Author Archive

July 8 roundup

Jurors as grown-ups

New Michigan rules allow juries to ask questions and judges to summarize evidence for their benefit. Michigan Chief Justice (and Overlawyered favorite) Robert Young Jr. “says jurors will no longer be treated like kindergarteners” under the new rules. [ABA Journal; my take back when]

July 7 roundup

  • Correct result, yet potential for mischief in latest SCOTUS climate ruling [Ilya Shapiro/Cato, my earlier take]
  • Wouldn’t even want to guess: how the Howard Stern show handles sexual harassment training [Hyman]
  • Philadelphia: $21 million award against emergency room handling noncompliant patient [Kennerly]
  • Antitrust assault on Google seems geared to protect competitors more than consumers [Josh Wright]
  • “They knew there was a risk!” Curb your indignation please [Coyote]
  • Theme issue of Reason magazine on failures of criminal justice system is now online;
  • “Why Your New Car Doesn’t Have a Spare Tire” [Sam Kazman, WSJ]

Employee misconduct and ADA protections

Will the law protect your right not to be fired if you shout profanities at your supervisor and throw things? Press coverage of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) may ebb and flow, but the law’s protection of mental, emotional and behavioral disabilities continues to generate extreme results in workplace cases, as attorney James J. McDonald, Jr. has documented in a series of articles. I discuss at Cato at Liberty.

July 6 roundup