The Paralegal Help Site

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Paralegal Student or Practitioner? Here's How You Can Avoid Plagiarism

May 17th, 2012

Giving credit where it's due and seeking second opinions from attorneys are two ways paralegal students and practitioners can steer clear of plagiarizing. Learn the consequences for plagiarism from Globe University's legal program chair.St. Paul, Minn (PRWEB) May 16, 2012 An article appearing in the March 2012 edition of the "North Carolina Law Review," Cooper J Strickland, "The Dark Side of …

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Ex-Pima County paralegal on probation for forgery

May 15th, 2012
TUCSON, AZ (AP) -

A former paralegal with the Pima County Attorney’s Office has been placed on two years’ probation for forgery.

County prosecutors say 37-year-old Brenda Pinckney also was ordered to pay nearly $3,900 in restitution.

Pinckney worked for 12 years at the Pima County Attorney’s Office.

She was indicted Jan. 5 on charges alleging she stole more than $4,000 from the office. The money was intended to reimburse crime victims and witnesses for travel to Pima County Superior Court and for per diem costs.

The Arizona Daily Star says Pinckney was accused of submitting reimbursement requests for nonexistent addresses and for court events that didn’t happen.

Pinckney pleaded guilty last month to two counts of forgery with intent to defraud. She could have received a prison term of up to 7 1/2 years.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. KPHO (Meredith Corporation) contributed to this report.

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Law & Order Briefs

May 15th, 2012

Former paralegal gets probation for forgery

A former paralegal with the Pima County Attorney’s Office was placed on two years’ probation Thursday for forgery.

Pima County Superior Court Judge Michael Miller also ordered Brenda Pinckney to attend a financial management course and pay $3,888 in restitution.

Pinckney, who worked for 12 years at the Pima County Attorney’s Office, was indicted Jan. 5 on charges she stole more than $4,000 from the office. The money was intended to reimburse crime victims and witnesses for travel to Pima County Superior Court and for per diem costs.

She faced 19 felony charges including fraud, theft, forgery and aggravated taking the identity of another person.

Last month, Pinckney, 37, pleaded guilty to two counts of forgery with intent to defraud.

Kim Smith

42-year-old man arrested in killing

Tucson police have arrested a 42-year-old man in connection with a fatal shooting at a midtown apartment complex.

Joel Langejans was arrested Wednesday night and booked into the Pima County jail on suspicion of first-degree murder.

Police believe Langejans was involved in a fight with 26-year-old Noah Holl at an apartment complex at 4860 E. Pima St. on Tuesday, Sgt. Maria Hawke, a Tucson police spokeswoman, said in a news release.

Holl was shot in the fight and taken to the hospital where he later died, the release said.

Veronica M. Cruz

Man shot his gun at strip club, cops say

A 30-year-old man was arrested early Thursday after police said he was shooting his gun outside of a strip club in a midtown neighborhood.

Adam K. Woods was booked into Pima County jail on suspicion of being a prohibited possessor and discharging a firearm within city limits, said Sgt. Maria Hawke, a Tucson Police Department spokeswoman.

An officer was flagged down around 1:30 a.m. in the 1100 block of South Craycroft Road and, at the same time, a second officer who responded advised that shots were being fired by an unidentified man, Hawke said.

The suspect left Club Venom, a strip club at 1104 S. Craycroft Road, and, for some unknown reason, was firing his handgun.

No injuries were reported.

The second officer who responded saw the suspect walking through a parking lot near the strip club. It appeared the suspect was concealing something in his waistband.

That officer told the man to stop and show his hands, but the man began running southbound across East 22nd Street.

The man then turned and ran toward the officer, who was chasing the suspect in his patrol car.

The officer fired his gun at the man, but didn’t strike him.

Police officers eventually took the suspect into custody.

The officer who fired is Officer Stephen Parker, a 15-year veteran.

Veronica M. Cruz

and Jamar Younger

OV police seek man, 20s, in sex assault

Oro Valley police are looking for a man who physically and sexually assaulted a woman last month after he forced his way into her apartment, police said.

The assault happened April 23 at an apartment complex on North La Cañada Drive near West Lambert Lane, according to an Oro Valley Police Department news release.

He is described as a light-skinned man in his mid-20s with dark hair, a short buzz cut and unshaven stubble on his chin and jaw.

The man is about 5 feet 10 inches tall with a medium build. He has a puffy scar on the left side of his neck.

Anyone with information is asked to call 88-CRIME.

