Archive for the 'Uncategorized' Category

Deaths on Alabama’s Rural Roads Drop 17 Percent

Deaths on Alabama’s rural roads drop 17 percent
1/7/2009, 5:37 p.m. ET
By PHILLIP RAWLS
The Associated Press

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Traffic deaths on Alabama’s rural roads dropped to their lowest level in 23 years in 2008 due to stricter enforcement, new safety features on roads and soaring gas prices that led to less driving, state officials said Wednesday.

Alabama’s state troopers recorded 633 fatal accidents on rural roads, including interstate highways. That’s down 17 percent from last year’s 766 fatalities and is the lowest number since the state recorded 618 deaths on rural roads in 1985, Gov. Bob Riley said at a news conference.

Fatal traffic accidents on urban roads are worked by city and county law enforcement. Their numbers are still being compiled, but traditionally they account for about one-third of the traffic deaths in Alabama. Preliminary numbers indicate urban traffic deaths also declined in 2008.

Alabama’s experience parallels what’s going on nationally. Through October, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said traffic deaths nationwide were down nearly 10 percent from the same period the prior year.

In 2006, Alabama recorded 1,207 deaths on urban and rural roads, the highest total since 1973. Since then, the rate has declined.

“When it comes to saving lives, Alabama is moving in the right direction,” Riley said at a news conference with Public Safety Director Chris Murphy, Transportation Director Joe McInnes and Economic and Community Affairs Director Bill Johnson.

They offered several explanations:

$4 per gallon gas prices caused Alabamians to drive less, as shown by the state’s 2 percent drop in gas tax revenue. But Riley said Alabama’s 17 percent decline in traffic deaths, compared to the national decrease of nearly 10 percent, showed other factors had an effect.

State agencies analyzed the locations and most likely times of day of fatal accidents. They used the information to focus state trooper patrols and to fix highway safety problems.

The Department of Transportation is spending $50 million to widen two-lane roads to prevent accidents caused by running off the road. It has spent $15 million since 2003 to add median barriers on interstate highways with narrow medians to prevent fatal accidents where cars cross the median. Interstate 20 in St. Clair County, once one of Alabama’s deadliest stretches, saw a significant drop in accidents after the dividers were added.

State troopers conducted more speeding and drunken driving crackdowns and increased their use of patrol cars that look like regular autos except for markings on the passenger side. They also started patrolling on motorcycles and tractor-trailer rigs to find aggressive drivers going at high speeds and weaving in and out of traffic.

Statistics compiled by the Department of Public Safety also show there were 2,505 fewer accidents and 1,647 fewer nonfatal injuries on rural roads in 2008 than the year before.

Alabama Highway Deaths During this Decade

Alabama highway deaths during this decade
1/7/2009, 5:02 p.m. ET
The Associated Press

(AP) — Traffic fatalities worked by state troopers on Alabama’s rural roads, including interstate highways, by year:

2008 633

2007 766

2006 828

2005 791

2004 777

2003 710

2002 726

2001 694

2000 690

Source: Alabama Department of Public Safety

LawCall

WVUA hosts LawCall every week on Thursdays at 6:30 p.m.  This week the topic will be ”Obama and the Law.” Bob Prince will host the show and Jim Lawson, radio host from “Lets Talk Radio,” will be the guest.  Please email us your legal questions anytime at lawcall@wvua7.com.  Each week, questions will be answered on the air.  LawCall can be found on channel 6 if you have Charter Cable, or channel 3 if you have Comcast Cable and live in the Tuscaloosa area.  It can also be found on channel 23 if you have satellite and live in the surrounding areas.

Prince Glover Settles Fayette County Personal Injury Case at Mediation

On December 5, 2008, Prince Glover Law attorneys Robert F. Prince and Joshua P. Hayes obtained a significant confidential settlement on behalf of two mental health workers who were injured at the hands of a negligent and irresponsible trucking company.

The evidence showed that the trucker was unsafely traveling narrow roadway while dangerously piggybacking three commercial motor vehicles.  Unfortunately, the decision to travel this dangerous route coupled with the driver’s actions led to one mental health worker’s emergency air flight for extensive injuries and medical treatment.  Unfortunately, that worker has permanent injuries from this horrible collision.

After traveling to as far away as Wisconsin taking depositions, this case reached its conclusion at mediation, with the defendant trucking company insisting on a confidential settlement.

Prince Glover Law continues to practice in the areas of trucking litigation, product liability, insurance fraud and environmental litigation.

Ken Swindle Receives the Distinguished Service Award

On January 15, 2009, our very own Ken Swindle received the Distinguished Service Award from the West Alabama Chamber of Commerce for the service he provided to them during his entire career in law enforcement.  Ken Swindle worked in law enforcement for 34 years and served as the Tuscaloosa Police Chief for 20 years before coming to work as an investigator with Prince Glover Law.

