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  • 06/27/2017 7:03 PM | Deleted user

    California Courts Newsroom 

     

    June 27, 2017

     

    Judicial Council Public Affairs

    415-865-7740

     

     

    Chief Justice Tani G. Cantil-Sakauye released the following statement after Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. signed the Budget Act for fiscal year 2017–2018:

     

    I am pleased with the provision for funding legal aid organizations and those attorneys representing foster children, but I remain disappointed that our underfunded court system did not receive more help. Chronic underfunding of the courts unfairly affects members of the public seeking their day in court. Trial courts receive a little more than a penny for every general fund tax dollar, and in the past the judicial branch has had funds swept to support the state budget during times of crisis. Now the courts have an ongoing funding crisis, new laws are added annually, there are more complex cases, but there is no stable funding solution for the judicial branch and the people we all serve.

     

    Related Links

  • 06/27/2017 7:02 PM | Deleted user

    California Young Lawyer's Asociation

     

    Understanding Attorney Trust Accounts with Robert Hawley, Deputy Director of The State Bar of California.

    Filmed at the 87th Annual Meeting of The State Bar of California in San Diego, CA.

     

     

     https://youtu.be/a3mU5IGMW5c

  • 06/27/2017 6:50 AM | Deleted user

    ABA Journal

     

    Posted Jun 26, 2017 03:36 pm CDT

    By Lee Rawles

     

    Homeless person.

     

     

    On Monday, the ABA announced the launch of the Homeless Youth Legal Network, meant to assist with the needs of homeless youth and the attorneys and social work groups who serve them.

     

    The network is a project of the ABA Coordinating Committee on the Legal Needs of Homeless Youth, and involves more than 20 ABA entities. It’s meant to serve three groups: homeless youth seeking legal assistance; lawyers seeking special training or technical assistance to work with homeless youth; and service providers who work with homeless youth. It is intended to help children, teens and young adults through the age of 25.

     

    “The Homeless Youth Legal Network is a fine example of how the American Bar Association can link youth experiencing homelessness with experts in the legal community who can help,” ABA President Linda A. Klein said in a press release. “This project, made possible with a grant from the ABA Enterprise Fund, shows how we can harness the power and reach of the ABA to improve access to justice by providing much-needed legal assistance to vulnerable populations.”

     

    According to researchers, nearly 8 percent of all children and teens experience homelessness at some point, the ABA reports. Homeless youth can need legal help to access benefits, education, employment, health care, housing, identification, treatment and services. The Homeless Youth Legal Network will also address civil legal needs and juvenile and criminal defense needs.

     

    In addition to a new website, the Homeless Youth Legal Network has conducted surveys of more than 300 individuals and groups about the legal needs of homeless children and teens, and compiled a group email list which currently boasts 250 members. It has also identified 12 model programs nationwide which will “document best practices, serve as models for replication, provide technical assistance to emerging programs and share data on legal barriers and improved outcomes resulting from legal advocacy.” This will also inform the training courses which the Homeless Youth Legal Network will offer for legal service providers and people running homelessness programs.

     

    If you are interested in getting involved in the Homeless Youth Legal Network, joining the email list or if you know someone who could benefit from its services, more information is available at the new website.

      

    http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/aba_launches_homeless_youth_legal_network
  • 06/26/2017 5:22 AM | Deleted user

    ABA Journal

     

    Posted Jun 23, 2017 02:00 pm CDT

    By Marella Gayla, The Marshall Project

     

     

    There’s something of a formula to the first morning of jury duty. It might involve a refresher on differences between civil and criminal cases, a little bit of shuffling between rooms, and a lot of waiting around in a generously named “Jury Lounge.” But in one federal district, the customary civics lessons for jurors have been given a twist to alert them to the hidden biases they might bring into the courtroom.

     

    The source is an 11-minute video—believed to be the first of its kind—that since March has been shown to every prospective juror in the two federal courthouses, in Seattle and Tacoma, that serve the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington.

     

    The video—which cost the court $15,000 to make—complements the customary voir dire process, during which judges and lawyers question potential jurors about conflicts of interest and obvious prejudices that could prevent them from deliberating fairly. It features three speakers: the district’s U.S. Attorney Annette Hayes, Reagan-appointed Judge John Coughenour, and Jeffery Robinson, deputy legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union who started his career as a criminal defense lawyer.

     

    “You might have a deep-seated belief that basketball is a better sport than football, and you may prefer strawberry to raspberry jam,” Robinson says in the video, describing examples of conscious—or explicit—bias. “Today, though,” he says, speaking slowly and looking directly into the camera, “I want to talk to you about unconscious bias: something we all have, simply because we’re human.”

     

    Robinson, who spearheaded the project, said that alerting jurors to their underlying prejudices was a “no-brainer,” citing decades of research on the role of unconscious racial biases in “every aspect of American society,” from hiring practices to policing. “You have two choices: either talk about it or don’t talk about it, and haven’t we seen what happens when we don’t talk about it?” said Robinson. “If it goes unchecked, implicit bias will run rampant.”