Jamar Younger

On StarNet: Find an interactive map of reported crimes in the city of Tucson, updated every morning with the previous day’s data, at azstarnet.com/crimemap

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Amarillo College student will be school's first male paralegal graduate

May 13th, 2012

Amarillo College student Ben Staton nearly missed his first law class when he walked in and saw a room full of women. "I instantly turned the opposite direction because I thought I was going the wrong way," he said.

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Law & Order Briefs

May 13th, 2012

Former paralegal gets probation for forgery

A former paralegal with the Pima County Attorney’s Office was placed on two years’ probation Thursday for forgery.

Pima County Superior Court Judge Michael Miller also ordered Brenda Pinckney to attend a financial management course and pay $3,888 in restitution.

Pinckney, who worked for 12 years at the Pima County Attorney’s Office, was indicted Jan. 5 on charges she stole more than $4,000 from the office. The money was intended to reimburse crime victims and witnesses for travel to Pima County Superior Court and for per diem costs.

She faced 19 felony charges including fraud, theft, forgery and aggravated taking the identity of another person.

Last month, Pinckney, 37, pleaded guilty to two counts of forgery with intent to defraud.

Kim Smith

42-year-old man arrested in killing

Tucson police have arrested a 42-year-old man in connection with a fatal shooting at a midtown apartment complex.

Joel Langejans was arrested Wednesday night and booked into the Pima County jail on suspicion of first-degree murder.

Police believe Langejans was involved in a fight with 26-year-old Noah Holl at an apartment complex at 4860 E. Pima St. on Tuesday, Sgt. Maria Hawke, a Tucson police spokeswoman, said in a news release.

Holl was shot in the fight and taken to the hospital where he later died, the release said.

Veronica M. Cruz

Man shot his gun at strip club, cops say

A 30-year-old man was arrested early Thursday after police said he was shooting his gun outside of a strip club in a midtown neighborhood.

Adam K. Woods was booked into Pima County jail on suspicion of being a prohibited possessor and discharging a firearm within city limits, said Sgt. Maria Hawke, a Tucson Police Department spokeswoman.

An officer was flagged down around 1:30 a.m. in the 1100 block of South Craycroft Road and, at the same time, a second officer who responded advised that shots were being fired by an unidentified man, Hawke said.

The suspect left Club Venom, a strip club at 1104 S. Craycroft Road, and, for some unknown reason, was firing his handgun.

No injuries were reported.

The second officer who responded saw the suspect walking through a parking lot near the strip club. It appeared the suspect was concealing something in his waistband.

That officer told the man to stop and show his hands, but the man began running southbound across East 22nd Street.

The man then turned and ran toward the officer, who was chasing the suspect in his patrol car.

The officer fired his gun at the man, but didn’t strike him.

Police officers eventually took the suspect into custody.

The officer who fired is Officer Stephen Parker, a 15-year veteran.

Veronica M. Cruz

and Jamar Younger

OV police seek man, 20s, in sex assault

Oro Valley police are looking for a man who physically and sexually assaulted a woman last month after he forced his way into her apartment, police said.

The assault happened April 23 at an apartment complex on North La Cañada Drive near West Lambert Lane, according to an Oro Valley Police Department news release.

He is described as a light-skinned man in his mid-20s with dark hair, a short buzz cut and unshaven stubble on his chin and jaw.

The man is about 5 feet 10 inches tall with a medium build. He has a puffy scar on the left side of his neck.

Anyone with information is asked to call 88-CRIME.

Jamar Younger

On StarNet: Find an interactive map of reported crimes in the city of Tucson, updated every morning with the previous day’s data, at azstarnet.com/crimemap

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Ex-Pima County paralegal gets probation for forgery

May 11th, 2012

A former paralegal with the Pima County Attorney’s Office was placed on two years probation Thursday for forgery.

Pima County Superior Court Judge Michael Miller also ordered Brenda Pinckney to attend a financial management course and pay $3,888 in restitution.

Pinckney, who worked for 12 years at the Pima County Attorney’s Office, was indicted Jan. 5 on charges alleging she stole more than $4,000 from the office. The money was intended to reimburse crime victims and witnesses for travel to Pima County Superior Court and for per diem costs.

She faced 19 felony charges including fraud, theft, forgery and aggravated taking the identity of another person.

Last month, Pinckney pleaded guilty to two counts of forgery with intent to defraud. She could have received a prison term of between 1 1/2 and 7 1/2 years.

