Articles Posted in Uncategorized

Published on:

By

Today is a Variation on The Flux sort of day. On the train this morning, a woman turned to me and asked, “are you the Oregon Legal Research blogger?” Now the odds of this happening must be close to zero. I live in one county of more than half a million people and commute 1.5 hours to another county of half-a million. I don’t even take the same route everyday. And I’m not sure how much I really look like my picture, but apparently more than I imagined.

Then, a little later in the morning, I answered the phone and a local detective was on the line with a question. I couldn’t answer his question, but I had one for him. Was he the detective who was written up in the paper a couple of weeks ago? When I saw the story I thought he’d be perfect for our cable-access program on juvenile law, but was too shy (!) or too whatever to phone to ask if he was free that night (we had to scramble for a last-minute speaker after the scheduled one had to cancel). But I tucked his name away in the recesses of my memory. And here he was on the phone. Who says you sometimes can’t just sit back and wait for someone to phone you – at least on a Flux Day. (He also has the most wonderful tattoos too – maybe it’s coming from a long line of artists, but tattoos are art to me and can be quite beautiful. I know, I know, but life is short.) And then a lawyer came it to ask a question I would not have been able to answer but for the fact that our last minute guest on the cable-access legal program last week talked specifically about the same topic.

Do you want to know about The Flux (but not this flux). The Flux, as I call it for reasons that will become clear in a moment, is pretty much a string of concurrent coincidences. Let’s say that out of nowhere, 3 books are simultaneously published on Queen Victoria’s third cousin – this is pretty much the example Willie Garvin gives of The Flux (it’s kinda scary what detail you can find online now) and it sums it up quite nicely. A few years ago there was a Philip Larkin Flux. You couldn’t trip over a curb, turn on the radio, open a magazine in a coffee shop or the dentist’s office, without falling smack into another story about Larkin. Very weird, especially when this went on for about a year. How often do you hear about Philip Larkin – at least in my line of work?

By
Posted in:
Published on:
Updated:
Published on:

By

Robert Ambrogi (and also Future Lawyer ) posts about this Intestacy Calculator. From Bob’s post: The site also includes an interactive summary of state laws. It shows you which states apply certain types of laws, such as giving community property to a surviving spouse. Another feature of the site is a federal estate tax calculator.”

Kurt Nilson, the creator of the calculator, is an attorney in Pennsylvania.

Interesting and useful web site, especially if it moves you to get a will in place. But please, the usual disclaimers apply. If you want a will that says what you want it to say, do some research and talk to a lawyer. No two people are alike (think snowflakes) and nowhere is this more true than when it comes to each person’s legal situation.

By
Posted in:
Published on:
Updated:
Published on:

By

While reading the next opinion the Oregon Supreme Court decided on Friday, State v. Bray, about an inmate who “worked at the call center” and was now a defendant in a child sex abuse case, I wondered about that “call center.” There are lots, and lots, of reasons to make sure prison inmates receive education and training while in prison. The Oregon Corrections Enterprises (OCE) plays a role in the endeavor, and manages the call center mentioned in State v. Bray. The OCE mission: To provide public safety by providing inmates with meaningful work experience in a self-sustaining organization.

By
Posted in:
Published on:
Updated:
Published on:

By

From FutureLawyer, June 1st posting:

“Google Photos Stir a Debate Over Privacy – New York Times

Link: Google Photos Stir a Debate Over Privacy – New York Times. O.K. This is creepy. I hesitate to check what Google’s cameras have caught in my front window. Mary Casey’s cat is becoming famous; the question is, is this an actionable invasion of privacy? Security and privacy in the Internet age are creating all sorts of legal issues. Lawyers are going to be called upon to sort it out.”

(Direct link to Miquel Helft, NYT story, here.)

By
Posted in:
Published on:
Updated:
Published on:

By

Is this a true story stranger than fiction or a clever hoax or urban legend??

The Doc is in blog reports that the drug-resistant TB victim (who ignored doctor’s orders and swept past border and airport security) is a personal injury lawyer. And, as all cute 7-year olds would then say, “it gets better!” The father-in-law is a microbiologist with the CDC. Another news story here, from the LA Times.

By
Posted in:
Published on:
Updated:
Published on:

By

Leave it to soldiers not to be able to call a library a library. It’s very funny. Maybe the name “library” is too girly? too wimpy? too something not manly or tough enough?

But the Center for Army Lessons Learned (CALL) is a wonderful sounding place (it’s a library!) and I love the name. After all, isn’t a library also a Center for Lessons Learned? (If only we would learn them!) This week’s (5/25/07) This American Life (TAL) broadcast a superb program on the CALL and it is worth listening to (free podcast/download from the TAL website).

By
Posted in:
Published on:
Updated:
Published on:

By

Juvenile-law attorneys, teens, and parents may not know about the wealth of information at the Juvenile Rights Project web page. Prepare to spend some time digging deeply into and through it. Parents and teens might want to look at the Helpline page and links. Attorneys will want to look at the many newsletters and reports. The guides for teens in foster care, for incarcerated parents, and many others provide a wealth of valuable information.

Published on:

By

Another book reading to attend (I last blogged about one here):

Sasha Abramsky, author of “American Furies: Crime, Punishment, and Vengeance in the Age of Mass Imprisonment,” will be reading from her book and answering questions at Powell’s City of Books, on Friday, June 1st, at 7:30 p.m.

From Powell’s web site:
In this dramatic exposé of U.S. penitentiaries and the communities around them, Sasha Abramsky finds that prisons have dumped their age-old goal of rehabilitation, often for political reasons. Brilliantly researched and compellingly told, American Furies: Crime, Punishment, and Vengeance in the Age of Mass Imprisonment shows that the ethos of “lock ’em up and throw away the key” has enormous social costs.”

By
Posted in:
Published on:
Updated:
Contact Information