Legal Research on the Internet

Saturday, December 21, 2019  10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.

Learn how to evaluate and use free sources of legal information online. This class also introduces select low cost websites for researching California and federal law.

Class covers:

  • How to search for bills, codes, regulations, and case law
  • Sources for Los Angeles City and County law and government
  • General legal research sites, including Google Scholar and FindLaw for Legal Professionals
  • Legal research tips
  • Hands-on exercises

Registration fees: $20 for the class
Non-refundable, payment reserves spot

No legal advice:
LA Law Library provides access to legal resources and assistance with legal research. LA Law Library does not provide legal advice. For legal advice, you should consult an attorney.

ON DEMAND: MCLE: Writing for Judicial Eyes (Without Reinventing the Wheel!)

Class recorded January 14, 2021

Writing and presenting legal arguments is the essence of an attorney’s job, but it’s often hard to know where to start and what tools are available to give you a leg up. In this class, learn how to leverage judicial tentative rulings – not just the ruling on your matter, but the rulings written by your judge in other cases over time – to help give you and your client an edge in law and motion practice.     

Class covers:

  • How tentative rulings can provide insight into how a particular judge reasons and rules
  • How to use this information to jumpstart, hone, and clarify your legal arguments, and save time
  • Insights into the tentative ruling process from a former L.A. Superior Court law clerk
  • Tools available to help you find and analyze judges’ past tentative rulings

Earn 1 hour participatory California general MCLE credit: After registration, a staff member will email you the course materials, an evaluation form, and your Certificate of Attendance (usually the next business day). Register first, then watch the recording to the end and answer the questions provided in the popup to verify your attendance.

Registration fee: $20
Non-refundable

Presented by Crawford Appleby, with Maria E. Hall:

Crawford Appleby is an attorney at the Los Angeles office of Baum, Hedlund, Aristei & Goldman, PC, and the founder of rulings.law, a free digital tool that makes tentative rulings searchable. He previously served as an L.A. Superior Court law clerk. He is a 2013 graduate of Loyola Law School.

Maria E. Hall’s practice focuses on civil rights, environmental justice, and representing tenants in actions against landlords, as well as real estate and business litigation and transactions. She has served as Vice President of the Mexican American Bar Association, and Co-President of the L.A. chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, and currently serves as Attorney Development Director for the L.A. Incubator Consortium.

ON DEMAND: MCLE: Practice Wisdom: Or, the Things they Should Teach You in Law School But Don't

Class recorded January 13, 2021

It’s often said that you don’t really learn how to practice law until you get into your first few years of practice – but what do you learn in those first few years? And, what should you continue to learn in the years that follow? In this class, learn how to hone those vital but overlooked “soft skills” that you don’t get in law school.     

Class covers:

  • How experienced attorneys navigate office environments, client interactions, and the courtroom – and how to emulate their success
  • Which questions to ask about how things really work
  • How to generate professional opportunities, and which opportunities to take advantage of
  • How to stay focused on what you want to achieve in a given interaction
  • How experienced lawyers approach litigation, and the value of “negative space”

Earn 1 hour participatory California general MCLE credit: After registration, a staff member will email you the course materials, an evaluation form, and your Certificate of Attendance (usually the next business day). Register first, then watch the recording to the end and answer the questions provided in the popup to verify your attendance.

Registration fee: $20
Non-refundable payment.

Presented by Karen A. Rooney and Vince M. Verde:

Karen Rooney has over 30 years of litigation experience, mostly in employment-related claims, including extensive trial and arbitration experience. Ms. Rooney served on the Board of the L.A. County Bar Association Attorney Referral Service and has volunteered as a mediator with both the Bar Association and the L.A. County Superior Court. She received her J.D., magna cum laude, from the University of San Diego School of Law.

Vince Verde is the head of Ogletree Deakins’ Trial Practice Group. He is a litigator and former prosecutor with extensive jury and non-jury trial experience in multiple jurisdictions, in single and multi-plaintiff actions. He was honored with the Philippine American Bar Association’s Trailblazer Award, and served as appellate counsel in several cases resulting in published opinions. He is a graduate of Boston University School of Law.

ON DEMAND: MCLE: Ethical Implications of Artificial Intelligence in the Practice of Law

Class recorded January 21, 2021

Artificial Intelligence (AI) technology holds the potential to revolutionize the practice of law and help to close the access to justice gap for those who cannot afford traditional legal representation. However, the ethical implications of lawyers using AI are not always clear or straightforward. In this class, learn how to navigate the ethics around an important part of the future of legal practice.

Class covers:

  • What is Artificial Intelligence (AI), and how is it currently used in the legal industry?
  • What attorneys’ duties should be considered in utilizing AI-powered tools?
  • How can AI address the access to justice gap?
  • Advantages and disadvantages of AI 
  • Future of AI: Can machines learn and think like human beings?

Earn 1 hour participatory California Legal Ethics MCLE credit: After registration, a staff member will email you the course materials, an evaluation form, and your Certificate of Attendance (usually the next business day). Register first, then watch the recording to the end and answer the questions provided in the popup to verify your attendance.

Registration fee: $20
Non-refundable

Presented by Charlie Gillig:

Charlie Gillig is Vice-President of Operations and Legal Technology at Neighborhood Legal Services of LA County (NLSLA) and an adjunct professor at Loyola Law School of Los Angeles, where he established and teaches the “Artificial Intelligence and Access to Justice Practicum.” Charlie previously supervised NLSLA’s Health Consumer Center. Prior to NLSLA, Charlie founded a technology company to prevent predatory practices against consumers in the remittance industry, and was a Skadden Fellow at the immigration legal services non-profit Casa Cornelia Law Center. He is a graduate of Georgetown University Law Center.

Legal Research on the Internet

Tuesday, March 3, 2020: 12:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Saturday, June 20, 2020:  10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.   CANCELLED - To view online class, please CLICK HERE.

Learn how to evaluate and use free sources of legal information online. This class also introduces select low cost websites for researching California and federal law.

Class covers:

  • How to search for bills, codes, regulations, and case law
  • Sources for Los Angeles City and County law and government
  • General legal research sites, including Google Scholar and FindLaw for Legal Professionals
  • Legal research tips
  • Hands-on exercises

Registration fees: $10 for the class
Non-refundable, payment reserves spot
Parking options available during registration (Tuesday, March 3rd class ONLY)

No legal advice:
LA Law Library provides access to legal resources and assistance with legal research. LA Law Library does not provide legal advice. For legal advice, you should consult an attorney.

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Saturday:
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