Modern Day Trucking Litigation: Exposing Both the Physical and Corporate Cause of the Catastrophic Wreck

Part 1:

Trucking Litigation involving catastrophic injury in today’s world requires diligence, financial support, an understanding of the complex arena of Federal Motor Carrier Safety regulations and a focused strategy to overcome the numerous hurdles that exist within the discovery process.  One of the potentially difficult hurdles to overcome involves the substantial likelikhood that your investigative team is not going to be the first investigative unit to take a look at the evident.  In reality, there may be multiple investigative units that visit the scene long before you have an opportunity to do the same.  Growing trends even suggest most trucking companies and the liability carriers that insure them have an operation in place that often allows their investigative teams to make it to the scene while the involved vehicles are still there and before state law enforcement agencies have times to interview witnesses and conclude their own investigation.

Alabama high court race again garners most expensive pricetag in U.S.

A spending surge the week before the Nov. 4 election helped paste a $5.3 million final price tag on the Alabama Supreme Court race, making it the nation’s most expensive in 2008, according to new campaign disclosures and watchdog groups.

Republican Greg Shaw, Democrat Deborah Bell Paseur and a third-party group spent nearly $850,000 during the last week of the campaign to buy airtime for ads, according to the Brennan Center for Justice at the New York University School of Law.

Total candidate spending was nearly $4.3 million – $2.5 million by Paseur and $1.8 million by Shaw, according to state campaign disclosures, including final accountings filed this week. Third-party groups spent at least $1 million more.

Despite being surpassed by Paseur in ad spending, Shaw squeaked to victory by fewer than 13,000 votes out of 2 million cast Nov. 4. He was sworn in Jan. 20.

Shaw, Paseur and the Virginia-based Center for Individual Freedom spent about $4 million on TV ads, according to disclosure forms and the Brennan Center, which tracks the influence of politics on the judiciary. That paid for nearly 11,000 ad spots, the Brennan Center said.

Paseur’s nearly $2 million ad campaign, the most spent in any judicial race nationally in 2008, paid for 6,000 ad airings on TV stations, disclosure forms and Brennan Center data show.

The Center for Individual Freedom ranked fifth nationally in buying airtime for judicial ads, according to the Brennan Center. The CIF, which does not disclose its donors, ran more than 2,400 ads in October and early November either supporting Shaw or attacking Paseur.

Paseur raised nearly $2.6 million in cash and in-kind services during her Supreme Court campaign, disclosure forms show.

About two-thirds of her total money came from the state Democratic Party executive committee, including $85,000 in cash and donated ads the week before the election, records show. Donors to the party committee include plaintiff trial lawyers and the state teachers union, the primary backers of Democratic judicial candidates.

Paseur’s campaign ended with a $32,000 surplus.

Pro-business political action committees continued to be the primary source of the $1.8 million total Shaw raised, disclosures show.

Shaw received nearly $128,000 in PAC money the last week of his campaign, current disclosures show. A further $27,500 came from PACs in late December to help retire a portion of Shaw’s campaign debt, now nearly $69,000, disclosures show.

Armed with an infusion of Democratic Party money, Paseur heavily outspent Shaw in the final month of the campaign, quickly gaining domination of the airwaves.

As Shaw fell further behind Paseur’s ad pace in early October, the Center for Individual Freedom leaped in with pro-Shaw television ads, followed by anti-Paseur spots.

Alabama Voters Against Lawsuit Abuse, a tort-reform advocacy group, also ran ads the last two weeks of the campaign on 14 radio stations statewide attacking Paseur’s judicial record. The group spent $160,000 to $180,000, AVALA executive director Skip Tucker said Friday.

Between Oct. 22 and Nov. 4, Paseur spent $625,000 to buy airtime for

ERIC VELASCO
News staff writer-The Birmingham News

Library of Congress RSS Feeds

pThe Library of Congress has a number of RSS feeds.nbsp; Many are primarily
of interest to those headed to DC, but there are also some excellent
copyright feeds, law feeds, and other interesting feeds.nbsp; A list of the
feeds with descriptions is available here: a href=”http://www.loc.gov/rss/”http://www.loc.gov/rss//a. br //pimg src=”http://blogs.law.yale.edu/aggbug.aspx?PostID=54″ width=”1″ height=”1″

Research Preparation for your Supervised Analytical Writing

pThis fall, the Law Library will be hosting a series of fall research seminars focused on helping law students
prepare for their supervised analytical writing (SAW) assignment by
demonstrating the emerging technologies in the field of legal research.
nbsp;Students will learn about helpful (and not so helpful) legal
databases, how to search for information and how maintain legal
research records. nbsp;Lecturers will showcase subscription based as well
as open source tools for legal research. nbsp;These seminars are open to
the whole law school community.nbsp; The first event is:/p
pb
Emerging Technologies in Documenting and Tracking Your Research/bbbr /Wednesday, September 17, 2008; 3:00 – 4:00 p.m. – Room 112/b/p
pParticipants will learn how to manage their electronic research using tools such as RSS feeds, Zotero, Google, etc.nbsp; Cookies and light refreshments will be served./p
pIf you were unable to attend this event, please contact Reference Librarian a href=”http://www.law.yale.edu/library/about/Camilla.asp”Camilla Tubbs/a for information on these important research tools./p
pnbsp;/p
pnbsp;/pimg src=”http://blogs.law.yale.edu/aggbug.aspx?PostID=218″ width=”1″ height=”1″

Legal News?

I just heard of this new Legal Industry News site that talks all about Legal news?  Maybe will work for getting some informative info! No?

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