April 27, 2011
Jennifer NelsonThe Indiana Supreme Court agreed with the lower appellate court that a man’s truck shouldn’t have been lost in
a civil forfeiture action because the state didn’t prove any substantial connection between the truck and the commission
of a crime.
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April 27, 2011
Jenny MontgomeryLawyers say fitness and networking are among the perks of traveling to the office on two wheels.
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April 27, 2011
Jenny MontgomeryThe message from lawyers, lawmakers, and educators is clear: Civic education is suffering, and along with it, our country.
But no one seems certain how to convince people to care about civics.
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April 25, 2011
Michael HoskinsIn a case of first impression in this state, the Indiana Court of Appeals has determined that BP Products North America Inc.'s
petroleum refinery plant in northern Indiana isn’t a public utility as defined by state statute when it acts as a sort
of conduit and provides natural gas and other services such as steam and wastewater to other private companies nearby.
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April 22, 2011
Michael HoskinsThe Indiana Supreme Court late Thursday reversed a decision from a Lake Superior judge and put a nonpartisan school board
member back on the ballot for the Hammond mayoral run in the upcoming primary election.
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April 20, 2011
Kelly LucasSeveral bills that may alter the look of the Indiana judiciary await final approval during the waning days of the 2011 legislative
session.
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April 15, 2011
IL StaffThe Allen Superior Court Criminal Division is accepting applications for the magistrate judge position that will open up after
Magistrate Judge Robert J. Schmoll retires. Magistrate Schmoll was appointed to the bench in January 1995.
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April 15, 2011
IL StaffOn Tuesday, two panels of Indiana Court of Appeals judges will travel north to hear arguments.
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April 13, 2011
Michael HoskinsA suspended attorney has pleaded guilty to stealing $283,000 from his clients during dozens of transactions.
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April 13, 2011
Jennifer NelsonAn attorney doesn’t have to produce documentation of the amount of money a former client owes in order to have a valid
retaining lien, ruled the Indiana Court of Appeals.
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April 13, 2011
Rebecca Berfanger, Jenny MontgomeryAttorneys in Indiana know that they must meet certain ongoing requirements to maintain their law licenses: CLE hours, and
staying abreast of procedural changes. Why, then, would anyone want to be licensed in two states?
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April 13, 2011
Jenny MontgomeryStudents from Valparaiso University School of Law worked with public defenders in New Orleans during their spring break.
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April 13, 2011
Michael HoskinsThe Indiana attorney general’s office doesn’t think the former East Chicago mayor hit with a $108 million racketeering
judgment stemming from public corruption should be able to avoid paying back that amount by declaring bankruptcy.
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April 1, 2011
Michael HoskinsA Lake Superior judge may not be breaking any new legal ground with an election-related ruling this week, but he’s set
the stage for an appeal that could clear up confusion about whether nonpartisan school board members must give up their right
to run for a public office that requires the candidate to declare their political party affiliation.
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March 30, 2011
Michael HoskinsThe Indiana Court of Appeals has reversed a trial judge on a land use dispute between two sets of neighbors, finding that
the clear meanings of “ingress" and "egress” do not include parking as two of the Porter County residents
had argued based on past caselaw.
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March 30, 2011
IL StaffFollowing a two-year reconstruction, Valparaiso University School of Law’s oldest building – Heritage Hall –
has become the newest learning space for law students.
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March 29, 2011
Michael HoskinsWith one judge frustrated that Indiana residents and students may have been “hornswoggled” by a college’s
advertisements about being accredited, the Indiana Court of Appeals has upheld an order compelling arbitration on a claim
that three students were fraudulently induced to enroll because of misrepresentation about that accreditation.
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March 25, 2011
Michael HoskinsAdding to what it has already done in targeting two “notario publicos” for illegally offering immigration services,
the Indiana Attorney General’s Office has now filed a criminal Unauthorized Practice of Law charge and several tax evasion
counts against one of those non-lawyers who was operating in Indianapolis.
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March 24, 2011
IL StaffThe Indiana Court of Appeals travels to Valparaiso University Monday to hear oral arguments in a criminal case.
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March 16, 2011
Michael HoskinsWhen a former town council member in northern Indiana was sentenced to county jail for two months on a misdemeanor battery
conviction, he didn’t realize that experience would take away his right to vote.
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March 16, 2011
Rebecca BerfangerMinority bar associations continue to benefit the Indiana legal community by offering diverse perspectives. Members benefit
from networking opportunities, and the bars help to maintain a positive professional presence in the communities they serve.
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March 10, 2011
Michael HoskinsThe Indiana Attorney General’s Office filed a pair of civil consumer deception lawsuits Wednesday against two non-attorneys
for offering immigration services that constitute the unauthorized practice of law.
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March 8, 2011
Michael HoskinsReversing her decision from a month ago, a federal trustee has determined that former East Chicago Mayor Robert Pastrick’s
income is not too high to qualify for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and his filing should not be considered to be an abuse of the process.
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February 28, 2011
Jennifer NelsonIn a case of first impression, the Indiana Court of Appeals concluded that a landowner who raises the subterranean water table
on his land and creates a federally regulated wetland may not invoke the common enemy doctrine of water diversion and be shielded
from liability to adjoining landowners whose properties as a result become federally regulated wetlands.
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February 28, 2011
IL StaffGov. Mitch Daniels made three judicial appointments, filling vacancies in Howard, Jay, and Wells county courts.
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Jack, I was only responding to bill's comment of tying everybody in government together. I agree with you though, it takes one bad apple to ruin the bunch.. As in any profession. What's truly unfair is when somebody violates someone's trust and takes complete advantage of someone
John’s comment is unfair. The majority of attorneys can be trusted. Unfortunately, all it takes is one greedy, unscrupulous, immoral attorney to jade the public.
In regards to bill's comment about trusting the cover meant. We can trust them about as much as we can trust attorneys'.
This is disturbing to learn...
Yikes!