Sunday, October 31, 2021

November 1: Business In Trying Times


This CLE provides a basic understanding of the materials that an attorney needs to be aware of while advising an organizational client during a crisis. It also touches on recent developments that have begun to occur as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic that has been spreading across the globe.
At the end of this hour, you should have a basic understanding of:
  • What legislation and agencies are important during a crisis
  • Practices to help maintain business operation during a crisis
  • Basic relief measures that a company can file for or apply to get.
Title:
Business In Trying Times
Webinar Dates And Times:
Credit:
1 credit hour in Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii,Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, Wisconsin.
By:
LexisNexis

Saturday, October 30, 2021

November 17: Insurers and the Blockchain: Embracing the Role of Insurance Coverage in the Cryptocurrency Space

This webinar will focus on the impact of cryptocurrency and blockchain technologies on the insurance industry. 
The presenters will introduce blockchain and cryptocurrency and address the impact of blockchain technology to insurance products, including current lines of coverage, blockchain as a tool for insurance, centralized and decentralized models, insuring the developing world with the help of blockchain technology, and potential underwriting and claims process efficiencies to be gained by using blockchain technology.
Title:
Insurers and the Blockchain: Embracing the Role of Insurance Coverage in the Cryptocurrency Space
Webinar Date+Time:
November 17, 2021
11:30 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. (ET)
Register Now!
Speakers:
  • Alissa K. Christopher
  • William H. Craven
Credit:
The registration form indicates the sponsor has applied for credit with California, Illinois, Nevada, New York, Pennsylvania and Texas. Check with your credit-granting authority whether you can self apply.
By:
Cozen O'Connor, established in 1970 and ranked among the top 100 law firms in America, has 750 attorneys who help clients manage risk and make better business decisions.

Thursday, October 28, 2021

October 29: A Conversation with Attorney Fred Gray

Fred Gray
Attorney Fred Gray returns to the Case Western Reserve University School of Law - and to the internet - to share details of his career's pursuit for racial justice.
Gray is a civil rights attorney, preacher and activist who still practices law in Alabama and served as Member of the Alabama House of Representatives from 1971–2015. His career includes the distinction of successfully litigating four major civil rights cases before the United States Supreme Court including Gayle v. Browder (1956), NAACP v. Alabama ex rel. Patterson (1958), Gomillion v. Lightfoot (1960), and New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964). In September 2021, Attorney Gray filed suit on behalf of the Macon County Commission regarding the presence of confederate statues on public property.
Title:
A Conversation with Attorney Fred Gray
Webinar Date+Time:
Friday, October 29, 2021
10:00 AM - 11:00 AM Eastern Time
Register Now For This Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar!
Speaker:
Born Dec. 14, 1930, in Montgomery, Alabama, Gray was ordained a Christian minister as a teenager and, following high school, he received a Bachelor of Science degree from Alabama State College for Negroes (1951) and an LLB from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio (1954). Gray then returned to Montgomery to open his private law practice while also serving as minister to the Holt Street Church of Christ. Gray recalled that he was anxious to return to Montgomery to “destroy everything segregated”. During the Montgomery bus boycott, Gray’s leadership and legal counsel played a crucial role in the successful desegregation of Montgomery buses. He defended Claudette Colvin and Rosa Parks against charges of disorderly conduct for refusing to give up their seats to white passengers. Gray also filed the petition that challenged the constitutionality of Alabama state laws mandating segregation on buses (Browder v. Gayle). In November 1956, the Supreme Court affirmed the lower court ruling that racial segregation on public transportation was unconstitutional.
Gray recalled that he and King occasionally had differences of opinion on what action should be taken to ensure that rights were protected: “There were times when Dr. King said, ‘Fred, I understand what you say the law is, but our conscience says that the law is unjust and we cannot obey it. So, if we are arrested we will be calling on you to defend us’”.
Gray was involved in many other civil rights cases, including Gomillion v. Lightfoot, which challenged the Alabama legislature after it redrew the boundaries of the city of Tuskegee, Alabama, to exclude black neighborhoods, thereby denying African Americans the right to vote in municipal elections. Gray also fought for African American rights to education, the freedom to march peacefully, and the right to participate in juries, and opposed injustices like the infamous Tuskegee syphilis study that purposely left affected black men untreated.
In 1970, Gray was elected to the Alabama State Legislature as a representative from Tuskegee. With this election, he became one of the first two African American officials to serve in the legislature since the Reconstruction era. In 1979, President Jimmy Carter nominated Gray to the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Alabama, but Gray withdrew his name in August 1980, after opposition from conservative opponents. Gray received the American Bar Association’s Equal Justice Award (1977), the Southern Christian Leadership Conference’s Drum Major Award (1980), and the World Conference of Mayors’ Legal Award (1985). He was elected president of the Alabama State Bar Association in 2001.
By:
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
Credit:
  • Ohio: 1 hour of CLE credit, pending approval
  • Other Jurisdictions: You may be able to self-apply to your credit-granting authority.
Cost:
Free and open to the public.

October 29: Sustainability in Community and Public Health Systems: Vaccines and the Law

This year’s Belmont Health Law Journal Virtual Fall Panel will explore and evaluate the most pressing issues and trends regarding vaccinations, policy, and the law.
Title:
Sustainability in Community and Public Health Systems: Vaccines and the Law
Date and Time:
Friday, October 29, 2021
6:30 AM – 7:30 AM PDT
Zoom Webinar - Register Now
By:
Belmont Health Law Journal
Credit:
Free CLE credit for licensed Tennessee attorneys that stay for the entirety of the event.
Speakers
  • Dr. Kathryn Edwards.
  • Rebecca Demaree
  • Brian Dean Abramson
  • Clint HermesD., magna cum laude, from Harvard Law.
By:
  • Belmont Health Law Journal.



