GSA Business Reports Firm Merger

Spartanburg attorneys David Turnipseed, Doug Brannon, Brac Turnipseed and Ben Stevens have combined their practices to create Turnipseed, Brannon & Stevens.

“This new partnership provides a tremendous added value for all our clients,” said David Turnipseed, whose office at 128 Magnolia St. now serves as the new headquarters. “By joining forces, we will be able to provide additional levels of service while continuing our primary mission of protecting Spartanburg families’ rights during difficult times.”

Turnipseed, Brannon & Stevens is a full-service family law, criminal law and personal injury firm.

With more than 60 years of experience, the attorneys’ knowledge and integrated legal philosophies complement and enhance one other, the firm said. Stevens brings a technological interest to the mix, known nationally as “the Mac lawyer.” Brannon is a criminal defense attorney with a strong civic commitment to the Spartanburg community.

Source: "Spartanburg Attorneys Join Forces" published in GSA Business.

Holiday Gift Guide for Lawyers

If you are wondering what to get that lawyer in your life for Christmas, you should check out Reid Trautz's 2009 Holiday Gift Guide for Lawyers.  Reid has a wide range of gift ideas that fit into every price range, so check it out.

Source:  "The 2009 Holiday Gift Guide for Lawyers" by Reid Trautz, published at Reid My Blog!

 

 

 

 

Happy Thanksgiving from The Mac Lawyer

Take a moment today to consider all the things that you should be thankful for, and be sure to let those you love know that you love and appreciate them...

 

 

Merry Christmas

I want to wish all my readers a very Merry Christmas and best wishes for a happy and successful New Year.

 

 

 

Inactivity / Lack of Posts

Law_books I wanted to let my readers know that the lack of posts last week and this week are due to my being involved in a very complex child custody case that is being tried this week in Greenville County, South Carolina.  Please bear with me, and I will resume my regular posting schedule once this trial has completed.

Apple Now 3rd Largest Computer Vendor in U.S.

Apple_logo_2 Market research firm Garner reported a few weeks ago that Apple is now the third largest computer vendor in the United States, having now passed Acer.  Dell and HP are still the leaders, but Mac sales rose more than 38 percent to nearly 1.4 million units in the US during the three-month period ending in June.

Source:  "Apple Passes Acer to Become Third Largest U.S. PC Vendor" posted at AppleInsider.

One Mac Lawyer That Gives Back

HumptydumptyI want to give public kudos to David Sparks, who publishes the excellent Mac Sparky blog, for his efforts to help educate elementary school students.  You can read about David's efforts in the following post from his blog:

Every year, about early June, I volunteer at the local elementary school where I give a presentation about how laws are made and the role of the courts and lawyers. This all started when my oldest daughter was in fifth grade and the teachers keep asking me to come back. I love it. It is so fun going over these topics with the kids and they ask such good questions. Once I finish my dog and pony show, the kids have their own mini-trial where they all play roles like the judge, attorneys, witnesses and jury. The trial is about Humpty Dumpty. We all know he fell, but why? Was it an accident? Or was it Murder! The kids conduct their own trial and the jury returns a verdict.

In terms of Mac geekery, the presentation is built in keynote and presented off my MacBook Air into the school's projector. I use all sorts of flashy word effects and transitions. It is much more glitzy than my normal jury presentations. I think all the motion seems to keep the kids interested. I seem to have lost my third-party remote since my last trial so I had to use an Apple remote which worked fine.

It really was a blast to do it again this morning. My favorite question was one tiny little girl who asked, "Is it fun to stand up and yell objection?" to which I enthusiastically replied, "Yes!" If any of you would like the trial materials or the Keynote presentation for the fifth graders in your life, drop me a note. I even have a quicktime clickable version for those of you stuck with Windows laptops. I've seeded this out to lawyers and teachers all over the country the last few years and love to hear it is getting used.

Source:  "Return of Humpty Dumpty" by David Sparks, published at Mac Sparky.

Guest Post :: Jury Selection Template

Guest_post_2 The following guest post is from fellow Mac-using lawyer, G. Ware Cornell Jr.:

For more years than I would like to count, I started every jury trial with a legal pad (the 14 inch variety) and turned it ninety degrees and drew five or six lines down it. I would do this on several pages, sometimes drawing six or seven lines and sometimes less, depending on the configuration of the courtroom. With my pad turned sideways I would frantically write the name of the juror, his or her jury number and the seat number assigned by the judge.

This process was pretty easy to screw up. Sometimes it was my fault, such as when I omitted a prospective juror, and sometimes it was the fault of the court who might summarily excuse a member of the panel before any lawyer voir dire.

Once jurors were in the box, I would frantically write down answers to standard (which means important) questions. Then at the very bottom I would put in the stuff that wasn't standard. Finally I would take my pad and, based on what I could read or remember, select a jury.

