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Indiana Court Decisions – June 12-24, 2013
Read recent appellate decisions handed down by Indiana courts.
Hammerle on … ‘The East,’ ‘The Purge’
Bob Hammerle recommends you see “The East” to find out how domestic terrorists can be the good guys.
SCOTUS ruling limits worker harassment claims
The case of Vance v. Ball State University hinged on the definition of 'supervisor.'
Sidebars: Fort Wayne eatery provides tasty respite from depositions
We give Don Hall’s Old Gas House 3 gavels!
Federal Bar Update: Southern District starts pilot program for employment cases
The Southern District of Indiana has been experimenting this year with a pilot program for certain employment cases. The only eligible cases are individual Title VII, ADA and ADEA actions.
DTCI: New associates and their different work ethic
Renee Mortimer offers some advice to “Millennial” associates.
ACLU of Indiana celebrates 60 years of guarding founding principles
The organization was embroiled in controversy at its founding and continues to draw a leery, sometimes angry, response from the public. However, the group maintains that it fights solely for the rights provided in the U.S. and Indiana constitutions.
Bell/Gaerte: SCOTUS guides trial courts’ involvement in plea offers
In the last term, the United States Supreme Court, in Missouri v. Frye, 132 S. Ct. 1399 (2012), took a small step toward inviting trial courts into plea negotiations.
Settlement reached in Weinberger medical malpractice suits
Victims split $55 million, but some cases continue for former fugitive Merrillville ‘Nose Doctor.’
SCOTUS decides high-profile cases in term’s final weeks
The Supreme Court of the United States issued the final decisions of the 2012 term June 26. In addition to the Vance v. Ball State University ruling on the definition of “supervisor,” several of the decisions handed down during waning days of the term promise to have far-reaching impact.
Fireworks lawyers help clients with flying colors
Muncie attorney John H. Brooke has a flair for providing hands-on help to his clients in the fireworks business. Say someone’s unavailable at the last minute to fire off a town’s Fourth of July display. Brooke can handle that.
Orzeske: How to stay in good standing with your CLE requirements
The Commission for Continuing Legal Education encourages attorneys to be active in obtaining education and maintaining correct contact information.
Improving judicial professionalism starts in the classroom
The new requirement for judges to log more continuing education hours is not seen as burden.
Canny: CLE enables paralegals to learn, grow
Cathy Canny asks why is it any less important for paralegals to obtain continuing legal education as compared to attorneys.
More attorneys are turning to online programming to get CLE credit
Since 2006, Indiana attorneys have been allowed to count CLE classes offered over the Internet toward their total required continuing education hours. The popularity of online programs has been growing among lawyers primarily because of the convenience. Lawyers do not have to budget travel time into their schedules to attend a seminar.