     

    Though no particular case in his decades-long career incited his passion for the issue, Robinson said he has seen many jurors who “trust police officers implicitly” and hopes that those who do may reconsider their assumptions.

     

    “If you’re a white person and the only time you see a police officer is when he helps you with a flat tire or responds when someone steals your stereo, you have one view of the police,” Robinson said. Jurors who are distrustful of the police, he said, might be dismissed for being unfair. “Why would trusting the police make you more fair in a criminal case?”

     

    Seattle-area lawyers and judges have generally praised the video tutorial, but its use remains at the discretion of trial judges, according to the court clerk, William McCool. And this week, for what is believed to be the first time since the video became part of the routine, it was barred by a judge in the case of Leonard Thomas, a black man who was shot and killed by a police SWAT team after a standoff at his home four years ago.

     

    The judge, Barbara Rothstein, ruled on Tuesday that the video would be “simply too prejudicial,” especially because the plaintiffs intended to argue that the officers were affected by racial bias when they shot Thomas. Objections to the video had been raised by the officers’ legal team in the wrongful death civil lawsuit.

     

    Brian Augenthaler, a lawyer for the officers, argued that watching the video could lead jurors to believe that his clients shot Thomas because of an unconscious bias against black people. This was especially so, he asserted, because Robinson is a well-known civil rights attorney who had once served on the ACLU’s board of directors with one of the plaintiffs’ lawyers.

     

    Although the video has been well-received, its effectiveness has yet to be evaluated. The body of research on implicit bias has expanded greatly in the last three decades, but there seems to be little consensus about ways to curb discriminatory behavior.

     

    Patricia Devine, a social psychologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, is an expert in the study of racial bias and the unconscious effect of stereotypes. She said the court’s method of “tuning jurors into their biases” is a generally sound approach, though it’s hard to predict how well it will work without some experimental testing. “They’re giving them generally good advice,” Devine said. “But they’re not doing research.”

     

    Although few scholars reject the concept of implicit bias, some are less confident about controlling discriminatory behavior. Calvin Lai, a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard’s Project Implicit lab, has studied hundreds of bias-reduction techniques and has found that most of them were unlikely to cause lasting shifts in behavior. Getting people to “self-regulate” their prejudices, he said, is difficult.

     

    “Simply understanding that your biases exist doesn’t necessarily mean you’re going to stop yourself from acting on them in the moment,” Lai said. “I might know in some abstract way that eating cheeseburgers is bad for my health, but in the moment, I’m not thinking about that. I just want to eat my cheeseburger.”

     

    The Washington federal court’s project is part of a broader effort to minimize the expression of unconscious bias in the courtroom. The American Bar Association, for example, posted guidelines for creating an impartial jury on its website (PDF), complete with recommended orientation materials and examples of jury instructions that directly address the issue of implicit bias.

     

    In the UCLA Law Review, Jerry Kang, a law professor who is the school’s vice chancellor for equity, diversity and inclusion, and some of his colleagues wrote that implicit bias education was likely to do more good than harm, and that such strategies are worth a try, even if there is little scholarship on their effectiveness in practice.

     

    Robinson, who helped initiate the Washington program, says he’s confident that it’s a step in the right direction. “When people ask if it works, I can say without question that it works better than saying nothing.”

     

    This article was originally published by The Marshall Project, a nonprofit news organization covering the U.S. criminal justice system. Sign up for their newsletter, or follow The Marshall Project on Facebook or Twitter

     

     

    http://www.abajournal.com/news/article/a_federal_court_asks_jurors_to_confront_their_hidden_biases

     

     

  • 06/26/2017 5:21 AM | Deleted user

    The State Bar of California 

     

     

    Family Law Section

    Credit(s): 1 Legal Specialization in Family Law
    1 Participatory MCLE Credits
    Course Number: FL_7-6-17
    Original Program Date: July 6, 2017
    Duration: 1 hour
    Access: Available for 3 months after purchase
    Date:

    July 6, 2017
    12:00 PM - 1:00 PM (Pacific)

     

    Cost: $55.00

     

     The California Supreme Court determined in People v. Sanchez that a testifying expert’s opinion may be based on otherwise inadmissible hearsay but that the underlying hearsay cannot be admitted for the truth of its content through the testimony of the expert. The panelists here will discuss the implications of People v. Sanchez in family law proceedings and practice tips to address those implications.

     

    Faculty:

    Hon. Dianna Gould-Saltman

    Stephen A. Kolodny   

    Abbas Hadjian, Moderator

    Leena S. Hingnikar, Moderator

    Contact us at (877) 880-1335


     Email Us

     

  • 06/26/2017 5:20 AM | Deleted user

    The State Bar of California

     

     

    Labor & Employment Section

     

    Credit(s): 1 Participatory MCLE Credits
    Course Number: LL_7-18-17
    Original Program Date: July 18, 2017
    Duration: 1 hour
    Access: Available for 3 months after purchase
    Date: July 18, 2017
    12:00 PM - 1:00 PM (Pacific)

     

    Cost: $55.00 

     

     Employers increasingly include collective and class action waivers in their arbitration agreements to avoid potentially lengthy and costly litigation. Employees increasingly see their state and federal court lawsuits removed to individual arbitration. Various courts are split on whether this type of waiver is lawful. Some administrative agencies find these waivers unlawful or take the position they are unenforceable. The United States Supreme Court will take up the issue in their October 2017 term in three consolidated cases, EPIC SYSTEMS CORP. V. LEWIS, ERNST & YOUNG LLP V. MORRIS, and NLRB V. MURPHY OIL USA. Will the Supreme Court’s decision impact litigation strategies in class action or other collective actions? Will it impact the rights of employees to pursue class or collective claims with the courts or with administrative agencies such as the NLRB?