Wednesday, October 27, 2021

October 28: Expert Testimony: Preparation for Examination & Analyzing Testimony of Others

Testimony is what legal cases are made of. It is the most compelling evidence of all. Therefore, we should think VERY hard about it, in the context of any legal matter we are working on. 
First, we need to elicit the testimony we need, then, we need to analyze, summarize, and use it in well supported arguments.
In our work on building-related litigation, we sometimes know (or think we know) what is going on without reviewing testimony, because construction projects are so document intensive. But in some cases we learn almost 100% of the "facts" from testimony. Of course, the "facts" described in testimony are not carved in stone and carried down a mountain. At best testimony is based on memory, prompted by contemporaneous documentation, and at worst it's intentionally false.
Every litigated case is a competing story of who is right and wrong, and how the law applies to the facts as presented. Our primary job as expert consultants and witnesses is to organize and understand the evidence and explain it to our clients in plain language so that they can make smart decisions.
This program is all about the work of a case using testimony. We will begin with our framework analysis. Then we'll be on to discuss preparing to question and questioning a witness, analyzing testimony, and utilizing testimony in reports.
Title:
Expert Testimony: Preparation for Examination & Analyzing Testimony of Others
Date+Time Of Webinar:
October 28, 2021
10:00am (Pacific Time)
Register Now!
Credits:
1.0 with the Florida State Bar
1.0 with the Oregon State Bar
1.0 with the Nevada State Bar
1.0 with the California State Bar
1.0 with the California Department of Insurance
Speakers:
  • Mikala Glaza, Moderator and Coordinator at Pete Fowler Construction
  • Pete Patterson, Technical Consultant at Pete Fowler Construction
  • Nancy Jones, Architect at Pete Fowler Construction
  • Tiffiny Fox, Partner at Bassi Edlin Huie & Blum LLP
By:
Pete Fowler Construction Services: https://www.petefowler.com/

October 28: Part II: When "The Truth" Is Found To Be Lies: Identifying And Handling Experts Who Deceive

During this presentation, Dr. Strayer will to try to help you identify and address concerns relating to inappropriate or deceptive expert witness testimony. What is said and what is suggested will reflect his experience as an expert witness, mainly relating to causation analysis.
Title:
Part II: When "The Truth" Is Found To Be Lies: Identifying And Handling Experts Who Deceive
When/Where:
October 28, 2021
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar - Register Now!
Speaker:
David Strayer, MD is a professor of pathology, anatomy and cell biology, as well as professor at the Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center at Thomas Jefferson University. He has served as an expert witness in over 100 cases filed in state and federal courts in PA, NJ, DE, NY, MD, and TX. Most of his work is on behalf of defendants, but he has performed expert work for attorneys representing plaintiffs as well as those representing defendants. His expertise involves medical malpractice, industrial accidents, personal injury lawsuits, and objective assessment of cases. He has participated in and chaired over 20 professional grant review panels including NIH, American Cancer Society and others.
By:
The TASA Group, Inc.
Credit:
  • This webinar is approved for CLE credit in CA, NJ, PA and IL (general and professional responsibility: Legal Ethics).
  • Many states allow attorneys to self-apply for credit: see State Rules.
More Information And Registration

October 28: Embryo Litigation: A Focus on Unique Legal Issues, Structural Challenges, and Resolution Platforms

The lecture will focus on three unique aspects presented by the recent Cleveland litigation surrounding the loss of eggs and embryos due to an issue with the cryogenic tank:
The lack of clear laws or precedent regarding the rights and remedies available under Ohio law. Does the claim fall under a medical malpractice, bailment, irreplaceable loss, breach of contract or a general negligence? The logistical challenges of pursuing a case with potentially 900 plaintiffs and 87 different firms will be discussed. Lastly, the lecture will focus on the structure surrounding resolution of these claims in a way that was fair and equitable to each individual claimant and the unique challenges presented by the damages claims. Please review these reading materials in advance of the lecture.
Title:
Cleveland, Ohio Embryo Litigation: A Focus on Unique Legal Issues, Structural Challenges, and Resolution Platforms
Event Date, Time and Venues:
Thursday, October 28, 2021
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM
The event will be held both virtually and in-person.
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
George Gund Hall
Room A59, Moot Courtroom
11075 East Blvd., Cleveland, OH 44106
Register now for in-person or virtual event
Speaker:
David Elk is the senior partner of Elk & Elk in Cleveland. As an Ohio personal injury lawyer, he has represented thousands of medical malpractice, wrongful death and injury victims throughout the state for over 56 years. He has devoted his entire professional life of more than five decades to helping injured people receive the compensation they deserve.
David began his professional career with one of the largest and most prestigious personal injury law firms in Ohio and spent his first seven years under the wing of Ohio’s best. After practicing on his own for several years, his entrepreneurial spirit got the better of him. He ventured into practice with his brother Art and built geographically one of the largest injury practices in Ohio.
By: 
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
Credit:
1 hour of online CLE credit, pending approval.
Cost:
Free and open to the public.
More Information And Registration

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

October 27: How to Implement E-Signature & Secure Document Sharing with Ethics in Mind

Discovery how to ethically implement e-signature and document sharing in your firm. Unless you’ve been hiding in the woods in recent years, you’ve probably signed a document with an e-signature product. What’s more, your clients are likely in love with their ease and quickness. The question becomes: how does a law firm efficiently integrate e-signature workflow into their firm? And what are the ethics requirements? While we’re talking about e-signature ethics and security, we will go into secure file sharing as well. 
Learning Objectives:
  • See how law firms can incorporate an e-signature process into their workflows and commonly used tools, like Outlook and Gmail. 
  • Understand the security implications and ethics requirements for secure document sharing. 
  • Discuss the issues related to client portals, and why they can be difficult for both clients and law firms.
Title:
How to Implement E-Signature & Secure Document Sharing with Ethics in Mind 
Date+Time:
Wednesday, October 27, 2021
1:00PM ET; Noon CT; 11:00 AM MT; 10:00AM PT
Credit:
This free continuing legal education webinar is approved for CLE credit in the following jurisdictions:
  • Florida Bar CLE Credits:Florida Bar CLE Credits: 1.0 General, 1.0 Technology, 1.0 Ethics
  • Other Jurisdictions: Check with your credit granting authority whether you can self-apply.
Speaker:
Larry Port
Larry Port is the founder and CEO of Rocket Matter, the leading cloud-based legal practice management software. Larry is also a speaker and award-winning writer at the crossroads of the legal profession and cutting-edge technology. His book, The Lean Law Firm: Run Your Firm Like the World’s Most Profitable and Efficient Businesses, was recently published by the American Bar Association. Larry frequently discusses design and efficiency as well as quality techniques in the software industry that can be leveraged by lawyers and other legal professionals. Larry was also named to the Fastcase 50 honoring the law’s smartest, most courageous innovators, techies, visionaries, and leaders.
By:
Rocket Matter helps law firms offer better client service and also increase revenues by more than 20%. Founded in 2007 as the first cloud-based legal practice management software, it has the most powerful, easy-to-use time and billing software in the industry.

