Tuesday, December 27, 2011

What’s Goin’ On In That Internet Cloud?

Coming Jan. 1, 2012:
See Sunday's Column
Dangers Of The Internet Cloud
@RegisterCitizen
@NHRegister




What's Goin' On In That Internet Cloud?







By BILL MURRAY
With Andy Thibault








What is The Internet Cloud and where did it come from?

There are many answers. Some are literal. Some are metaphorical.

  • Complete Column At Register Citizen


  • Complete Column At New Haven Register


  • Last Week’s Column: Are Connecticut courts ready for e-discovery rules?


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Sunday, December 18, 2011

    Are Connecticut courts ready for new e-discovery rules?

    Coming Dec. 25:
    What's Goin' On In That Internet Cloud?
    See Sunday's Column
    @RegisterCitizen
    @NHRegister 


    Who Will Find Hidden e-Evidence In CT Court Cases?




    How Soon Will Defense Attorneys In Civil Cases
    Develop Carpal Tunnel
    From Hitting
    The Protective Order Button
    ?






    Watch For Interesting Arguments On Those Protective Order Requests








    By BILL MURRAY
    With Andy Thibault

    Excerpts:







    “I don’t think the judges know a lot — even the ones who write the opinions,” attorney Julia Brickell of Columbia University told the New Haven Bar Association last month.



    Brickell, a former vice president and deputy general counsel for Philip Morris USA, runs an automated document review firm in New York. She said the costs of electronic discovery — if not managed properly — can be wildly disproportionate to the value of a case ...








    “The new rules shine a light on electronic data and make it clear it is a fair subject for thorough discovery,” said lawyer Alinor Sterling of the Bridgeport firm Koskoff, Koskoff & Bieder. “It’s my job as a lawyer to persuade the judges as to why I am entitled to certain data.”





    ... One potentially big loophole is Sec. 13-14, which allows judges to excuse the “loss” of electronically stored information “as the result of the routine, good-faith operation of a system or process in the absence of a showing of intentional actions designed to avoid known preservation obligations.”

    Qualified computer operatives could easily present a good-faith showing while hiding information in a series of widely-divergent databases ...

    Bill Murray is president of EdocMasters LLC, a company that takes the mystery out of e-documentation for the legal industry. Andy Thibault, author of books including Law & Justice In Everyday Life, blogs at The Cool Justice Report, http://cooljustice.blogspot.com/

    Complete Postings At
    JRC / Digital Media First


  • Complete Column At New Haven Register


  • Complete Column At Torrington Reigster Citizen


  • Last Week's Column: Missing Evidence In Deepwater Horizon Debacle


  • Murray's Short Bio:

    Bill Murray is a self taught forensic computer technician.

    He has more than 30 years experience with computers. At 16 he wrote -- with the help of a teacher at his high school -- the senior class textbook on computer technology. Later, he was old enough to take his own class.

    Bill has worked in a variety disciplines including software development, administration, security and desktop support in the manufacturing, banking, investment insurance, medical and legal industries. He was a pioneer in the computer compact disk retail market.

    He is president of EdocMasters LLC, a company that takes the mystery out of e documentation for the legal industry
    .


  • Law & Justice @ Amazon


  • Law & Justice @ Barnes & Noble


  • Law & Justice @ Facebook


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Sunday, December 11, 2011

    New E-Tips & Traps Column On Missing Evidence In Deepwater Horizon Debacle



    Recovery of destroyed evidence in BP-Halliburton oil explosion
    Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011






    By BILL MURRAY
    With Andy Thibault

    Excerpts:



    Ricky Lynn Morgan, a cement expert for Halliburton, was surrounded by high-powered lawyers representing more than half a dozen companies, the U.S. Justice Department and the state of Louisiana. The conference room on the 11th floor of the Pan-American building where they met on Oct. 17, 2011, is a short stroll from the New Orleans Superdome.

    The legal fees generated that day would make a nice down payment for a house. The result of Ricky Lynn Morgan’s deposition could amount to billions of dollars.