Ten years ago, when I first started bringing laptops to trial, I tried to create jury selection template in Excel. I failed completely, but every time some new version of Excel came out I would try again, and repeat my failure.

Last fall I was in trial in Miami. I had just downloaded a trial version of iWork'08. There was some problem with the venire, and as a result I had a little time to kill. I decided to see if Numbers would do what Excel couldn't. To my amazement I had a very functional juror selection form in about ten minutes. Since then I have refined it a bit, but it is still basically the template I made in that courtroom.

The Standard Questions

My table has 22 rows, and in the first column I put what are (for my employment law practice) standard questions going down the row. The final row is for individualized notes. Given the ease with which templates are created or modified in Numbers, the questions are easily adaptable to specific practice issues. I also took advantage of slide and drop down menus to answer common questions like cities of residence.

With respect to residence in our courts, we do not often get specific residence addresses. However the community tin which a panel member resides gives important clues. When I was using a legal pad, I would rarely write out the full name of the city and use abbreviations like "FL" for Fort Lauderdale or "Hwd" for Hollywood. On my pad the residence information would not be in a line across the pad because other important information such as a trial scheduling issue might be covered before residence locations would be discussed. With the template every jurors residence is in one row, making access easier and more reliable.

Jury_selection_1_2

I also used slide menus for age estimates in decades, since generally speaking asking a prospective juror her age is a recipe for disaster.

Jury_selection_2

Note that in the example above age is reflected as twenty, but the juror has lived in South Florida (Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach Counties primarily) for twenty five years. Age is estimated in decades in this template.

Few residents have lived in South Florida their whole lives. Most judges will make inquiry about length of residence during the court's voir dire.  I use a slide response since it really doesn't matter if it is eight years or eleven, I am looking for the degree of ties to the community. For instance, over forty percent of South Florida residents today did not live here during Hurricane Andrew in 1992, which was until Katrina the most destructive hurricane in history. In one case years ago, a witness claimed a certain event occurred on a particular August day.  In closing argument I showed a NOAA map recording the passage of Hurricane Andrew on that very day.  I wanted jurors who would remember how destructive that storm was and who would know how long it was before it was business as usual.

Other questions in my template are peculiar to my practice. However it is easy enough to change the questions to fit cases, and to save those changes as your own template using the "File" menu in Numbers.

The Configuration

One thing I like to ask at either pretrial or calendar call is how the court conducts voir dire. By this I want to know how big a panel will be ordered and where the jurors will sit, and in how many rows. If I have this information I can prepare my seating chart before I enter the courtroom. However, even if I don't the template allows me to easily create one even as the panel is being led into the gallery.

When you start a new document in Numbers, it creates a table with thirteen columns. Columns can be easily added or subtracted from the table, but most jury boxes put between six and nine seat in a seating row. Since each column represents a juror, I cut the number of columns to match the seat diagram with an extra column on the left for standard questions.

It is important to know where the first juror will sit. Juror number one will often be in the first seat of a row closest to the judge, but not always. Once I know where juror number one will be, I can give each seat a number. It is easy to delete or add rows in Numbers. As a result each table will represent one seating row. New tables are added simply by copying the first table, pasting and then adjusting the seating capacity of the second and/or third rows. This process works even when overflow jurors are placed in the court's seating gallery.

The following illustration shows sixteen prospective jurors sitting in two rows.  In this configuration the jury box is most likely to the judge's left. If it were reversed the numbering would be reversed as well.

Jury_selection_3

Along the bottom of the screen, certain information may be highlighted in green or red. Based on a juror's overall response I give each panel member a quick overall assessment of suitability. A juror I really want will get a high enough assessment to get a "green light", where as the one's of whom I have the most concerned will get a "red light." The template automatically highlights these panel members.

Finally I have a question with a drop down menu to tract peremptory and challenges for cause. I have not attempted to create any capacity to automatically configure the jury box based on challenges. I presume it is possible, however given the prevalence of back-striking in our state courts (a practice generally disallowed in U.S. District Court) and the number of jurors that may ultimately be seated in federal court, I rely on my ability to count to help me visualize who will ultimately be seated in the box.

Jury_selection_4
Conclusion

Jury selection remains a critical part of a trial lawyer's job. Years ago, lawyers were given basic information about a prospective venire a week or so in advance. Most trial lawyers today, except those who have tried highly publicized cases in which selection questionnaires were utilized, never see even the names of panel members until they are brought to the courtroom. What follows is an often hurried process in which selection error possibilities dramatically increase.

Templates cannot substitute for experience and skill during voir dire. But a jury selection template can simplify and routinize the process, and that creates a bit more time for a lawyer to focus on the panel with an eye towards selecting the best possible jury on any given day.

You can download a copy of the Jury Selection Template in Numbers format by clicking HERE.

