Attend Fact Finding on the Internet: Investigative Research for Lawyers in Milwaukee on March 24 and learn the benefits of conducting research on the Internet and how to integrate the Internet's advantages into your day-to-day practice. Find out a client's maiden name or if a lien has been placed on a piece of property. Get criminal records or even uncover relevant information to attack a witness's credibility.
March 2005
Learn timesaving and efficient Internet research techniques at CLE
seminar
Attend Fact Finding on the Internet: Investigative Research for
Lawyers in Milwaukee on March 24 and learn the benefits of
conducting research on the Internet and how to integrate the Internet's
advantages into your day-to-day practice. Find out a client's maiden
name or if a lien has been placed on a piece of property. Get criminal
records or even uncover relevant information to attack a witness's
credibility.
Carole Levitt and Mark Rosch, cofounders of the California-based
Internet for Lawyers and coauthors of The Lawyer's Guide to Fact
Finding on the Internet, are the featured speakers. Levitt and
Rosch will present techniques to use the Internet to quickly find facts
about unfamiliar topics and will share search strategies and shortcuts
to help attorneys become effective cyber detectives.
Attendees will receive a free copy of Levitt and Rosch's book and a
free CD-ROM with links to all of the Internet sites discussed in the
book. In a Wisconsin Lawyer May 2004 book review, Attorney
Nicholas Zales said, "The key to Internet research is finding the
best sites in the least amount of time. This book sets forth in succinct
detail the best of the best on the Internet."
Tuition for the 8 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. seminar is $229. The video
seminar is scheduled for May 10 at statewide locations. The seminar has
been submitted for up to 7.0 CLE credits, does not qualify for EPR
credits, and will be submitted for Minnesota CLE credits.
The start time includes a 30-minute registration period.
Inside the Bar