    At issue is the quality of cement used to seal BP’s well, which exploded off the Louisiana coast in April 2010, killing 11 workers and spewing about five million barrels of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico. BP is fighting Halliburton and contractors including the rig owner, Transocean, over liability for some of the damages. This case is known as Oil Spill By The Oil Rig Deepwater Horizon In The Gulf Of Mexico On April 20, 2010. Presiding for the Eastern District of Louisiana is U.S. Judge Carl Barbier ...

    ... BP is seeking an adverse finding of fact by the judge, which could swing the trial in BP’s favor. Trial is scheduled for February 2011. BP has also asked the judge to order Halliburton to deliver a computer used to produce 3D modeling results to an independent forensic firm ...

    ... We believe a competent electronic forensic firm probably could recover the missing 3D images or modeling results. There is a possibility, if not a likelihood that the model or models were shared and viewed by more than one person. Screen captures of the model or models and other related data might be stored in any number of places ...

    Bill Murray is president of EdocMasters LLC, a company that takes the mystery out of e-documentation for the legal industry. Andy Thibault, author of books including Law & Justice In Everyday Life, blogs at The Cool Justice Report, http://cooljustice.blogspot.com/

  • Complete column at New Haven Register


  • Complete column at Torrington Register Citizen


  • D.C.'s Justice Integrity Project Leads Monthly News Scoop Page w/ Deepwater Horizon Missing Evidence


  • West Coast Post On Deepwater Horizon Missing Evidence / E-Tips & Traps Column


  • Last week's column: The Care of eDocs is crucial for business


  • Also posted at U.S. Court site


  • Litigation Support Technology And News


  • EDD blog


  • Murray's Short Bio:

    Bill Murray is a self taught forensic computer technician.

    He has more than 30 years experience with computers. At 16 he wrote -- with the help of a teacher at his high school -- the senior class textbook on computer technology. Later, he was old enough to take his own class.

    Bill has worked in a variety disciplines including software development, administration, security and desktop support in the manufacturing, banking, investment insurance, medical and legal industries. He was a pioneer in the computer compact disk retail market.

    He is president of EdocMasters LLC, a company that takes the mystery out of e documentation for the legal industry
    .


  • Law & Justice @ Amazon


  • Law & Justice @ Barnes & Noble


  • Law & Justice @ Facebook


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Saturday, December 10, 2011

    Novelist, Retired NYPD Narcotics Detective Bob Leuci At Rotary Luncheon Thurs., Dec. 15







  • Litchfield-Morris Rotary


  • Forman School




  • Leuci @ the Hartford Club, 6-3-10, Conducting Workshop,
    13th Annual CT Young Writers Celebration
    -- photo by Bob Thiesfield


    LITCHFIELD, Conn. -- Bob Leuci, fresh off last Sunday's appearance at the Ridgefield Playhouse with actor Treat Williams, will be the guest speaker for the Litchfield-Morris Rotary, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011 at noon at Forman School. The public is welcome.

    Leuci was a writer for the TV shows 100 Centre Street and Precinct Hollywood. He is an adjunct professor in the University of Rhode Island English department.

    He has written more than half a dozen crime novels, translated into four languages and most recently published a memoir with Harper Collins, All The Centurions. He has also written a play for German radio, Brooklyn Roofs.

    His crime novels feature characters on all sides of the law -- inside and outside law enforcement -- and boast an edge and a substance found in the better political thrillers.

    Leuci's 20 years as a New York City police officer dovetailed with the career of another cop memorialized in film and print, Frank Serpico.

    In his memoir, All The Centurions, Leuci reports that many in the NYPD literally cheered upon learning Serpico was shot in the face in what by some accounts was a set-up by fellow cops. Leuci does not share that view. But, Serpico was an oddball: He wouldn't take money.

    Leuci and Serpico shared that tag: Leuci was not a manicured or well-dressed guy like his peers in the elite Special Investigative Unit. Even over time, he did not quite fit in.

    Serpico's revelations about police corruption led to the formation of the Knapp Commission, which documented low levels of corruption -- "grass eaters" -- and high levels of corruption -- "meat eaters."

    Leuci, troubled by what he saw on the job, ultimately came forward and cooperated with prosecutors. Leuci initially believed the prosecutors would go after high-level corruption including judges. It didn't work out that way.

