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Justice Department plows ahead with execution plan next week

July 8, 2020 | Associated Press and IL Staff

The Justice Department is plowing ahead with its plan to resume federal executions next week for the first time in more than 15 years, despite the coronavirus pandemic raging both inside and outside prisons and stagnating national support for the death penalty.

FBI investigating reported assault on Black man at Monroe Lake

July 8, 2020 | Associated Press

The FBI said Tuesday it’s investigating the reported assault of a Black man by a group of white men at a southern Indiana lake. Meanwhile, Bloomington police continue to look for the driver of a car that injured two people in a protest calling for arrests in the case.

Chief Justice Roberts recently hospitalized after fall

July 8, 2020 | Associated Press

Chief Justice John Roberts spent a night in a hospital last month after he fell and injured his forehead, a Supreme Court spokeswoman said Tuesday night.

Supreme Court sides with Catholic schools in employment suit

July 8, 2020 | Associated Press

The Supreme Court of the United States is siding with two Catholic schools in a ruling that underscores that certain employees of religious schools, hospitals and social service centers can’t sue for employment discrimination. The high court’s ruling on Wednesday was 7-2.

SCOTUS sides with Trump in religious birth control opt-out case

July 8, 2020 | Associated Press

The United States Supreme Court on Wednesday sided with the Trump administration in its effort to allow employers who cite religious or moral objections to opt out of providing no-cost birth control  to women as required by the Affordable Care Act.

Web Exclusive: Legislative study panels may be remote; emergency planning is focus

July 8, 2020 | Katie Stancombe

Changes could be coming to the way Indiana legislators convene this summer, as teleconferencing and virtual meetings become more commonplace in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Family ties: Reunification celebration spotlights families who achieve stability

July 8, 2020 | Marilyn Odendahl

Although many may be skeptical of parents whose children are removed from their care, statistics show that nearly 67% of Hoosier youths exit foster care and are successfully reunited with their moms and dads. Those stories of resilience inspired the Marion Superior Court Juvenile Division and the Marion County Public Defender Agency to celebrate National Reunification Month for the first time in Indiana.

Study: Public defenders get $5.16 an hour after overhead

July 8, 2020 | Marilyn Odendahl

A study by the Indiana Public Defender Commission is highlighting what officials say is a flawed system that encourages contract public defenders to increase their private caseload to cover their overhead costs, which eat the bulk of the compensation they receive for representing indigent defendants.

New territory: State courts prepare for return of jury trials

July 8, 2020 | Katie Stancombe

As Hoosier trial courts prepare for the return of in-person proceedings with COVID-19 precautions, many unanswered questions remain about the best practices for safely conducting jury trials.

Who’s watching you? Contact tracing protected by privacy laws despite public resistance

July 8, 2020 | Olivia Covington

Americans have encountered numerous new experiences during COVID-19, but contact tracing isn’t one of them. Long used to track diseases such as tuberculosis, contact tracing is described by experts as a “tried and true” public health tool. But as the scale of the tracing has ballooned during the pandemic, so has the distrust of the method.

Cost transparency efforts advance in medicine

July 8, 2020 | Associated Press and Olivia Covington

The Trump administration won a court ruling last month upholding its plan to require insurers and hospitals to disclose prices for common tests and procedures in a bid to promote competition and push down costs. The federal court decision comes as Indiana prepares to enact its own health care price transparency legislation next year.

Betz: Real, specific demands to confront systemic racism in Indiana

July 8, 2020 | Kevin Betz

The Black Lives Matter movement jolted us from our self-satisfied stasis. But to change things, we must do things. If silence is violence, then speaking without specifics is only nominally better. To bring the justice protesters so desire, it is time to recognize the deeply embedded systemic racism in Indiana and develop a list of specific demands to yield measurable results. The risk of not doing so is too great: the country simply cannot become further torn over racial injustice.

‘Back to work’ looks remotely different

July 8, 2020 | Olivia Covington

Like the rest of the state, lawyers aren’t heading back to the office all at once — in fact, some aren’t heading back at all. The new normal of “working from home” has become so engrained that firm leaders say they don’t expect their employees to return to the old lifestyle of commuting into the office every day.

IndyBar: Rent Our Facilities and Host Your Next Meeting at IndyBarHQ

July 8, 2020

The brand new IndyBarHQ facility, opened in 2020, boasts meeting spaces now available for reservation! Our flexible meeting rooms feature state-of-the art technology, reliable wi-fi connectivity and easy access via private street-level entrances.

DTCI: Finding gratitude for the practice of law in difficult times

July 8, 2020 | From DTCI

Practicing law occupies your mind. Being a lawyer has been described as a thinking job and not just a doing job. Lately the news around us has been horrible, and the decisions we face about tasks as simple as buying groceries have been daunting. In these times, I have found my law practice to be a welcome respite from the world around me.

Hammerle on… Baseball

July 8, 2020 | Robert Hammerle

“Field of Dreams” (1989) captures the essence of baseball. The immortal line, “If you build it, he will come,” will always reminds me of my late father. As kids, he played catch with me and my brothers in a field near our house, and I still see him waving at me when I drive by that location in Batesville. As baseball tries to play a short season, I am reminded of my love of the game.

JLAP: Of course I heard you. What did you say?

July 8, 2020

I’m a lawyer, so I’m a good communicator, right? Or at least I have been conditioned to believe that. In my own practice, I listen and respond to arguments all the time. Reflecting on my personal interactions, I would like to think that I take the time to look and listen to the person I am speaking with. So what more could I do? Doesn’t this mean I’m a good listener? If attorneys are supposedly so good at communicating, do I know what am I actually communicating when I interact with colleagues, coworkers and clients?

Indiana Court Decisions – June 18-30, 2020

July 8, 2020

Read Indiana appellate court decisions from the most recent reporting period.

IndyBar: Celebrate History — Nominate for the Antoinette Dakin Leach Award by August 7

July 8, 2020 | From IndyBar

Now more than ever, it’s important to remember what makes us unique and support one another. Each year, the Indianapolis Bar Association Women and the Law Division is proud to celebrate Antoinette Dakin Leach, who was the first woman admitted to the Indiana State Bar Association in 1909, by presenting an honor in her name to a trailblazing female attorney.

IndyBar: USPTO News: Expedited Review of Qualifying Pandemic-Related Trademark Applications

July 8, 2020 | From IndyBar

As of June 16, 2020, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) has implemented a new examination program to expedite trademark applications related to COVID-19 in light of the current economic circumstances caused by the global pandemic.

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In This Issue

  • Indiana State Bar Association leads new program to support rural attorneys

  • UPDATE: Senate set to vote on heavily amended immigration bill

  • Midwest firm accuses former partners of orchestrating mass staff exodus

Most Read
  • Firing squad, gas execution methods move out of Indiana House committee

  • House committee advances bill redefining hemp, putting Indiana on path to more restrictions

  • New habeas corpus strategy is freeing some immigrant detainees

  • Midwest firm accuses former partners of orchestrating mass staff exodus

  • Widow of Delaware County sheriff’s deputy files wrongful death lawsuit against trucking companies, drivers involved in fatal crash 

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