Sunday, October 24, 2021

October 4, 7, 18+25: A Knight in Shining Armor: Representing Individuals in Times of Crisis

This 90-minute free CLE presentation is for legal professionals who represent primarily individual clients. It will cover many of the critical considerations that require prompt responses to emergencies, as well as anticipating the needs of individuals in the immediate aftermath of a crisis.
After completing this course, you will be able to:
  • Identify the many ways a crisis can impact an individual client’s life
  • Understand emergency and disaster response
  • Identify changes to laws and emergency regulations impacting individuals
  • Understand the impact of the Digital Divide
  • Utilize Best Practices for practicing from home
  • Guide clients through employment changes
  • Guide clients through financial difficulty
  • Handle emergent family law issues
  • Handle civil, criminal and probate litigation cases related to an emergency
  • Identify areas of need and quickly learning new practice areas
  • Understand where to find resources for novel legal issues.
Title:
A Knight in Shining Armor: Representing Individuals in Times of Crisis
Webinar Dates And Times:
Speaker:
Michelle Pittman
Credit:
1 credit hour in Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii,  New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin; you may be able to apply for credit in other states that allow online credits.
By:
LexisNexis
More Information And Registration

November 4: Investigating Solar Panel Fires, and Subrogation

As a renewable technology, solar power is seen by many as the energy source of the future. As the use of solar power has proliferated, so have casualty losses associated with the design, installation, and use of solar power-related equipment. This presentation will focus on the evolving use and technology associated with solar power as well as provide you with an overview of the laws governing its use and the nature and type of opportunities for subrogation growing out of solar power-related losses.
Title:
Investigating Solar Panel Fires: Solar Powered Subrogation: Powering Tomorrow's Subrogation Opportunities
Webinar Date+Time:
Thursday, November 4, 2021
11:00 AM EDT (8:00 AM PDT)
Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar - Register Now!
Credit:
California, Illinois, Nevada, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas. For other jurisdictions, check with your credit-granting authority.
Speakers: 
  • Attorney Anthony J. Morrone, Chair, Subrogation & Recovery, Midwest Region, Cozen O'Connor
  • Jason McPherson, MSEE, PE, IntPE., Forensic Electrical Engineer at MSD Engineering.
By: 
Cozen O'Connor, established in 1970 and ranked among the top 100 law firms in America, has 750 attorneys who help clients manage risk and make better business decisions.

Saturday, October 23, 2021

November 17: Preparing for a Trial as a Solo Attorney

Join LawPay's Director of Education, Claude Ducloux, for a 60-minute presentation covering:
  • Preparing the non-trial lawyer for a trial before the court;
  • Understanding the business/ethics side of litigation and ethics of fee-setting;
  • Understanding WHY you’re going to court;
  • Developing a trial theme; Defining elements of the case or defense and evidence required for each;
  • Preparing witnesses ahead of time;
  • Simple yet effective presentation techniques;
  • Scoping out your courtroom/court staff ahead of time;
  • Scheduling how you will present your evidence;
  • Understanding standard objections;
  • Ethical rules about evidence, offers of testimony, and the duty to correct false testimony;
  • Drafting your judgment early and other necessities;
  • Courtroom choreography—where you’ll sit or set up and the room;
  • Keeping track of exhibits and rulings during trial; and
  • Handling your client throughout the process and setting reasonable expectations.
Title:
Preparing for a Trial as a Solo Attorney
Date+Time:
November 17, 2021
4pm Eastern / 3pm Central / 2pm Mountain / 1pm Pacific
Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar - register now!
By:
LawPay
Speaker:
Claude Ducloux, LawPay's director of education, ethics and compliance, has nearly four decades of experience practicing law. Claude has earned many professional honors for his dedication to educating attorneys, including the Gene Cavin Award for Lifetime Achievement in Teaching Continuing Education.
Credit:
The sponsor's website does not list CLE credit as available. You might be able to self-apply for credit in your jurisdiction.

November 4: Defense Dialogues: Representing The Accused Before International Criminal Tribunals

Those accused of international crimes such as genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes are often prosecuted by international criminal tribunals, as the International Criminal Court, the International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia, the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, and others. Although accused of such grave crimes, these defendants enjoy due process rights and benefit from the presumption of innocence. 
Representing such defendants poses unique challenges and requires particular expertise. Kate Gibson will discuss her experience as a criminal defense lawyer before the most prominent international criminal tribunals. She will discuss issues such as procedural particularities, but also specialized defenses such as superior orders, necessity, insanity, mental disease, and duress. Finally, she will focus on differences between representing defendants before international tribunals, such as the International Criminal Court, and domestic tribunals.
Title:
Criminal Justice Forum
Date and Time:

Thursday, November 4, 2021
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Register Now For This Webinar!
Speaker:
Kate Gibson
Kate Gibson has been practicing before international criminal courts and tribunals since 2005, appearing before the ICC, ICTR, IRMCT, ECCC and SCSL on some of the leading cases before these courts. Currently, Kate is the co-counsel of Bosco Ntaganda before the ICC, and also represents Rohingya victims in the Bangladesh/Myanmar situation. Kate also leads the legal team of Paul Rusesabagina, charged with terrorism in Rwanda, and is a member of the Defence team of former President of Kosovo Hashim Thaçi before the Kosovo Specialist Chambers.
Previously at the ICC, Kate was the co-counsel of Jean-Pierre Bemba, former Vice-President of the DRC who was acquitted by the ICC Appeals Chamber in 2018. She was also the co-counsel of former President of Liberia Charles Taylor before the SCSL, and the Co-Counsel of former President of the Republika Srpška Radovan Karadžić before the IRMCT. Kate was one of the youngest Lead Counsel to be appointed at the ICTR, representing Minister Justin Mugenzi who was acquitted on appeal. She was also co-counsel to Jean-Baptiste Gatete, former bourgmestre of Murambi commune before the ICTR. Between 2007 and 2008, Kate was the Associate Legal Officer of His Honour Judge Mohammed Shahabuddeen in the Appeals Chamber of the ICTY and ICTR. Kate also represented victims in the Duch case at the ECCC.
In 2018, Kate was appointed as a Legal Consultant to the UN Independent International Fact-Finding Mission for Myanmar. She is a Senior Legal Advisor with the Public International Law and Policy Group (PILPG) in Washington, DC, working on transitional justice programs in Bangladesh, Libya, and the MENA region. She holds an LL.M in International Law from Cambridge University and lives in Geneva, Switzerland.
Credit:
Ohio: 1.0 credit hours pending.
Other Jurisdictions: You might be able to self-apply for credit.
By:
Cleveland-Marshall College of Law / Cleveland State University

