Then he humbly made a reference to his work at
Simple Justice now being «part of the old, forgotten blawgosphere» (obviously not true), thanked everyone for reading and keeping him honest, linked to some video that I didn't watch about a dolphin «thanking everyone for all the fish,» and wrapped up post number 4,744.
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 Gu
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 Gu
Now Negotiation Blog, Scott Greenfield's
Simple Justice, Ken Lammer's CrimLaw, Diane Levin's Mediation Channel, and Jeff Beard's LawTech Guru.
After well over nine months, enough has been said and written about the Jackson reforms but little if any attention has been given to what
now seems to be a clear picture of the driving force behind these changes: civil
justice for personal injury claimants is to be rationed, based upon the
simple value of the claim rather than its substantive merits.