    As The New York Times reported: For years, on the well-founded assumption that his life was in danger, Detective Leuci had to travel with bodyguards [as many as nine]. His investigation had implicated not only his fellow officers; organized crime figures, lawyers, bail bondsmen and an assistant district attorney had become involved, too. Detective Leuci had been undercover 16 months; the trials had gone on more than four years. Then the bodyguards were gone ...

    In addition to the memoir, All The Centurions, that era in Leuci's life is documented by the book Prince of the City , by former New York City Deputy Police Commissioner Robert Daley; and by the film of the same name, directed by Sidney Lumet. Lumet also directed Serpico and All The President's Men. Treat Williams played the Leuci character, Danny Cielo.

    "Frank Serpico wasn't like Bob Leuci at all,'' Lumet told The New York Times." Frank would have ended up going off to Europe alone with his dog whether he was a stockbroker, a flutist with the Philharmonic or a cop. Bob is a cop, all cop, and then comes everything else -- the charm, the guilelessness, the naivete ... "

    Leuci has lectured at police departments around the county. In 2010, he was a keynote speaker and workshop leader for the CT Young Writers Trust.

    For more information, contact:
    Rotary Club speaker committee member Andy Thibault
    @ tntcomm82@cs.com / 860-690-0211



    -- Actor Treat Williams With Director Sidney Lumet During Filming of Prince of the City

  • Trailer: IT HAPPENED


  • Undercover Life Gets Complicated






  • WTIC 1080 PODCAST 1-1-10, Preview Of Triple KO Event: Diane Smith Interviews Bob Leuci, Sammy Vega











  • CT-N Video, Leuci Keynote Speaker 6-3-10, CT Young Writers Annual Dinner


  • Among Leuci's titles:

    All the Centurions: A former New York City narcotics detective discusses his work on such film-inspiring cases as the French Connection and Serpico, and shares his disillusionment in the face of corruption, and the criminal justice system's dark side.

    Fence Jumpers: As kids, they took on New York's mean streets. As men, they're on opposite sides of the law. Dante O'Donnell and Jimmmy Burns took up the oath, the badge and the gun of the police force. Jo Jo Paradiso took a different path as a rising player in the Paradiso crime family. Today the three friends are trapped in an ever-more-vicious game of betrayal -- one that threatens to break much more than the bonds of their youth.

    Odessa Beach: A Russian and the American mob make strange bedfellows in a brilliantly plotted masterpiece of cross-cultural criminality. The book is set in Brighton (renamed Odessa) Beach, Brooklyn, where Nikolai Zoracoff has defected from Moscow -- not seeking political asylum but escape from the KGB. A charming hedonist and a criminal only because in Moscow luxury is bought by crime, Zoracoff's assimilation into America includes cowboy hats, Dolby stereo and a drug connection which, in New York, means an alliance with the Mafia -- and a game which is harder than Zoracoff can bear.

    Blaze: A rising star in the NYPD, Captain Nora Riter has a private life that threatens to torpedo her career. A streetwise actor/conman Nicky Ossman faces prison for assaulting a vice cop. Nora needs Nicky to help her re-establish personal and professional control as she takes on a case that leads her to taking down a psychopathic criminal kingpin known as "Blaze."

    Captain Butterfly: This is a riveting thriller about police corruption and the labyrinth of the human heart.

    The Snitch: A highly-principled police detective is chosen to infiltrate the notoriously corrupt Organized Crime Control Bureau. When the OCCB raid a nightclub, leaving seven people dead, the powers that be decide a major bust would look better than a police corruption case -- only the detective refuses to compromise his principles.

    Renegades: A thriller about three friends who grow up together on the tough streets of New York. Their friendship, loyalty and courage are tested when two become policemen and the other becomes a mafia boss.

    Double Edge: A tough, all-too-human police drama set on the dangerous streets of Washington, D.C. Cotton is a crack dealer who's seen it all. Scot Ancelat is a detective who's seen too much. In a vivid, brutal tale, their stories intertwine, as Ancelat struggles to solve the senseless murder of a young boy.