Thursday, October 21, 2021

October 22: Labor, Trade, and Supply-Chain Developments—A Practice-Oriented Update on Trade and Customs Law

With the change in administrations, current U.S. trade policy has carried on important elements of prior policy (e.g., Section 301 and 232 tariffs), as well as innovated with renewed emphasis on multilateralism, a focus on the implications of trade on U.S. workers, and the enforcement of labor protection provisions in trade agreements. Certainly, the next few years will keep trade practitioners busy, whether they focus on expanding cross-border market access, enforcing trade remedies, complying with import requirements or ensuring labor protection-compliant supply chains. 
Juscelino F. Colares, the Case Western Reserve University Schott-van den Eynden Professor of Business Law and professor of political science, and the Fall Update Organizing Committee welcome attendees to the Sixth Trade Law Fall Update, to be held this year in person and remotely (via Zoom), on Friday, Oct. 22, 2021, at the CWRU School of Law.
This Fall Update, titled "Labor, Trade, and Supply-Chain Developments—A Practice-Oriented Update on Trade and Customs Law," will include a trade-and-labor panel, an international trade panel, a rapid "crossfire" exchange on some emerging issues on customs and trade law, and a keynote speech by U.S. Senator Sherrod C. Brown. 
Title:
Labor, Trade, and Supply-Chain Developments—A Practice-Oriented Update on Trade and Customs Law
Sixth Trade Law Fall Update
Webinar Date+Time:
Friday, October 22, 2021
 8:00 AM - 4:00 PM
The event will be held virtually and in-person at Case Western Reserve University School of Law George Gund Hall Room A59, Moot Courtroom 11075 East Blvd., Cleveland, OH 44106.
Register now to attend in-person or by zoom!
Speaker:
Too many speakers to list! More Information!
By: 
  • Case Western Reserve University School of Law
  • Sponsored by Grunfeld Desiderio Lebowitz Silverman & Klestadt LLP.
Credit:
3.25 hours of CLE credit, pending approval 1 hour of online CLE credit, pending approval.
Cost:
Free and open to the public.

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

October 21: A Subrogating Carrier’s Best Resource – The Role of the Insured in the Investigation and Litigation of Subrogation Claims

This free continuing legal education webinar will discuss the requirements, in some states, that subrogation carriers notify insureds of whether subrogation is being pursued. Additionally, the presentation will discuss in depth that even where the subrogation carrier is not required to notify the insured, the subrogation carrier should want to involve the insured in the investigation process due to the myriad ways in which insureds can help with proving a subrogation case. The presentation will address important rules when co-litigating a subrogation case with the insured, including made whole, pro-rata, and joint prosecution considerations.
Title:
A Subrogating Carrier’s Best Resource – The Role of the Insured in the Investigation and Litigation of Subrogation Claims
Webinar Date+Time:
October 21, 2021
11:00 am ET
Credit:
CLE is approved in CA, DE, FL, GA, IL, NC, NV, NY, PA, and TX. Other jurisdictions will be applied for upon request.
Speakers:
David D. Brisco
Howard D. Maycon
By:
Cozen O'Connor, established in 1970 and ranked among the top 100 law firms in America, has 750 attorneys who help clients manage risk and make better business decisions.

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

October 27: When "The Truth" Is Found To Be Lies: Identifying And Handling Experts Who Deceive

On October 27, 2021, at 3:00 p.m. (ET), The TASA Group, in conjunction anatomic pathologist Dr. David Strayer, will present a one-hour, interactive webinar presentation, When "the Truth" is found to be Lies: Identifying and handling experts who deceive, for all legal professionals. During this presentation, Dr. Strayer will to try to help you identify and address concerns relating to inappropriate or deceptive expert witness testimony. What is said and what is suggested will reflect his experience as an expert witness, mainly relating to causation analysis.
Title:
When "The Truth" Is Found To Be Lies: Identifying And Handling Experts Who Deceive
When/Where:
October 27, 2021
3:00 PM - 4:00 PM
Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar - Register Now!

Speaker:
David Strayer, MD is a professor of pathology, anatomy and cell biology, as well as professor at the Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center at Thomas Jefferson University. He has served as an expert witness in over 100 cases filed in state and federal courts in PA, NJ, DE, NY, MD, and TX. Most of his work is on behalf of defendants, but he has performed expert work for attorneys representing plaintiffs as well as those representing defendants. His expertise involves medical malpractice, industrial accidents, personal injury lawsuits, and objective assessment of cases. He has participated in and chaired over 20 professional grant review panels including NIH, American Cancer Society and others.
By:
The TASA Group, Inc.
Credit:
  • This webinar is approved for CLE credit in CA, NJ, PA and IL (general and professional responsibility: Legal Ethics).
  • Many states allow attorneys to self-apply for credit: see State Rules.
More Information And Registration

October 20: Don't Get Spooked! Avoiding Malpractice Tricks and Traps

A malpractice claim could haunt your firm long after Halloween. The best way to avoid a lurking danger is to learn from the mistakes of other lawyers!
Join George Jonson, J.D., and Erin McCartney, J.D., as they discuss hair-raising legal malpractice cases involving violations of the Model Rules of Professional Conduct. The discussion will include best practice tips regarding the ethics rules pertaining a lawyer’s duty of diligence, competence, communication, misconduct, and the duty to report another lawyer’s professional misconduct.
Title:
Don't Get Spooked! Avoiding Malpractice Tricks and Traps
Webinar Date+Time:
October 20, 2021 
1:00 PM-2:00 Eastern Time
12:00 PM-1:00 Central Time
11:00 AM-12:00 PM Mountain Time
10:00 AM-11:00 Pacific Time
Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar - Register Now!
Speakers:
  • George Jonson, Partner, Montgomery Jonson LLP
  • Erin McCartney, Risk Management Lead, Attorney Protective
CLE Credit:
Typically, Attorney Protective webinars are eligible for ethics credits in most jurisdictions; please consult your state's website.
By:
Attorney Protective

October 20: Implicit Bias, Dehumanization and Racial Disparities in the Criminal Justice System

