In This Issue of Indiana Lawyer

MAY 7-20, 2014

A recent Indiana attorney disciplinary order quickly has prompted some analysts to predict the ruling would have a chilling effect on lawyers here and around the country. But the case also involved pursuit of discipline that a court-appointed hearing officer called “disconcerting.” Some say the federal vacancies on the bench could last for years thanks to politics. Indiana Tech Law School has begun the accreditation process with the American Bar Association.

Top StoriesBack to Top

indianatech_2col.jpg

Indiana Tech begins ABA accreditation proccess

Indiana Tech Law School sent a letter in March notifying the ABA of its intent to seek accreditation and will submit a self-study in August which will explain what the school is about, where it wants to go and what challenges it faces. If the school does well it could have provisional approval by the end of the spring 2015 semester.

Read More

Lawyer disciplined over third-party site

A recent Indiana attorney disciplinary order quickly prompted some analysts to predict the ruling would have a chilling effect on lawyers here and around the country. But the case also involved pursuit of discipline that a court-appointed hearing officer called “disconcerting.”

Read More

FocusBack to Top

apb_jeffkosc_il03_2col.jpg

Law firms should be concerned about cybersecurity

The real dollars are paid on the black market for inside details about possible mergers and acquisitions, new public policy, and information about cutting-edge technology. In short, the kind of private, confidential information that many law firms hold in their client files.

Read More

OpinionBack to Top

DTCI: Invest in yourself to build practice and reputation

We have all noticed that there are a lot of lawyers. On top of that, there are a lot of lawyers with less work than they would like. Lawyering is a business and is controlled by traditional rules of commerce: supply, demand, pricing, quality, branding. Lawyers are the product. They are the brand.

Read More

Finney: 8 steps to evaluating and selecting your firm’s software

Oftentimes firms select software based upon performance during a software demonstration rather than evaluating what will provide the best results for specific firm needs. Finding the right software requires identification of job requirements including process workflows prior to selecting the tool.

Read More

Badger: Supreme Court will hear death records dispute

The Indiana Supreme Court will hear oral argument May 8 in a dispute over public access to county death records. The case, Evansville Courier & Press v. Vanderburgh County Health Department, raises the issue of whether a county health department’s death certificates, including the cause of death, are public records under the Indiana Access to Public Records Act.

Read More

Inside the Criminal Case: SCOTUS rules anonymous 911 call reliable

The Supreme Court of the United States recently held that an anonymous call to 911 was sufficient to initiate a traffic stop in certain specific circumstances. Navarette v. California, 2014 U.S. Lexis 2930 (2014). The decision set off a minor shockwave in the media with reports that the 5-4 opinion eroded Fourth Amendment protection.

Read More

In BriefBack to Top

Special SBack to Top

Disciplinary ActionsBack to Top

Bar AssociationsBack to Top

Abrams: Celebrating Law Day

May 1 is officially recognized as Law Day. The day is spent reflecting on the role of law in the pursuit of happiness in our everyday lives and recognizing the importance of law for our community.

Read More

IndyBar: Shortridge Students Witness Final Path to Citizenship

he journey to citizenship was experienced first-hand by students at the Shortridge Magnet School for Law and Public Policy as the school, the IndyBar Public Outreach Committee and the United States District Court for the Southern District of Indiana collaborated to host a naturalization ceremony on-site at the school Thursday, May 1.

Read More