    Selected Links For LEUCI BOOKS

  • Prince Of The City: The True Story Of A Cop Who Knew Too Much


  • All The Centurions: A New York City Cop Remembers His Life On The Street


  • Captain Butterfly


  • Odessa Beach


  • The Snitch


  • Doyle's Disciples

  • --

  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Sunday, December 04, 2011

    New Business Column On Electronic Evidence, e-Tips & Traps, At RegCit & NHR, JRC / Digital Media First Publications



    e-Tips & Traps: The Care of eDocs is crucial for business
    Sunday, December 4, 2011


    By BILL MURRAY
    With Andy Thibault

    Excerpts:


    Federal courts formally recognized the need to protect electronic data in 2006, and most states followed with their own versions of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Key change: Before 2006, discovery and production of documents began shortly before trial; now, e-discovery begins as soon as a lawsuit is filed ...

    ... In 2007, a federal judge ordered Intel to produce electronic documents that if stacked in a pile would have been an estimated 137 miles high. Not only a lot of documents were at stake. In a settlement, Intel paid arch-rival Advanced Micro Devices $1.25 billion for antitrust violations in the chip-maker market.
  • Complete Column At Register Citizen

  • Also Posted At New Haven Register ...

  • … And U.S. District Court

  • Murray's Short Bio:

    Bill Murray is a self taught forensic computer technician.

    He has more than 30 years experience with computers. At 16 he wrote -- with the help of a teacher at his high school -- the senior class textbook on computer technology. Later, he was old enough to take his own class.

    Bill has worked in a variety disciplines including software development, administration, security and desktop support in the manufacturing, banking, investment insurance, medical and legal industries. He was a pioneer in the computer compact disk retail market.

    He is president of EdocMasters LLC, a company that takes the mystery out of e documentation for the legal industry
    .


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Saturday, December 03, 2011

    Rotary Club Honors Championship Contender Boys' & Girls' Soccer Teams, Title IX Achievement








  • Litchfield-Morris Rotary





  • “I hope each of you is proud to be part of an historic team whose fight for equality in education, of which sports and fitness are an integral part, is legendary. In 1972, Title IX opened long-shut doors for young women by guaranteeing equal opportunity in education. Just as your trip to the State Finals was long and hard-won, so, too, has been the battle for gender equity.”
    -- Teresa Younger, Executive Director
    Ct Permanent Commission on the Status of Women


    Story and Photo By Ricky Campbell, Register Citizen
    Students from both teams were able to share their Class S state title runs Thursday to a welcoming group of Litchfield-Morris Rotarians, supporting not only their community, but the student-athletes, too. The seven representatives from their respective squads, and two coachers, were beaming with excitement, as they shared their experiences with the Rotarians.

    “We made history this year by getting out of the quarterfinals,” Cowgirls Head Coach Brian Mongeau said. “It’s really been a special year.”
  • Complete Article In RegCit

  • Setting the record straight on Litchfield, Connecticut's Title IX Girls' soccer case


  • RegCit P. 1: Litchfield Cowgirls' Title IX team a legacy for soccer


  • Title IX Impact On Education, Employment


  • Title IX Team, Championship Contenders, Featured In Hartford Courant


  • Litchfield.BZ Photos & Video Of Historic Cowgirls' Team


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Friday, December 02, 2011

    Novelist / Retired Detective Bob Leuci, Friend Of Young Writers, At Ridgefield Playhouse Sunday With Treat Williams For Prince Of The City Screening

  • CT Post Preview



  • Leuci @ the Hartford Club, 6-3-10, Conducting Workshop,
    13th Annual CT Young Writers Celebration
    -- photo by Bob Thiesfield


    Sunday's Event
    12/04/2011 - 6:30pm

    The Ridgefield Playhouse Film Society
    Presents Prince of the City

    Q & A
    with Actor TREAT WILLIAMS and NYPD Narcotics Officer [retired] Robert Leuci

  • Ridgefield Playhouse



  • -- Actor Treat Williams With Director Sidney Lumet During Filming of Prince of the City

  • Trailer: IT HAPPENED


  • Undercover Life Gets Complicated


  • From The Playhouse Announcement:

    Sidney Lumet's Prince of the City is a classic crime film about a NYC police officer who chooses to expose police corruption for idealistic reasons. The character of Daniel Ciello (Treat Williams) was based on Robert Leuci, a real-life NYPD Narcotics Detective. The film and its screenwriters, Director Sidney Lumet and Jay Presson Allen, received an 1982 Academy Award Nomination for “Best Adapted Screenplay.” That year, the film also had received three Golden Globe nominations and Sidney Lumet won the NY Film Critics Award for “Best Director.”