Attendees will learn more about the racial disparities in the U.S. criminal justice system and how those disparities were created and remain today. 
Faculty Spotlight Series
Webinar Date+Time:
October 20, 2021
12:00 PM in Eastern Time
Speaker:
Professor Reginald Oh  is a prolific scholar whose work is most often a careful examination of distributive justice, including the ways in which justice succeeds or fails when gender and race are involved.
History, politics, linguistic analysis, and race and gender studies inform articles such as "Interracial Marriage in the Shadows of Jim Crow: Racial Segregation as Racial and Gender Subordination" in the University of California Davis Law Review (2006) and "Discrimination and Distrust: A Critical Linguistic Analysis of the Discrimination Concept" in the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law (2005). "Regulating White Desire," which examines the gendered nature of racial segregation, was published in the Wisconsin Law Review in 2007. "Fear of a Multiracial Planet: Loving’s Children and the Genocide of the White Race" was published in the Fordham Law Review in 2018.
By:
  • Cleveland-Marshall School of Law
  • Presented in conjunction with the Racial Justice Community Conversation Work Group 
Credit:
1 hour of online CLE credit, pending approval.
Cost:
Free and open to the public.

Monday, October 18, 2021

November 18: Rules of Medical Necessity

Health insurance has long been understood to cover most forms of "medically necessary" health care. But who gets to decide whether particular medical interventions for individual patients are indeed "medically necessary" and hence covered? Since the 1980s, health insurers have attempted to reserve this authority for themselves. For just as long, state and federal laws have policed insurers' medical necessity determinations to ensure that they do not put profits ahead of patients.
In his talk, Professor Schwarcz will explore how health insurers are increasingly undermining these legal constraints on their coverage determinations by formally incorporating into their insurance policies incredibly detailed and specific rules for when particular types of care are medically necessary for particular types of patients. He will also explore whether and how federal and state actors can push back on these insurer efforts to avoid legal oversight of their medical necessity determinations.
Professor Schwarcz's talk will be based on his draft article, Rules of Medical Necessity, which is co-authored with Professor Amy Monahan and is forthcoming in the Iowa Law Review.
Title:
Rules of Medical Necessity
Fredrikson & Byron Professor of Law Appointment Lecture
Date + Time of Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar:
November 18, 2021, 4:00 to 6:00 pm CT
Online via Zoom webinar AND in-person attendance at
Walter F. Mondale Hall
Room 25 (Lockhart Hall)
University of Minnesota Law School
229 19th Ave South
Minneapolis, MN 55455
Speaker: 
Professor Daniel Schwarcz is an award-winning teacher and scholar. His research focuses on a broad range of issues in insurance law and regulation, spanning systemic risk, regulatory federalism, consumer protection, employer-sponsored health insurance, and insurance coverage litigation. In 2017, the American Law Institute awarded Schwarcz its highly selective Early Career Scholars Medal, which recognizes one or two “outstanding law professors whose work is relevant to public policy and has the potential to influence improvements in the law relevant to the real world.” He has also been awarded the Liberty Mutual Prize, which is given annually for the most outstanding article on property and casualty insurance law.
Credit:
Minnesota: 1 standard CLE credit has been requested, event code #424550.
Other Jurisdictions:You may be able to self-apply for credit in other jurisdictions.
By:
University of Minnesota Law School

November 8+29: A Knight in Shining Armor: Representing Individuals in Times of Crisis

This 90-minute free CLE presentation is for legal professionals who represent primarily individual clients. It will cover many of the critical considerations that require prompt responses to emergencies, as well as anticipating the needs of individuals in the immediate aftermath of a crisis.
After completing this course, you will be able to:
  • Identify the many ways a crisis can impact an individual client’s life
  • Understand emergency and disaster response
  • Identify changes to laws and emergency regulations impacting individuals
  • Understand the impact of the Digital Divide
  • Utilize Best Practices for practicing from home
  • Guide clients through employment changes
  • Guide clients through financial difficulty
  • Handle emergent family law issues
  • Handle civil, criminal and probate litigation cases related to an emergency
  • Identify areas of need and quickly learning new practice areas
  • Understand where to find resources for novel legal issues.
Title:
A Knight in Shining Armor: Representing Individuals in Times of Crisis
Webinar Dates And Times:
Speaker:
Michelle Pittman
Credit:
1 credit hour in Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York,  Nevada, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, Wisconsin; you may be able to apply for credit in other states that allow online credits.
By:
LexisNexis
More Information And Registration

November 18: Lawyering as if the Future Matters

This presentation considers what steps lawyers can take to become sustainability leaders. It does not focus on the specifics of the rules of lawyer conduct. It does not, for example, explore detailed rules relating to conflicts of interest, safekeeping client property, or selling a law practice although these are real rules.
Rather, the presentation focuses on the principles and duties that establish the system of lawyer regulation and the ability of lawyers to function as sustainability leaders while complying with these rules. It helps lawyers who want to integrate sustainable development into their practice by considering the relationship of the lawyer’s duty to clients with the lawyer’s duty to society.
Lawyers must protect their client’s legitimate interests. How to navigate these duties is an important challenge, which makes it important for lawyers who want to be leaders in sustainability to know what conduct laws and principles of ethical lawyering permit, require, and prohibit.
Some argue that courts and bar associations should sanction or penalize lawyers who facilitate client practices that cause environmental harm or add to the cumulative effects of climate disruption. Some lawyers fear they lack the tools needed to serve sustainable development or that the duty to serve their clients’ interests prevents them from acting to protect society from the climate crisis.
The truth about legal ethics and sustainability resides in the space between these poles. This presentation will identify the principles of legal ethics that guide sustainability lawyers and lawyers who wish to become sustainability leaders.
Title:
Lawyering as if the Future Matters
Date/Time/Venue:
Thursday, November 18, 2021
4:00 PM – 5:00 PM
By:
Widener University Commonwealth Law School.
Speaker:
Irma Russell joined the faculty at UMKC in the fall of 2015 as the Edward A. Smith/ Missouri Chair in Law, the Constitution, and Society. Prior to coming to UMKC, she served as Dean of The University of Montana School of Law (from 2009 to 2014) and as the NELPI Professor and Director of the National Energy-Environment Law & Policy Institute at the University of Tulsa College of Law. Professor Russell is a former chair of the ABA Section of Environment, Energy and Resources, the AALS Section of Natural Resources and Energy Law, and ABA Section of Professional Responsibility. She currently serves as the Liaison of the ABA Section of Environment, Energy and Resources to the Center for Professional Responsibility and the Publications Board of ABA Section on Dispute Resolution. She has served as the chair of the Professionalism Committee of the ABA Section of Legal Education and Admission to the Bar and as a member of the ABA Standing Committee on Professionalism and the ABA Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility. She has also served as chair of the AALS Section on Socio-Economics, and as a member of the Publications Board of the Center for Professional Responsibility.
In practice, Russell represented potentially responsible parties, government entities, lenders, and others on issues arising under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), wetlands designation, site mitigation, and other environmental issues. She was founding Chair of the Environmental Law Section of the Memphis Bar Association and as Chair of the Tennessee Bar Association Environmental Section. Professor Russell is an elected member of the American Law Institute, the Judicial Conference for the Tenth Judicial Circuit, and the American College of Environmental Lawyers.
Professor Russell earned her J.D. from the University of Kansas. She clerked for The Honorable James K. Logan, United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit and engaged in private practice in Kansas, Missouri, and Tennessee.
Credits:
1 ethics CLE credit available in Pennsylvania (subject to approval)
You may be able to self-apply in other states; check with your credit-granting authority.
By:
Widener University Commonwealth Law School is the Pennsylvania capital’s only law school, with three specialized centers of legal scholarship through its Law and Government Institute, Environmental Law and Sustainability Center, and Business Advising Program.

