![]() |
||||||||||||||||||||
|
Eric Turkewitz, The Turkewitz Law Firm, New York, NY |
||||||||||||||||||||
Tuesday, December 22, 2009The Year in Review Today I take a look back at some of my favorite posts of 2009. In doing so, I'd also like to thank a few sites for the many readers they sent my way. These include Above the Law, Overlawyered, Law.com, and Simple Justice. There were many, many others, of course, but these sites were not only a generous source of inbound links, but between them represent a remarkable diversity of focus.Generally speaking, posts that were more national in scope drew more readers. It is hardly surprising that my more New Yorkcentric posts didn't make the cut, and you'll see that reflected in the list below. Below is smattering of favorites, based partly on page views, and partly on personal whim: New York's Anti-Solicitation Rule Allows For Ethics Laundering and Must Be Modified (1/22/09): This posting discusses how the anti-solicitation rule can be circumvented and why it causes First Amendment problems in certain circumstances due to the breadth of its definition of solicitation. Indeed, under the rules, this very posting could qualify as an ethical violation as I use the US Airways Flight 1549 splash landing in the Hudson River as a case example on how the solicitations can occur. In fact, the ethics rule is so full of holes that it would sink in a true disaster...Twitter and the Age of Information Overload (1/25/09): The internet and the burgeoning social networks that it has spawned have made it possible to acquire information in ways that our parents never envisioned. Information now pours over the transom in an unprecedented deluge, being pushed and pulled in myriad ways.Buffalo Plane Crash WILL Test New York's New Anti-Solicitation Rules (2/13/09) When I wrote three weeks ago about the possibility of the Hudson River splash landing testing New York's 30-day anti-solicitation rules for attorneys, I did it with a question mark and with one eye firmly on the fact that it ended very well for the people on board the plane. It even ended well for the bar, as I found only one firm that appeared to violate the ethics rule. It also led me to explore, while the Second Circuit considered the issues of New York's new rules, the myriad ways that ethics laundering can take place with lawyers hiring attorney search services to solicit, or running "articles" on their web sites about the crash.Do Attorney Anti-Solicitation Rules Work? (A Brief Analysis of Three Disasters) (2/26/09): The ads are gone. All of them. In the wake of the crash of Continental 3407 near Buffalo I tracked seven different law firms using Google Adwords to advertise for victims, and every ad has now disappeared. ...New York's No-Fault Mess (Do Our Judges Want Doctors To Go To Law School?) (3/5/09): New York's No-Fault law is out of control. It seems to have reached the point where judges are almost demanding one of two things from injured patients: That their doctors get legal tutoring on how to write reports that will satisfy the judiciary, or alternatively, that injured patients seek treatment from only those doctors that already know how to write medical-legal reports...The Cross-Examination of Jim Cramer (3/13/09) Around the country, Jon Stewart is winning plaudits for his devastating debate with Jim Cramer on The Daily Show, after a week of ripping CNBC up, down and sideways for their utter failure to see the Great Recession coming on, while claiming to be the experts of the financial world. Stewart is winning those plaudits (and perhaps an Emmy?) not just for the interview, but for a week-long skewering of financial talking heads who pretend to know the future of the markets.As Seen on Oprah! (Kinda, Sorta, Almost) (3/17/09) Oprah is big. I know this because my media maven wife tells me so. She has, like, a jillion fans and even more money. I've never actually seen her strut her stuff on her show, but a jillion fans (and even more money) can't really be wrong, can they? Boston Marathon (Drinking Beer, Kissing Wellesley Women and Abstract Journeys) (4/21/09) (Amtrak - northbound, April 18) Every adventure starts with a journey. As I leave my wife and kids behind I experience that rarest of moments -- leaving town by myself when it isn't for business. As the steel wheels rumble underneath me heading north toward Boston, I slip on the iPod and tune in Arlo...Susan Boyle's Voice, and the Lessons for Trial Attorneys (4/22/09) If you haven't heard of unemployed, 47-year old Susan Boyle taking the stage in a British talent shows and blowing the doors off the joint by now, you've probably been living under a rock. The expectations were as low as can be for the rather plain (some say homely) looking woman who, it turns out, had the voice of an angel.Gloria Allred v. OctoMom (What's a "Celebrity Lawyer?") (5/4/09) Now I understand what a matrimonial lawyer is. And I know what an entertainment lawyer is. And certainly what a personal injury lawyer is.The SCOTUS Nominee and the Tissue Box Test (5/12/09): I want a nominee that knows what it's like to have someone cry in their office. I want a nominee that has been there when someone tells them that their mother/father/brother/daughter was arrested/injured/killed and that they are desperate for help.I Hate My Website (5/26/09): It isn't the style or functionality of my website that I hate, it's my writing. The site is my firm's electronic brochure and it's designed so that folks in need of a personal injury attorney can find it and consider retaining my firm. But creating such a website is a real problem because of three conflicting concepts...Did Sotomayor Violate NY Ethics Rules in Private Solo Practice with "& Associates" Name? (6/4/09) Now Sotomayor was a prosecutor up until 1984 and started in April of that year with Pavia & Hartcourt, according to the questionnaire. That means she had her private law firm, likely a home office based on her modest description of the practice, that overlapped both her prosecutor's position and her associate's position at Pavia & Hartcourte. So the question