    Film Critic Roger Ebert said, “Prince of the City is a film about cops, drugs, and New York City, in that order. After the film starts to turn itself over in your mind, it becomes a much deeper piece, a film about how difficult it is to go straight in a crooked world without hurting people you love. The film is about the ways in which a corrupt modern city makes it almost impossible for a man to be true to the law, his ideals, and his friends, all at the same time. The movie has no answers, only horrible alternatives.” The film is based on a book by former Ridgefield resident, Robert Daley about Robert Leuci, a New York police officer who cooperated with a 1971 investigation of police corruption. In the movie Leuci is called Ciello. He is played by actor Treat Williams in a demanding and grueling performance.

    Williams is almost always onscreen, and almost always in situations of extreme stress, fatigue, and emotional turmoil. We see him coming apart before our eyes. He falls to pieces not simply because of his job, or because of his decision to testify, but also because he’s in an inexorable trap and sooner or later will have to hurt his partners.

    Actor Treat Williams and former NYPD Narcotics Detective Robert Leuci,will be on hand for the Q&A. Robert Leuci is the author of numerous books and short stories including “All the Centurions” and “Blaze.” He has also worked as a TV series writer on Sidney Lumet’s “100 Centre St.”

    Ticket Price: Adults $10, Seniors $7.50, Students $5.00
    --




  • WTIC 1080 PODCAST 1-1-10, Preview Of Triple KO Event: Diane Smith Interviews Bob Leuci, Sammy Vega











  • CT-N Video, Leuci Keynote Speaker 6-3-10, CT Young Writers Annual Dinner


  • Among Leuci's titles:

    All the Centurions: A former New York City narcotics detective discusses his work on such film-inspiring cases as the French Connection and Serpico, and shares his disillusionment in the face of corruption, and the criminal justice system's dark side.

    Fence Jumpers: As kids, they took on New York's mean streets. As men, they're on opposite sides of the law. Dante O'Donnell and Jimmmy Burns took up the oath, the badge and the gun of the police force. Jo Jo Paradiso took a different path as a rising player in the Paradiso crime family. Today the three friends are trapped in an ever-more-vicious game of betrayal -- one that threatens to break much more than the bonds of their youth.

    Odessa Beach: A Russian and the American mob make strange bedfellows in a brilliantly plotted masterpiece of cross-cultural criminality. The book is set in Brighton (renamed Odessa) Beach, Brooklyn, where Nikolai Zoracoff has defected from Moscow -- not seeking political asylum but escape from the KGB. A charming hedonist and a criminal only because in Moscow luxury is bought by crime, Zoracoff's assimilation into America includes cowboy hats, Dolby stereo and a drug connection which, in New York, means an alliance with the Mafia -- and a game which is harder than Zoracoff can bear.

    Blaze: A rising star in the NYPD, Captain Nora Riter has a private life that threatens to torpedo her career. A streetwise actor/conman Nicky Ossman faces prison for assaulting a vice cop. Nora needs Nicky to help her re-establish personal and professional control as she takes on a case that leads her to taking down a psychopathic criminal kingpin known as "Blaze."

    Captain Butterfly: This is a riveting thriller about police corruption and the labyrinth of the human heart.

    The Snitch: A highly-principled police detective is chosen to infiltrate the notoriously corrupt Organized Crime Control Bureau. When the OCCB raid a nightclub, leaving seven people dead, the powers that be decide a major bust would look better than a police corruption case -- only the detective refuses to compromise his principles.

    Renegades: A thriller about three friends who grow up together on the tough streets of New York. Their friendship, loyalty and courage are tested when two become policemen and the other becomes a mafia boss.

    Double Edge: A tough, all-too-human police drama set on the dangerous streets of Washington, D.C. Cotton is a crack dealer who's seen it all. Scot Ancelat is a detective who's seen too much. In a vivid, brutal tale, their stories intertwine, as Ancelat struggles to solve the senseless murder of a young boy.