Sunday, October 17, 2021

October 18: Food Labelling, the First Amendment, and More

Extra Mile Law, PLLC, is pleased to present another CLE class in its Monday CLE webinar series.
Did you ever wonder what it takes to be a burger or a hot dog?
Join Jonathan Grad of Extra Mile Law, PLLC for this fast-moving, basic class about legal issues related to food labeling, including the interplay or conflict between the First Amendment and statutes/regulations attempting to prevent misleading labeling. We will examine these issues through the lens of several cases. 
Title:
Food Labelling, the First Amendment, and More
Date+Time:
Monday, October 18, 2021
12 p.m. - 1 p.m., CDT
Register Now for this free Continuing Legal Education program!
Enrollment limited to the first 40 registrants.
Credit:
  • 1 unit of credit has been approved in WY.
  • 1 unit of credit has been applied for in MN and WI.
  • Many states allow attorneys to self-apply for credit: see State Rules.
Speaker:
Jonathan Grad, JD, PhD, Member, Extra Mile Law, PLLC, has practiced law since 1995 and is licensed to practice in MN, WI and the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
Presented By:
Extra Mile Law, PLLC, a MN-based boutique intellectual property law firm.

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

November 17: Business Interruption Insurance Meets the Pandemic: Understanding Pennsylvania Law

This program will provide lawyers and Pennsylvania business owners with an understanding of the state of Pennsylvania law with respect to business interruption insurance. Currently, liability for losses suffered from the pandemic is being litigated and remains a hot contested issue. Two of the top Pennsylvania lawyers litigating these issues will present their view and understanding about the resolution of this important business issue
Title:
Business Interruption Insurance Meets the Pandemic: Understanding Pennsylvania Law
Date/Time/Venue:
Wednesday, November 17, 2021
12:00 PM – 1:00 PM
By:
Widener University Commonwealth Law School.
Speakers:
  • Moderator: Christian Johnson, Commonwealth Professor of Business Advising and Law
  • Scott Cooper, Schmidt Kramer
  • Kevin C. McNamara, Thomas, Thomas & Hafer
Credits:
Pennsylvania CLE Credits: 1 substantive credit (subject to approval)
You may be able to self-apply in other states; check with your credit-granting authority.
By:
Widener University Commonwealth Law School is the Pennsylvania capital’s only law school, with three specialized centers of legal scholarship through its Law and Government Institute, Environmental Law and Sustainability Center, and Business Advising Program.

October 1, 6, 8. 13, 14+26: Legal Evolution: Analytics And Artificial Intelligence In The Law

This CLE covers how technology has changed the practice of law and how we can (and should) use analytics to our transactional and litigation advantage. 
Title:
Legal Evolution: Analytics And Artificial Intelligence In The Law
Webinar Dates And Times:

Credit:
1 credit hour in Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Florida,  Georgia, Hawaii, Idaho, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Vermont, Wisconsin; you may be able to apply for credit in other states that allow online credits.
By:
LexisNexis

October 14: Hiding in Plain Sight- Unmasking Human Trafficking

This 2 hour CLE credit will provide you with wisdom on the topics of
  • What is trafficking?
  • What does trafficking look like?
  • Who is trafficked?
  • How can you help? 
You will also hear from a group panelists who work with trafficking in the field every day. Afterwards, there will be opportunities for questions and networking.
Title:
Hiding in Plain Sight- Unmasking Human Trafficking
Registration Link gives you choices for attending in-person or virtual(internet)
Date/Time/Venue:
Thursday, October 14, 2021
4:00 PM – 6:00 PM EDT
In-Person Location:
Widener University Commonwealth Law School
3800 Vartan Way
Harrisburg, PA 17110
Also Available Via Distance Learning (Eventbright)
By:
Widener University Commonwealth Law School 
Speaker:
Featured speaker Steven V. Turner retired from the Pennsylvania Governor’s Office of General Counsel (OGC) service in August 2015. Prior to that time he served in a number of OGC positions, most recently as Chief Counsel to the Department of State. In that capacity, Steve advised the Secretary of the Commonwealth and Department staff on legal and administrative matters. Steve’s tenure at OGC also included service as Chief Counsel to the Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency; Chief Counsel to the Office of Inspector General; and Deputy General Counsel in the OGC Main Office. Steve also served as a Prosecuting Attorney for the Department of State’s Bureau of Professional and Occupational Affairs, where he prosecuted professional misconduct cases; and as a Senior Deputy Inspector General for the Office of Inspector General.
Credits:
2 ethics CLE credit available in Pennsylvania (subject to approval)
You may be able to self-apply in other states; check with your credit-granting authority.
By:
Widener University Commonwealth Law School is the Pennsylvania capital’s only law school, with three specialized centers of legal scholarship through its Law and Government Institute, Environmental Law and Sustainability Center, and Business Advising Program. Widener Law Commonwealth offers an exceptional learning experience that is personal, practical, and professional.