As part of her job, Pinckney, 37, was responsible for obtaining funds from petty cash and giving them to the witnesses.

Pinckney was accused of submitting reimbursement requests for nonexistent addresses and for court events that didn’t happen, according to a letter notifying Pinckney of her impending termination. She was also accused of not returning the required receipts or forging the signatures of victims and witnesses on the receipts she did return.

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Ex-Pima County paralegal on probation for forgery

May 11th, 2012
TUCSON, AZ (AP) -

A former paralegal with the Pima County Attorney’s Office has been placed on two years’ probation for forgery.

County prosecutors say 37-year-old Brenda Pinckney also was ordered to pay nearly $3,900 in restitution.

Pinckney worked for 12 years at the Pima County Attorney’s Office.

She was indicted Jan. 5 on charges alleging she stole more than $4,000 from the office. The money was intended to reimburse crime victims and witnesses for travel to Pima County Superior Court and for per diem costs.

The Arizona Daily Star says Pinckney was accused of submitting reimbursement requests for nonexistent addresses and for court events that didn’t happen.

Pinckney pleaded guilty last month to two counts of forgery with intent to defraud. She could have received a prison term of up to 7 1/2 years.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. KPHO (Meredith Corporation) contributed to this report.

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Court to review request of illegal immigrant to practice law

May 19th, 2012

California’s agency that licenses lawyers wants to admit an illegal immigrant to practice law, an unprecedented request that the state’s highest court decided Wednesday to review.

The State Bar of California certified Sergio C. Garcia after he passed a written test and a moral examination, sending it to the California Supreme Court for routine approval. The bar informed the court at the time that Garcia was undocumented.

In a unanimous decision, the state high court ordered the bar to explain why an illegal immigrant should be given a legal license and invited briefs from other parties, opening the door to a potentially heated debate over national immigration policy.

Would the issuance of a license imply that Garcia could be legally employed as an attorney? the court asked. What are the legal and public policy limitations, if any, on an illegal immigrant’s ability to be a lawyer? May other state agencies that license professionals also admit undocumented immigrants?

After reviewing the written arguments, the court may hold oral arguments on the case.

Garcia’s case is the first to come before the state’s highest court involving an illegal immigrant seeking a legal license, according to a court spokeswoman. Similar cases are pending in Florida and New York. The bar began asking non-citizen applicants their immigration status several years ago.

Garcia was born in Mexico and brought to the United States by his parents when he was 17 months old, according to the Daily Journal, a legal newspaper. He attended college in Chico and works as a paralegal. Garcia has applied for legal status, but the process could take five to 15 years, Garcia’s immigration lawyer has said.

Stanford Law professor Deborah Rhode, a legal ethicist, said she would be surprised if the court approved a legal license for Garcia before he obtained residency.

“It seems fairly inconsistent with a long line of decisions that officers of the court are forsworn to uphold the law and should not be seen to have defied it,” she said.

But she also cautioned that Garcia could have a personally compelling case.

“Some of these cases are really heart-wrenching on the facts, especially undocumented immigrants who are brought over to this country at a young age, who go through the school system, who managed to triumph over a lot of obstacles, and who have now invested all this money in a degree,” she said.

A spokeswoman for the bar said it would respond to the court’s order but declined to discuss Garcia’s case. Instead, the spokeswoman provided a summary of requirements for practicing law in California.

They included a juris doctor from an accredited law school, a background check and a positive finding of moral character. The summary said applicants must supply a Social Security number but may request an exemption. The summary made no mention of immigration status.

Garcia’s immigration lawyer was unavailable.

Jerome Fishkin, a lawyer who is representing Garcia before the bar, responded to a request for an interview with a brief written comment.

“We hope that the California Supreme Court adopts the state bar’s finding that Sergio meets all legal qualifications to become a California lawyer,” Fishkin said. ” We will be filing our brief on his behalf.

maura.dolan@latimes.com

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Ex-paralegal sentenced for Burlington grand jury leak

May 19th, 2012
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A former paralegal working for the U.S. Attorneys Office in Burlington will serve three years of probation for leaking federal grand jury information in 2008 to a boyfriend who was under investigation at the time for drug trafficking.

This is an extremely serious offense, U.S. District Judge William Sessions said as he issued his sentence in the case of Danielle Hall. Ive never seen anything like it before in my 16 years on the bench.

