Legal Commentary
: Counsel to CounselKeep it in Your Pocket
Never look at your blackberry during a job interview. It's rude! That's the advice in this week's Advice for the Lawlorn (free subscription required.)
Full post as published by Counsel to Counsel on July 14, 2008 (boomark / email).

The Pocket Part: 2007 Highlights
The Pocket Part is bringing back some of our most popular and influential issues of the year...
Do lawyers now need to know all about web searching and wikis?
Perhaps the only thing I took away from the my law school legal research class a couple decades ago was that I should always remember to check the pocket part for new developments...
The Yale Law Journal Pocket Part: Marilyn Monroe?s Legacy: Taxation of Postmortem Publicity Rights
Joshua Tate revisits an April 2008 essay in The Yale Law Journal Pocket Part by Mitchell Gans, Bridget Crawford, and Jonathan Blattmachr, who argued that recent state legislation recognizing postmortem publicity rights fails to take into account the likely estate tax consequences...
Video: Pocket Machine Gun to Take the Mass Out of Massacre
Only recently, the world was given the first two-inch gun. Now, for those looking for more firepower but less bulk, there is the pocket machine gun...
The Yale Law Journal Pocket Part: Citing the Transcript of Oral Argument: Which Justices Do It and Why
The behavior of the Justices during oral argument has always fascinated Supreme Court watchers...
Yale Law School Pocket Part Calls For Papers
The Yale Law Journal Pocket Part is soliciting commentaries and essays related to the legal issues presented by virtual worlds and economies...
It is my understanding that the 6th Amendment requires, that if you can't afford a lawyer in a criminal case, the Court must provide a lawyer in your defense at no charge to you. However, in a civil case no such protecti
That is not entirely true, even in the case of criminal cases. The court will pr...

It is my understanding that the 6th Amendment requires, that if you can't afford a lawyer in a criminal case, the Court must provide a lawyer in your defense at no charge to you. However, in a civil case no such protecti
That is not entirely true, even in the case of criminal cases. The court will pr...