     

    Faculty: 

     

    Jill Coffman

    Michael Robin

    Walter Stella

    Christy Kwon, Moderator

     

    Contact: 877-880-1335


     

  • 06/26/2017 5:19 AM | Deleted user

    The State Bar of California

     

     

    Intellectual Property Law Section, International Interest Group

     

    Credit(s): 1 Participatory MCLE Credits
    Course Number: IP_7-19-17
    Original Program Date: July 19, 2017
    Duration: 1 hour
    Access: Available for 3 months after purchase
    Date:

    July 19, 2017

    2:00 PM - 1:00 PM (Pacific)

     

     

    Cost: $55.00

     

    Two recent Supreme Court decisions, TC Heartland and Lexmark , are significant to the patent landscape because of the Supreme Court’s extraterritorial jurisdiction of U.S. IP Law. The presentation will examine the recent developments on the issue of how foreign conduct can be ensnarled by U.S. IP laws. The webinar will also provide an analysis of how these decisions impact international businesses, particular with strategy in dealing with NPE litigation as well as a thoughtful consideration of supply chain issues and transfer of goods between subsidiaries of an international corporation.

     

    Faculty: 

    Thane Bauz

    David Tseng, Moderator

     

     Contact us at (877) 880-1335


     Email Us

     
  • 06/26/2017 5:18 AM | Deleted user

    The State Bar of California 

     

    Intellectual Property Law Section, Copyright Interest Group

     

     

    Credit(s): 1 Participatory MCLE Credits
    Course Number: IP_7-25-17
    Original Program Date: July 25, 2017
    Duration: 1 hour
    Access: Available for 3 months after purchase
    Date: July 25, 2017
    12:00 PM - 1:00 PM (Pacific)

    Cost: $55.00

     

     

    When ReDigi launched its first beta in 2011 it set out to do something truly remarkable--set up the world’s first online "drop box" for people to exchange and trade unwanted digital media. Less than a year later, Capitol Records sued ReDig, kicking off litigation that would seek to define what Copyright's First Sale Doctrine would mean in the digital age. In this webinar you'll hear from one of ReDigi's attorneys to learn about the history of the case so far and glimpse into what the future of the First Sale Doctrine may look like.

     

    Faculty:

     

    Bob Welsh focuses his practice on intellectual property, entertainment, and first amendment issues. Bob crafts innovative solutions to his clients' cases using his analytical background and depth of experience with a fresh, unique perspective. He has a wide range of experience ranging from representation of record companies and a record company trade association (for which Bob received an Honorary Gold Record from RIAA for obtaining the "largest civil settlement in RIAA history") to representation of a children's television broadcaster against state and federal claims brought by the producer of a television series, and obtained a defense verdict. He is currently Of Counsel at Baker Hostetler in Los Angeles.

     

    Teri Karobonik, Moderator

     

    Contact us at (877) 880-1335


    Email Us

  • 06/26/2017 5:17 AM | Deleted user

    The State Bar of California

     

    Labor & Employment Law Section

     

     

    Credit(s): 1 Legal Specialization in Immigration & Nationality Law
    1 Participatory MCLE Credits
    Course Number: LL_7-25-17
    Original Program Date: July 25, 2017
    Duration: 1 hour
    Access: Available for 3 months after purchase
    Date: July 25, 2017
    11:00 AM - 12:00 PM (Pacific)

    Cost: $55.00

     

    In this anti-immigrant political climate, plaintiff’s lawyers must be mindful that unscrupulous employers may use immigration status to exploit workers.  California has some of the most expansive worker protection laws that prohibit unlawful discrimination and retaliation based on immigration status or the threat of reporting immigration status.  This webinar will provide practitioners with a summary of those California statutes and provide a summary of rights and remedies available to immigrant workers under California law.

     

    Faculty:

     

    Sandra Munoz

    Law Offices of Sandra Munoz

     

    Monica Guizar, Moderator

    Weinberg, Roger & Rosenfeld

     

     

    Contact us at (877) 880-1335


    Email Us

      
  • 06/24/2017 12:15 AM | Deleted user

    A report from the 2015 - 2016 San Mateo County Civil Grand Jury

     

    ISSUE

     

    The San Mateo County Law Library has steadfastly served the residents and legal community of San Mateo County for 100 years. Its continued success in providing legal information to the residents of San Mateo County is in serious jeopardy due to its current inadequate funding structure. What can be done to improve this situation?

     

     

    http://www.smclawlibrary.org/about/Law%20Library%20Report%202016.pdf 

     

     

     



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