The sentence was part of a binding plea deal worked out between lawyers for Hall and the government in January, when Hall agreed to plead guilty to an obstruction of justice charge. Sessions, under the deals terms, could void but not alter the deal. At Mondays hearing, he praised the two sides for coming up with the agreement.

This was a very difficult case, Sessions told the lawyers. It could have been an incredible trial.

Hall declined comment as she departed the courtroom after her sentencing.

According to court documents, Hall used a computer at the U.S. Attorneys Office to obtain confidential information about her then-boyfriend, Michael Ryan, and his role in a drug-distribution scheme. She was fired from her job when the conduct was discovered in April 2008.

Hall wept at her sentencing hearing Monday, telling Sessions she knows she made a horrible decision to access the information about Ryan. She said she was struggling with depression and alcohol problems at the time and felt sorry for Ryan.

Id like to apologize for what I did, especially to the U.S. Attorneys Office, my family, to you, your honor, and to the court, Hall said.

You understand that what you did goes to the heart of what the criminal justice systems is about? Sessions asked Hall later in the hearing.

I know, Hall answered. I cant take those things back.

In court documents, Hall claimed she sought out the grand jury information about Ryan because she wanted to learn more about who he was. She later admitted she did share details of what she learned with Ryan.

She broke off the relationship with Ryan in March 2008, but remained in touch with him afterward and texted him just before she tried to commit suicide the following month. Ryan, after receiving the text message, went to her home and discovered her in the garage with her car motor running and called the authorities, according to court records.

Hall told the court that she has straightened out her life over the past four years. She said she no longer drinks alcohol and is happily married to a man she met later in 2008.

Ryan and Randy Russell were co-owners of Justin Cruz Salon, a high-end hairstyling outfit in Burlington, when the two were arrested and charged in 2009 with marijuana trafficking and laundering drug proceeds through their business.

Russell was sentenced in 2010 to 30 months in prison and four years of supervised release. Ryans case, slowed by the disclosures about Halls conduct, was resolved last month when he was sentenced to four years of supervised release, 200 hours of community service and fined $2,500. (Correction: An earlier version of this story gave inaccurate details of his sentence.)

Sessions, at Mondays hearing, noted that there was no evidence the information Hall leaked to Ryan resulted in bodily harm to anyone. Hall will serve the first six months of her probation in home confinement and will be required to perform 150 hours of community service.

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Sr. Legal Assistant- Houston

May 17th, 2012


RELOCATION ASSISTANCE IS NOT AVAILABLE


SUMMARY:

The Paralegal supports the Senior Counsel who handles mergers and acquisitions; financial transactions; various litigation; and all corporate disclosures.


ESSENTIAL DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES include but not limited to the following.

• Assists closing process for corporate transactions, which includes drafting and updating checklist, identifying and compiling due diligence, and various other matters as applicable to the transaction.

• Coordinates and manages special projects for which Senior Counsel is responsible.

• Reviews subpoenas, identifies action to be taken, contacts process service or outside counsel and communicates findings to the relevant parties.

• Interfaces with outside counsel on a regular basis and manages outside counsel for various projects.

• Assists with analysis, preparation, and maintenance of Senior Counsel’s budget.

• Drafts powers of attorney, certificates, procedures, memorandums, correspondence and other legal documentation.

• Assists Senior Counsel by researching and analyzing law sources such as statutes, recorded judicial decisions, legal articles, treaties, constitutions, and legal codes.

• Performs document management, such as tracking of exhibits, transcripts, depositions and other types of documents; organizes, maintains, and updates document and electronic filing systems within the Senior Counsel’s responsibility.


QUALIFICATIONS

To perform this job successfully, an individual must be able to perform each essential duty satisfactorily. The requirements listed below are representative of the knowledge, skill, and/or ability required:

• 5+ years of progressive experience in a legal department of a major corporation or law firm.

• At least 3 years of experience as a legal assistant or paralegal supporting a senior executive, law firm partner or member of corporate legal department.

• Strong written and verbal communication skills and proven people and organizational skills.

• Experience in the oil & gas industry is a plus but not required.

• Bachelor’s degree (preferred).

• Paralegal certification (preferred).

• Notary Public (preferred).


Disclaimer


The above statements are intended to describe the general nature and level of work being performed by employees assigned to this job. It is not designed to contain or be interpreted as a comprehensive inventory of all duties, responsibilities, and qualifications required of employees assigned to this job. All personnel may be required to perform duties outside of their normal responsibilities from time to time, as needed.