    Selected Links For LEUCI BOOKS

  • Prince Of The City: The True Story Of A Cop Who Knew Too Much


  • All The Centurions: A New York City Cop Remembers His Life On The Street


  • Captain Butterfly


  • Odessa Beach


  • The Snitch


  • Doyle's Disciples

  • --

  • CT Young Writers Trust Website




  • Young Writers Trust Website Hosted By CSU System







  • Yale Daily News Q & A With 2009 State Poetry Champ Felicity Sheehy


  • -- photo by Chion Wolf

  • Ct Young Writers Trust Facebook Page


  • Twitter@CtYoungWriters


  • twitter@cooljustice


  • Thursday, December 01, 2011

    Setting the record straight on Litchfield, Connecticut's Title IX Girls' soccer case

    Girls at Litchfield High School ramped up their efforts to establish a girls’ soccer team during the 1994-95 school year. They were well aware that Title IX of the Federal Education Act of 1972 made equal rights including funding for girls’ sports the law ...

    ... Among those who recognized the economic, social and employment benefits of equal rights for girls’ sports was Mia Hamm, the Olympic soccer star who scored more goals (158) than any man or woman in international play. Hamm recently told ESPN: “First and foremost, I got an education. That’s what I was there for. It was to give women at state-funded schools an opportunity to go to school and get a scholarship … For me, it was being able to go to the University of North Carolina on a scholarship. And then, obviously, I got to play one of my loves and passions through my college years.”

  • Complete Column Via The Register Citizen


  • UPDATE:
    Ct Permanent Commission On The Status Of Women
    Congratulates Litchfield Cowgirls
    Letter Presented To Team Captains,
    Coaches During Rotary Club Luncheon 12-1-11


    click on images for better views



    TEXT OF LETTER
    FROM Teresa C. Younger, Executive Director


    Nov. 29, 2011

    To the Members and Coaches of the Litchfield High School Girls’ Soccer Team:

    On behalf of the Permanent Commission on the Status of Women, I would like to send hearty congratulations to the Litchfield High School girls’ soccer team on your impressive record. To have come this far in such a short time is testament to your athletic prowess, drive, teamwork and good coaching.

    I hope each of you is proud to be part of an historic team whose fight for equality in education, of which sports and fitness are an integral part, is legendary. In 1972, Title IX opened long-shut doors for young women by guaranteeing equal opportunity in education. Just as your trip to the State Finals was long and hard-won, so, too, has been the battle for gender equity.

    Each of you has contributed to the greater good of the team. I urge you now to go on to work for gender equity in education, in the workplace, and in public service. Women make up 51 percent of Connecticut’s population, yet are under-represented in almost every area, making up just 29 percent of the State’s General Assembly. And of the top 500 U.S. publicly traded companies, only 13 are run by female CEO’s.

    As you head soon into your working lives, be aware of discrimination in wages. Women are paid, on average, just 76 cents for every dollar a similarly qualified man makes. Imagine if you had to score a goal-and-a-half in order for the refs to count it as one goal! So you can see, we have a long way to go before women and men are truly equal.

    But it starts with you; you have already helped pave the way for the girls who will come after you. By working hard to establish a girls’ soccer team, and by honoring that struggle with your dedication, you’ve already set down the road to success.

    I wish you all the best in the future as you continue to work, each in your own way, for gender equity.

    Best Regards,

    Teresa C. Younger
    Executive Director

    About the PCSW: The Permanent Commission on the Status of Women was formed in 1973 under Sec. 46a of the Connecticut General Statutes to study and improve Connecticut women’s economic security, health and safety; to promote consideration of qualified women to leadership positions and to work toward the elimination of gender discrimination. As a non-partisan arm of the General Assembly, the agency monitors, critiques and recommends changes to legislation in order to inform public policy, and assesses programs and practices in all State agencies for their effect on the state’s women. The PCSW serves as a liaison between government and its diverse constituents, and convenes stakeholders, including the business, non-profit and educational communities, local governments, and the media, in order to promote awareness of women’s issues.

  • RegCit P. 1: Litchfield Cowgirls' Title IX team a legacy for soccer


  • Title IX Impact On Education, Employment


  • Title IX Team, Championship Contenders, Featured In Hartford Courant


  • Litchfield.BZ Photos & Video Of Historic Cowgirls' Team


  • twitter@cooljustice