This session will explore Fourth Amendment standards governing police uses of force as interpreted by the court in Tennessee v. Garner (1985) and Graham v. Connor (1989) and federal statutes that prohibit the unnecessary or excessive use of force.
Additionally, the attendees will be introduced to the Supreme Court cases that led to the Roe v. Wade decision and how the right to privacy played a key role in the Supreme Court's ruling.
In this session, viewers will become more effective in helping prepare for litigation and have a better understanding of what information can make it to the jury.
Attendees will learn the motives behind family members suing each other and how to successfully bring and defend a guardianship or trustee action for the client's best outcome.
Every day, smart assistants like Siri and Alexa respond to routine requests. Can the government compel disclosure of a user’s data in their smart devices? If so, under what circumstances?
Questions this course explores are what do we do as a people, as a society, and as key participants in the legal system if we can no longer believe and trust what we see or hear? What legal tools are there to deal with deepfakes?
This session will discuss the most common hurdles to effective outside counsel management from both sides of the legal coin (in-house and law firm) and how best to determine whether to stay in-house or use external support.
This course will cover how to collect text messages and other information from a cell phone, when you should do it yourself, and when an expert needs to be called in.
This course will help you become more confident in your foreign subpoena skills and set you up for becoming the go-to source in your firm for issuing out-of-state subpoenas.