Lexis Rebrands Free Case Law f/k/a LexisOne

Posted in Case Law, LexisNexis, U.S. | Tagged , ,

One of the better free U.S. case law sites has, for years, been LexisOne, a site powered by LexisNexis case law right down to the ability to search by document segment (counsel, court, etc.).  It didn’t match the paid subscription version of LexisNexis but it was an excellent starting point.  That site is now gone, and the resources have been shifted laterally into LexisNexis’ social community site.

The good news is you can still create an account (or use your old one) and search case law for free.  The benefits of using LexisOne continue in the new site.  The requirement to access it through the LexisNexis community portal is not at all surprising, if looked at it from LexisNexis’ perspective.  I’ve spent little time in there and this will likely make me use it more often.  There are elements that can be customized, mostly related to news and current awareness.  There are quick links to professional and practice area sub-sites, although some of them are outside the community portal and accessible without a log-in.

Hat tip to @catherinereach at the Chicago Bar Association.

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U.S. District Court Opinions Coming for Free

Posted in Case Law, Content, Government, U.S. | Tagged , ,

The successor to the United States Government Printing Office GPO Access, the Federal Digital System, has announced a pilot project to bring Federal district court opinions to the free Web. The district courts are the trial courts in the U.S. Federal system and are frequently only available in print or in fee-based databases.  The initial pilot will include one district court, two bankruptcy courts (same level), and the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals (self-indulgent note:  I used to play my bagpipes just outside the 39th story window of Judge Morris Arnold of the 8th in the Little Rock TCBY tower).

While some district courts publish a selection of opinions on their Web sites, there is no easy way to search across multiple courts and all opinions. If this project is successful, it will be a great resource for legal researchers to be able to access this information in aggregate, through a site as powerful as FDSys. They already make available the primary legislative and executive regulatory documents for the U.S. Federal government.

You can already search and browse the 4 courts on the FDSys Web site and feedback is encouraged.  The site says opinions go back to 2004, but the 8th Circuit lists back to 2001, and the Florida bankruptcy court starts in 2006.

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Use Qiqqa for Quicker Management of Research PDFs

Posted in Case Law, Document management, File Management, Research Management, Windows

Users of Mendeley or Zotero are probably already managing articles or case law or other documents downloaded in PDF format.  An interesting newcomer to this area is Qiqqa.  Unlike academic researchers, for which all of these tools appear to be primarily designed, I’m always curious to see how they do with law-related PDFs.  While they will handle a law journal nicely, I test them against case law.  Zotero, for example, has the ability to capture an item as a case, with special feeds to store date decided, and reporter volume.

Qiqqa does not have a specific case law attribute but offers a lot of other ways to get into the documents you have.  I downloaded an opinion of the U.S. Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in PDF.  It was easy to add to my local library – there is also an online sync function available, so you can have your library stored online – and Qiqqa automatically will perform optical character recognition (OCR) on the document.

It displays this information in interesting ways.  First, it shows a tag cloud of terms that occur frequently in the document.  For example, the case I used – Johnson v. City of Detroit – dealt with housing discrimination and was a Section §1983 case.  The tag cloud displays a large 1983 among the other keywords it highlighted in the case.  You can click on any term in the tag cloud and Qiqqa will highlight that keyword wherever it exists in your document.  You can also search across your library for a keyword to quickly bring documents together.

Qiqqa’s metadata sniffer didn’t extract any useful metadata but, with the PDF of the case downloaded from the Sixth Circuit’s site, when I clicked on Google Scholar, it ran a search and retrieved the same case.  That can help you quickly get into other citations, using Google Scholar’s How Cited feature.

Like Zotero, Qiqqa isn’t ideal for legal research management unless you are primarily dealing with traditional journals and articles. However, the features it has for handling PDFs are quite useful and I could see this being a great tool for managing a case with a lot of downloaded PDFs or for internal functions, like managing articles or knowhow that you have found that relate to your practice.