 

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

October 19: Pathways to Leadership With NJWLA Past Presidents

Hear from NJWLA’s Past Presidents and New Jersey’s most prominent women leaders who will discuss their pathways to leadership and provide insights into their career paths. The program will also explore career development, self-promotion, work-life balance and diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives so we can continue to advance women lawyers to the highest levels of our profession.
Title:
Pathways to Leadership With NJWLA Past Presidents
When:
October 19, 2021
5pm
Via Zoom - Register Now!
Panelists:
Moderator/Speakers:
Dina M. Mastellone, NJWLA President & Partner, Genova Burns LLC
Diana Manning, NJWLA President-Elect & Managing Partner, Bressler, Amery & Ross, P.C.
NJWLA Past Presidents Panelists:
Kirsten Scheurer Branigan, Owner & Founder, KSBranigan Law P.C.
Desha Jackson, Desha Jackson Law Group
Lynda A. Bennett, Partner, Lowenstein Sandler LLP
Lynne Anne Anderson, Partner, Faegre Drinker Biddle & Reath LLP
Wendy Johnson Lario, Shareholder, Greenberg Traurig, LLP
Suzanne M. Cerra, Partner & Co-Founder, Nukk-Freeman & Cerra
Randi W. Kochman, Partner, Cole Schotz P.C.
Hon. Jessica Stein Allen, U.S.M.J. (Newark)
Loren Pierce, Partner, Bressler, Amery & Ross, P.C.
Michelle Schaap, Partner, Chiesa Shahinian & Giantomasi PC
Linda G. Harvey, Partner, Greenberg Dauber Epstein & Tucker
Jemi Goulian Lucey, Partner, Greenbaum Rowe Smith & Davis LLP
By:
Credit:
NJ CLE Credits Pending (1.5 credits including 1.0 DEI credit pending)
You may be able to self-apply for credit in other jurisdictions

And More Information at recent NJWLA newsletter

Monday, October 11, 2021

October 27: A Practical Guide on How to Maintain a Claim File

This webinar will discuss key considerations and best practices for maintaining an insurance claim file, with the aim of promoting the prompt and fair resolution of claims and avoiding insurer bad faith.
The presenters will discuss:
  • Who might read a claim file and why?
  • What is bad faith?
  • The initial investigation
  • Claim correspondence
  • Obtaining additional information
  • Responding to settlement demands
  • Bad faith set-ups
  • Basic good faith principles
Title:
A Practical Guide on How to Maintain a Claim File
Webinar Date+Time:
October 27, 2021
11:30 am ET
Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar - Register Now!
Credit:
CLE is approved in CA, DE, FL, IL, NC, NV, NY, PA, and TX. Other jurisdictions will be applied for upon request.
Speakers:
Mike Melendez and Chad Pasternack
By:
Cozen O'Connor, established in 1970 and ranked among the top 100 law firms in America, has 750 attorneys who help clients manage risk and make better business decisions.

November 11/Cleveland: The Rage of Innocence: How America Criminalizes Black Youth

Drawing upon 25 years of experience representing Black youth in D.C.'s juvenile court, Professor Kristin Henning confronts America's irrational, manufactured fears of Black youth and makes a powerfully compelling case that the crisis in racist American policing begins with its relationship to Black children. Discriminatory and aggressive policing has socialized a generation of Black teenagers to fear and resent the police. Henning details the long-term consequences of racism and trauma Black youth experience at the hands of police and their vigilante surrogates.
Unlike white youth, who are afforded the freedom to test boundaries, experiment with sex and drugs, and figure out who they are and who they want to be, Black youth are seen as a threat to white America and are denied healthy adolescent development. Henning examines through court cases the criminalization of Black adolescent play and sexuality, and of Black fashion, hair, and music. She highlights the effects of police presence in schools, and the depth of policing-induced trauma in Black adolescents.
Title:
The Rage of Innocence: How America Criminalizes Black Youth
Webinar Date+Time:
Thursday, November 11, 2021
4:30 PM - 5:30 PM Eastern Time
In Person Only: Case Western Reserve University School of Law
George Gund Hall
11075 East Blvd.
Cleveland, OH 44106
Register Now
By:
Case Western Reserve University School of Law
Credit:
  • Ohio: 1 hour of online CLE credit, pending approval
  • Other Jurisdictions: You may be able to self-apply to your credit-granting authority.
Speaker:
Kristin Henning

Kristin Henning is the Blume Professor of Law and director of the Juvenile Justice Clinic and Initiative at Georgetown Law, where she and her law students represent youth accused of delinquency in Washington, DC. Kris was previously the lead attorney for the Juvenile Unit of the DC Public Defender Service and is currently the director of the Mid-Atlantic Juvenile Defender Center.
Kris has trained state actors across the country on the impact of racial bias and trauma in the juvenile and criminal legal systems. Her workshops help stakeholders recognize their own biases and develop strategies to counter them. Kris also worked closely with the McArthur Foundation’s Juvenile Indigent Defense Action Network to develop a 41-volume Juvenile Training Immersion Program (JTIP), a national training curriculum for juvenile defenders. She now co-hosts, with the National Juvenile Defender Center (NJDC), an annual week-long JTIP summer academy for trial lawyers and a series of “Train the Trainer” programs for experienced defenders. In 2019, Kris partnered with NJDC to launch a Racial Justice Toolkit for youth advocates, and again in 2020, to launch the Ambassadors for Racial Justice program, a year-long program for juvenile defenders committed to challenging racial injustice in the juvenile legal system through litigation and systemic reform.
Kris writes extensively about race, adolescence and policing. Her new book, The Rage of Innocence: How America Criminalizes Black Youth, was published by Penguin Random House in September 2021. Henning serves on the Board of Directors for the Center for Children’s Law and Policy, the ABA’s Juvenile Justice Standards Task Force, and ALI’s Restatement on Children and the Law project. She has won several awards including the 2021 Juvenile Leadership Prize by the Juvenile Law.
Cost:
Free and open to the public.
More Information And Registration

Sunday, October 10, 2021

October 20: Let’s Talk About Employee Wage and Hour Compliance

Wage and hour compliance continues to cause big headaches for employers. Non-compliance exposes companies to individual, Private Attorneys General Act (PAGA), and class action claims, and other representative actions. Wage and hour laws continue to multiply, with new regulations, court decisions, and myriad changes to existing laws impacting employer compliance obligations. The continuing pandemic further complicates the compliance landscape. For experienced human resources professionals, this webinar will be a practical “refresher.” For less experienced human resources professionals, this webinar will introduce real-world advice regarding wage and hour essentials.
To learn about what your company needs to do to stay in compliance and out of court, join us for an overview of the legal requirements and best practices of California wage and hour law.
Title:
Let’s Talk About Employee Wage and Hour Compliance
Webinar Date+Time:
Wednesday, October 20, 2021
12:00 – 1:00 p.m. PDT
Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar - Register Now!
Credit:
CLE is approved in CA. Other jurisdictions will be applied for upon request.
Speakers:
Brett C. Greving
Elena K. Hillman
C. Edward Langhammer, Jr.
Craig Schloss.
By:
Cozen O'Connor, established in 1970 and ranked among the top 100 law firms in America, has 750 attorneys who help clients manage risk and make better business decisions.

