriminating statements in phone calls from jail. Meehan's attorney argued that taping the conversations violated his client's privacy rights. This is the first time a taping was challenged in the state because it involved a juvenile pre-trial detainee.Fight Over Legal Bill Auditing Comes to Quiet End
In a quiet end to a bitter fight, some of the country's biggest insurance carriers have stopped sending their lawyers' bills out to be picked over and whittled down by third-party auditors. "They're finding that the use of outside auditors was disastrous to their relationship with outside counsel," says Michael F. Aylward, of Boston's Morrison Mahoney & Miller.Trending Stories
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