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Research Add-ons Chart for Lawyers Using IE, Chrome, Firefox, and Safari

Posted in Add-on, Business Information, Canada, Case Law, Evernote, Firefox, Google, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer, Safari, Search, U.K., U.S. | Tagged , ,

This page was inspired by a recent conference presentation I saw that focused, like much of this blog, on extensions and tweaks for Mozilla’s Firefox or Google’s Chrome Web browsers.  The legal profession is predominantly using the Microsoft Internet Explorer browser, however, probably at even greater levels than the general population.  It is sometimes hard to determine what add-ons or extensions work for Microsoft Internet Explorer, because there is no comprehensive central marketplace for available resources.

Here is a chart with a list of free extensions that can help your online research and the browsers for which they are available.  It’s not comprehensive, but it has a number of resources that are available to 3 or more browsers.

I have made a selection for each category and browser but there may be other options.  Keep in mind that the add-on may be for a particular version of the Web browser or require a particular operating system, so they may not install for the version you are running.  You can also go directly to sites like IEAddons.com for Internet Explorer, Mozilla’s Add On site, Google’s Web Store (or the old extension site), Safari Addons, and the Userscripts.org site to find tweaks for all major Web browsers.

Feel free to add your own favorite research-related extensions or add-ons in the comments!

  1. Click the icon that matches YOUR browser to go directly to an available extension.  If the icon is grayed out, then I didn’t provide a link.
  2. Hold your mouse pointer over the icon before you click it.  I have added a tool tip for each icon to try to help you before you click away.
Access Internet Explorer-designed Sites without Internet Explorer IE Tab 2 Add-on for Mozilla Firefox IE Tab Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Block Ads IE Adblocker Adblock Plus Add on for Firefox Adblock Add-on for Chrome AdBlock for Safari
Bookmark Synchronization XMarks Add-on for Internet Explorer Bookmark synchronization is built in to Firefox browser Bookmark synchronization built in to Chrome Web browser XMarks Add-on for Safari
Case Law Citation Locator UK ONLY:  Justis J-Link Add-on for Internet Explorer US ONLY:  Jureeka Add-on for Mozilla Firefox Not available for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Citation Management with Zotero (free) Not available for Internet Explorer Zotero Citation Management Add-on for Mozilla Firefox Zotero Alpha Add-on for Google Chrome Zotero Alpha Add-on for Safari
Diigo Web Highlighter and Research Manager [FLI post on Diigo] Diigo Research Manager Toolbar for Internet Explorer Diigo Research Manager Toolbar for Mozilla Firefox Diigo Research Manager Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Evernote Web Clipper [FLI post on Evernote]

Evernote Add-on installed with Evernote for Windows

Evernote Add on for Firefox

Evernote Add-on for Chrome Add-on for Safari installs with Evernote for Mac
Google Search Result Term Jumping / Highlighting Google Toolbar for Internet Explorer supports term highlighting and jumping Search WP Add-on for Mozilla Firefox Word Highlight Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Google Scholar Star Pagination for Cases [FLI post on pagination] Not available for Internet Explorer Not available for Firefox Google Scholar Star Pagination Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
Greplin Personal Cloud Search [FLI post on Greplin] Not available for Internet Explorer Not available for Firefox Greplin Add-on for Chrome Not available for Safari
Instapaper Deferred Reading Instapaper Bookmarklet defers reading for Internet Explorer Instapaper Bookmarklet defers reading for Mozilla Firefox Instapaper Bookmarklet defers reading for Google Chrome Instapaper Bookmarklet defers reading for Mac
Readability Not available for Internet Explorer Arc90 Readability Add on for Mozilla Firefox Arc90 Readability Add-on for Chrome Not available for Safari
Surf Canyon Personalized Search Results Surf Canyon Personalized Search Results for Internet Explorer Surf Canyon Personalized Search Results for Mozilla Firefox Surf Canyon Personalized Search Results Add-on for Google Chrome Not available for Safari
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