Saturday, October 9, 2021

October 7, 11, 18, 21, 25+27: Breached! An Inside Look At Cybersecurity For Law Firms

Data security incidents and data breaches happen daily, forcing courts and lawmakers to address, define, and handle new challenges, often presenting a case of first impression. As technology evolves, so do our professional legal requirements of upholding our duties in advising and zealously advocating for our clients, while also tackling the burden of data security itself.
This free Continuing Legal Education (CLE) session covers:
  1. Latest security threats and what’s being done to address them,
  2. Current data breach laws
  3. How a lawyer’s professional duty may extend into new areas of technology and cyberspace,
  4. How to prepare a data incident response plan.
Title:
Breached! An Inside Look At Cybersecurity For Law Firms
Webinar Dates & Times:
Credit:
1 credit hour in Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Georgia, Hawaii, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Wisconsin; you may be able to apply for credit in other states that allow online credits.
By:
LexisNexis

Friday, October 8, 2021

October 21: Representing San Francisco Tenants in Wrongful Eviction Actions

This meeting will cover:
  • Issue spotting wrongful eviction lawsuits
  • Evaluating available damages, including rent-differential damages
  • The impact of decreasing rents on rent differential damages
  • Common defenses.
Title:
Representing San Francisco Tenants in Wrongful Eviction Actions
Webinar Date+Time:
Thursday, October 21, 2021
3:00 pm to 4:30 pm Pacific
Attendance is Limited - Register Now!
Speaker:
Daniel Wayne is a founding partner of Wolford Wayne LLP a dedicated tenant’s rights law firm located in San Francisco’s Financial District. Daniel and his team have assisted hundreds of Bay Area tenants in resolving landlord/tenant disputes and represent tenants in wrongful eviction lawsuits, rent board matters, tenant buyouts and habitability matters.
Daniel has spent his entire legal career fighting on behalf of tenants. He is a volunteer counselor at the San Francisco Tenants Union, writes about tenant’s rights issues for the popular San Francisco-based site Broke-Ass Stuart, and for the San Francisco Apartment Association, and has appeared on 91.7 FM KALW’s “Your Legal Rights” Program. Daniel has been named a Super Lawyer “Rising Star” in each of the past six years (2016 – 2021), an honor bestowed on the top 2.5% of attorneys in Northern California.
By:
The Attorney Action Club is a network of San Francisco Bay Area lawyers who host monthly topical discussions on attorney work life balance and law practice management.
Cost:
Free; registration is limited
Credit:
California: 1 MCLE credit; You may be able to self-apply for other jurisdictions.

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

October 26: How Minor Guardianship Has Changed and Adult Guardianship Will Change Under the New UGA

An introduction to how changes to Title 11 Minor Guardianships affect non-parental custody orders and reflections from the first months under the new law as well as a preview of changes to Adult Guardianship upcoming in 2022.
Title:
How Minor Guardianship Has Changed and Adult Guardianship Will Change Under the New UGA
WSBA Legal Lunchbox Series
Webinar Date+Time:
October 26, 2021
12:00 PM - 1:35 PM PT
Free Continuing Legal Education Webinar - Register Now!
Speakers:
  • MODERATOR Christine Kuglin - WSBA Pro Bono and Public Service Committee and Chair of the School of Professional Accounting at Eastern Washington University, Spokane FACULTY Kay King - Office of Guardianship & Elder Services -- Administrative Office of the Courts, Olympia 
By: 
Washington State Bar Association Legal Lunchbox Series Legal Lunchbox Series
Credits:
Washington State: 1.50 Law & Legal Procedure
Cost:
Free to all members of the Washington State Bar Association.
More Information and Registration

Monday, October 4, 2021

October 29: Perfect Paralegal Assistance with Witnesses on the Stand at Trial

Witness testimony is often the most unpredictable part of trial, however it is the key to winning for your client.
The credibility of each witness is crucial to the evidence they present and a prepared paralegal gives their attorney an advantage when it comes to protecting or dismantling it. A seamless presentation of documents, exhibits and demonstrative aids provides cogent witness testimony. This presentation will provide paralegals with the knowledge needed to help manage witness testimony and to be their attorney’s secret weapon at trial.
Title:
Perfect Paralegal Assistance with Witnesses on the Stand at Trial
Date/Time:
Friday October 29, 2021
Noon Eastern Time
Via Zoom - Register Now!
Speaker:
Attorney and Army Veteran Joseph E. Brooks, Managing Partner, Brooks Law.
Credit:
1 Credit Hour (Florida)
.

November 4: Most Common Mistakes Litigators Make That Damage Their Chances On Appeal

This program will discuss the most common mistakes litigators make that damage their later chances on appeal.
Title:
Most Common Mistakes Litigators Make That Damage Their Chances On Appeal
Webinar Date+Time:
Thursday, November 4th, 2021
3:00 pm to 4:30 pm
Attendance is Limited - Register Now!
Speaker:
Ben Feuer is the chairman of the California Appellate Law Group. Deemed one of the “top appellate litigators in California” by a national news network, Ben regularly represents large and small businesses, individuals, and associations, plaintiffs, defendants, and amici, in the California appellate courts, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, and the U.S. Supreme Court. He leads and consults on high-stakes appeals and writs, including bet-the-company commercial disputes, multimillion-dollar tort actions, major real estate controversies, high-net worth family law litigation, and novel constitutional law challenges.
By:
The Attorney Action Club is a network of San Francisco Bay Area lawyers who host monthly topical discussions on attorney work life balance and law practice management.
Cost:
Free; registration is limited
Credit:
California: 1 MCLE credit; You may be able to self-apply for other jurisdictions.