G. Ware Cornell Jr. is a Board Certified Civil Trial Lawyer in Weston, Florida where he primarily practices employment law with the firm of Cornell & Associates P.A. He is a graduate of Emory University, the University of Georgia School of Law, and served as the first senior law clerk for United States District Judge William M. Hoeveler in the Southern District of Florida upon his investiture in 1977. Mr. Cornell was recently selected as a Fellow of the Litigation Counsel of America, a trial lawyers' honorary society.

Barack Obama Uses Macs

Barack_obamaThis post is not intended to interject politics into the Mac legal technology arena, but I found it interesting that Barak Obama's wife, Michelle, is apparently a believer in Macs.  The profile of Mrs. Obama in this week's edition of Newsweek says

"To help bridge the physical distance between father and daughters, Michelle recently bought two MacBook laptops, one for Barack and one for the kids, so they could have video chats over the Internet."

If one of the busiest men with one of the busiest families on the planet has said "yes, we can" to the Mac, shouldn't you too?

Source:  "Barack's Rock" by Richard Wolffe, published in Newsweek.

Addendum:

One of my readers, Christopher McDavid, kindly pointed out that the New York Times published an article a few weeks ago that compared Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton and concluded that Obama is a Mac and Clinton is a PC, and you can read it by clicking HERE.  If Sen. Obama's surge in the polls continues, he could be our first Mac President.

Source:  "Is Obama a Mac and Clinton a PC?" by Noan Cohen, published in the New York Times.

Holiday Gift Guide for Mac-Using Lawyers

Gift There are only 22 more shopping days left until Christmas.  If you are wondering what to get the Mac-using lawyer on your list, you might want to check out Macworld's 2007 Gift Guide.  The guide is divided into three categories:  Entertainment, Photography/Video, and Travel Accessories.  My personal list includes the Jawbone headset and some iTunes gift cards.

Source:  "Cool Mac Gear" published at Macworld.

Apple Repair Service :: Second to None

Apple_logo My partner's PowerBook began having problems last Friday, and it stopped working.  His machine is over two years old, and this was the first problem that we had with it.  Anyway, we have AppleCare on this machine (and all our Macs), so Paul placed a call for help.  When the technician was unable to resolve the problem by phone, he informed us that the PowerBook needed to be sent in for repair.

The shipping box arrived on Tuesday afternoon, and DHL picked up the computer on Tuesday evening to ship it back to Apple.  I thought that it would be at least a week before we saw it again, but I am thrilled to say that Paul's PowerBook returned to our office this morning in perfect condition.  Yes, you read that right, It was gone less than 72 hours which included the shipping time from SC to CA and back.  Better yet, the cost to us -- free since it was covered by AppleCare.

Apple Announces Personal Shopping Program

One_to_one Earlier this week, Apple announced a whole new way to shop at your local Apple Store.  Personal Shopping is a free service where you and a dedicated Mac Specialist explore and test-drive products to find out which ones are best for you.  This service is free, and it affords you undivided attention, even in a busy store.

Source:  "Apple Unveils ProCare Changes; Project LaunchBox; iPhone Parts", published at AppleInsider.

Apple Announces Change to ProCare Program

Procare Today, Apple announced changes to its ProCare program.  As previously posted on this blog, this program provided personal training, priority repairs and service, and setup services -- all for $99 per year.

Now, the "old" ProCare has been split into two separate $99 packages.  In my opinion, these programs are still an excellent value, and I can understand to a degree why Apple split ProCare in two.  All good things must pass in time.  The two packages now available are:

  • ProCare  ::  designed purely for service

ProCare membership starts with a complete setup of your Mac and includes premium benefits like same-day service at the Genius Bar, Rapid Repairs, yearly tune-ups, and more for up to three computers.

  • One to One  ::  designed purely for Mac training

Personal training sessions are designed to move at your pace and provide the support and guidance you need, whether you're new to Mac or ready to master the latest pro software.

Source:  "Apple Unveils ProCare Changes; Project LaunchBox; iPhone Parts", published at AppleInsider.

What Type of Computer Would Jack Bauer Use?

24 I have been a huge fan of "24" since its very first episode.  It is one of the most creative and unique shows on network television, and it continues to be as fresh and interesting today as it was when it premiered.

So, what does this have to do with Macs?  Chris' Blog pointed out on 24, "the good guys use Macs and the bad guys use Windows. You can draw many conclusions from that...."  I'm just glad that Jack Bauer is on our (the Mac users') side....

Source:  "Mac vs Windows on 24" by Chris Johnston, published at Chris' Blog.

The Mac Lawyer Gets Facelift

Jbs_dome030 Well, "I" didn't get a facelift, but the site has.  I just wanted to freshen things up a bit and to make the blog's appearance a little more "Mac-like." 

Also, in case you were wondering, yes that's me (or at least part of me) watching over my blog.  Hopefully, that picture won't scare away too many readers.

Thanks to my buddy and blogger extraordinaire, Grant Griffiths, for his assistance in creating the new banner and freshening up the overall look of the site.  I hope that all my readers enjoy the new look.