Sentences with phrase «simple justice blog»

So let me understand this: Mr. Randazza decries the very same behavior that he supports in the blog postingss at the Simple Justice blog.
UPDATE: Scott Greenfield, a US defense lawyer and author of the Simple Justice blog, was kind enough to respond:
Our favorite reported quotes come from Greenfield, the author of the consistently good Simple Justice blog, who cast off this gem: â $ œGeneration Y uses this term life - balance as an excuse for their incompetence.â $
Scott Greenfield also discussed flawgs recently on his Simple Justice blog in a post entitled, The Year of the Flawg.
In response to Scott's post, a commenter on the Simple Justice blog noted that «Mike McQueary was a graduate student back then.
On Monday morning, Scott Greenfield added a post to his Simple Justice blog («5 Years») marking that prolific blog's five - year anniversary.
As pointed out here by Scott Greenfield on his Simple Justice blog, Gradeless appears to have found a way to monetize his massive following on Twitter through a service called Sponsored Tweets, which hooks «Tweeters» like Gradeless up with advertisers who want to reach their supposedly vast audiences (although as discussed here, a person's numbers of Twitter followers can be a pretty meaningless figure).
In his post on the case on the Simple Justice blog, criminal defense attorney Scott Greenfield agreed, writing that the fact that Jenkins was «being prosecuted because an incredibly ugly image on his body makes the cops feel angry and hurt, not to mention disrespected, goes well over the line.
While reading the Simple Justice blog today (it must have been an old post as I know I wrote a fond «Farewell to «Simple Justice» and Scott Greenfield» post back in February 2012 when Simple Justice shut down), I saw two references to young lawyers who tried placing free ads on Craigslist but ultimately rejected this business development tactic as undignified.
Today, Scott Greenfield added to this discussion on his Simple Justice blog, pointing out that big follower numbers continue to impress many Twitter users who lack «a clear understanding that followers on Twitter are too often named «Britney» or [are] themselves only interested in gathering as many followers as possible in their simplistic quest at marketing hegemony.»
Last week, Scott Greenfield wrote on his Simple Justice blog about a panel discussion that almost occurred at the Avvocating conference, put on by lawyer listings site Avvo, but never did.
This prompted a flurry of discussion in this post on the Simple Justice blog (written by [email protected], aka Scott Greenfield) and ultimately here on Legal Blog Watch as to the validity of Rule # 1033.

Not exact matches

Notable among them is Scott H. Greenfield, who at least tried Twitter (for a week) before condemning it in a post at his blog, Simple Justice.
For example, Ernie the Attorney graciously directed readers to vote for Appellate Blog or Overlawyered, while Scott Greenfield of Simple Justice urges colleagues to vote for anyone but him.
In both Elite Taxi and Uber France and in accordance with the Advocate General's Opinion in that first case (discussed previously on this blog), the Court of Justice rejected this line of defence, confirming that Uber itself, through its UberPOP application, offers more than simple intermediation.
Law.com bloggers and co-hosts J. Craig Williams and Robert Ambrogi welcome Kevin O'Keefe, CEO of LexBlog and owner of LexMonitor, and attorney Scott Greenfield, author of the blog Simple Justice, to discuss the pros and cons of Twitter and discuss whether it is a phenomenon or a necessity for lawyers and law firms.
So I asked Scott Greenfield who represented Bluestone (and who reported on the case at his blog, Simple Justice to comment on the implications of the decision for bloggers.
But anecdotally, I note that Hermann's curmudgeonly attitude toward blogging (which produced an invitation to the curmudgeon's club from Scott Greenfield of Simple Justice) also earned Hermann coverage in the popular WSJ Law Blog.
I can think of no better way to frame what I would like to say in this week's blog — on our monthly theme of «Clearer and Simpler Court Forms & Processes for SRLs» — than Mr. Justice David Brown's remarkable end - of - term speech to the Ontario Bar Association last week (2014.
Today's final installment of Blawg Review has spawned related posts at «Simple Justice,» «Defending People,» «The Trial Warrior Blog,» «My Law License,» «Popehat,» «New York Personal Injury Law Blog,» «Declarations and Exclusions,» «a public defender,» «Likelihood of Confusion,» «Charon QC,» and «Infamy or Praise.»
Finally, to paraphrase Scott Greenfield, author of the Simple Justice blawg: «Just because anyone can write a blog, doesn't mean everyone should.»
Not surprisingly, Scott Greenfield, the blogosphere's most prolific law blogger (if you don't believe me, then take a look at his monthly archives in the left menu bar of his blog) has done Simple Justice to Blawg Review # 170.
Among them are Marc Mayerson's now - defunct Insurance Scrawl, Howard Bashman's How Appealing, Curacao lawyer Karel Frielink's Karel's Legal Blog, Victoria Pynchon's Settle it Now Negotiation Blog, Scott Greenfield's Simple Justice, Ken Lammer's CrimLaw, Diane Levin's Mediation Channel, and Jeff Beard's LawTech Guru.
Simple Justice's Scott Greenfield expressed in an interview with Lexblog that he blogs for fun, not for the purpose of marketing himself.
-LSB-...] Posted by Kramer on June 3, 2009 Generation Y has a bad rap in the workplace these days. We're lazy, don't want to show up on time or actually do any work, and we expect to have the corner office from the day we walk in the door. And if law is your chosen field, you can't really do that. Over at his fine blog, Simple Justice, Scott Greenfield took issue with Gen Y lawyer and blogger Adrian Dayton, that Gen Y isn't really lazy, we just want our work to actually have a point.
His blog won the ABA Journal best criminal blog award in a hard won fight with Scott Greenfield's blog, Simple Justice — more of which later.
This is plain to see in his writings on his award - winning blog Simple Justice.
Scott Greenfield, who writes the brilliant Simple Justice, asked (via Twitter) bloggers to blog about programs that use wreaths to honor those who died in the service to their country.
Simple Justice - A Criminal Defense Blog New York About Blog This is a Criminal Defense Blog by Scott Greenfield providing legal advice on various cases.
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