here is not whether she had permission to have that private firm, as I suspect she must have, but rather, why she called it Sotomayor & Associates?Michael Jackson: The Mother of All Malpractice Suits? (6/26/09): With Michael Jackson's sudden death yesterday at 50 have come swirls of rumors about prescription medications he was taking for dancing related injuries. And if toxicology tests show over-medication being a substantial cause of death, that leads to the inevitable questions regarding potential medical malpractice as well as potential criminal liability.NYT: "Sotomayor & Associates" Becomes an Issue For Nominee and White House (7/7/09) On June 4th Sonia Sotomayor released an extensive, completed questionnaire about her past to the Senate, and I picked up on the fact that her solo law firm "Sotomayor & Associates" didn't have any actual associates. This raised an ethical issue, albeit a small one, because it was misleading to the public. The private firm overlapped both her time in the District Attorney's office and her time with her next gig, Pavia & Harcourt."Sotomayor & Associates" Under Senate Investigation ( A preview of 6 potential issues) (7/9/09) I was called yesterday by a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee's minority's legal staff regarding my postings on "Sotomayor & Associates" and potential ethics issues, and the subsequent New York Times article regarding the firm.10 Tips for Laid Off Lawyers (8/19/09) It may be a long time before the legal field recovers from the massive layoffs from this past year. Some folks could be out of work longer than imagined, and it appears that some may need a bit of help on what to do. As you can see from this utterly miserable description of life as a cast-off lawyer coding documents in the basement of BigLaw firms for $28/hr. (via ATL), there are some people with big time degrees that are trapped into thinking that BigLaw is all the law that exists.Medical Malpractice (So You Think You Know What It Is?) (9/11/09) So you think you know what medical malpractice is? Well, last week a panel of appellate judges in New York split on the subject in Friedman v. New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center...I'm a Super Lawyer! (Now What?) (10/8/09) A relative told me something that I already knew: That I had been selected as a personal injury Super Lawyer. They knew because it had been published by the New York Times.Blawg Review #236 (The Bogeyman Cometh) (11/2/9): The Bogeyman was pissed. And when The Bogeyman gets pissed, it's probably wise to listen.New Spam Comment Policy for Law Firms (You Will Be Exposed) (11/5/09) I'm getting tired of seeing spam in the comment area of my blog that comes from law firms and attorney search services. So if it comes in again I'm going to write a fresh post about them. I've done this a couple of times before but now I'm going to make a policy of it...Outsourcing Marketing = Outsourcing Ethics (5 Problems With Outsourcing Attorney Marketing) (11/16/09) Five months back there was a Metro train crash in Washington DC, and I watched from a distance to see who/how/where/when the web would be used by lawyers to find victims. And one of the things we saw was that one of the gazillion attorney search firms that infect the web was soliciting clients. Given that these search firms are agents of the lawyers, that raised the problem of attorneys using the web to solicit.Martindale-Hubbell Apologizes For Blog Spam; Suspends Spammer; Promises to Answer Questions (12/1/09) Martindale-Hubbell has apologized for blog spam left on my site, using the comments area of my prior post for that purpose. MH has also agreed to publicly answer questions about the incident...Tiger Woods: One Man Bar Exam (12/8/09) Tiger Woods is providing a feast of legal issues as he swiftly morphs from choir boy to bad boy. And in the process he opens up a veritable bar exam full of questions. Labels: Year In Review
The New York Personal Injury Law Blog is sponsored by its creator, Eric Turkewitz of The Turkewitz Law Firm. The blog might be considered a form of attorney advertising in accordance with New York rules going into effect February 1, 2007 (22 NYCRR 1200.1, et. seq.) As of July 14, 2008, Law.com became an advertiser, as you can see in the sidebar. Law.com does not control the editorial content of the blog in any way. Throughout the blog as it develops, you may see examples of cases we have handled, or cases from others, that are used for illustrative purposes. Since all cases are different, and legal authority may change from year to year, it is important to remember that prior results in any particular case do not guarantee or predict similar outcomes with respect to any future matter, including yours, in which any lawyer or law firm may be retained. Some of the commentary may be become outdated. Some might be a minority opinion, or simply wrong. No reader should consider this site (or any other) to be authoritative, and if a legal issue is presented, the reader should contact an attorney of his or her own choosing for advice. Finally, we are not responsible for the comments of others that may be added to this site.
|
Subscribe by Email
|
|||||||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|||||||||
![]() |
An Affiliate of the Law.com Network
|
![]() |
|||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
November 2006
December 2006
January 2007
February 2007
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
October 2007
November 2007
December 2007
January 2008
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008
August 2008
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008
December 2008
January 2009
February 2009
March 2009
April 2009
May 2009
June 2009
July 2009
August 2009
September 2009
October 2009
November 2009
December 2009
January 2010
February 2010
Copyright © 2007 Eric Turkewitz & The Turkewitz Law Firm
About the New York Personal Injury Law Blog:
An attorney's blog on New York personal injury law,
medical malpractice, the civil justice system
and cases of interest.
|
|
Design by Lidija Tomas Design / Studio 4D |