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episodes and events

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Drag.net

by Brit Hanson

  • May 19, 2015

Amateur sleuths armed with their own laptops, public information and a lot of spare time are working alone and in groups to crack criminal cases. Sometimes it works and sometimes it goes very, very badly. Welcome to the future of crowdsourced law enforcement.

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP5646934310.mp3
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Tipping the Scales

by Ashley Cleek

  • May 5, 2015

Are aggressive, expensive elections corrupting the court system? Or are they evidence of a strong democracy? The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that states can prohibit judges from openly asking for money to pay for their judicial campaigns.

“Judges are not politicians,” wrote Chief Justice John Roberts, “even when they come to the bench by way of the ballot.”

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP3154296226.mp3
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Marijuana Rules

by Peter Frick-Wright

  • April 20, 2015

Recreational pot has earned the state of Colorado $53 million dollars in tax revenue. All on a drug that, according to federal law,
is still illegal. How does a marijuana business navigate all the uncertainty? Find out this week, on Life of the Law.

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP4898040735.mp3
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Bad Gig

by Casey Miner

  • April 7, 2015

Exotic dancers, on-call drivers and writers might have a different name for what they do — freelancing, part-time work and independent contracting — but it all means the same thing. Work that doesn’t start at 9 and end at 5. And sure, it has its perks but do 1099 workers have protections?

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP2536150578.mp3
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Anatomy of a Confession

by Michael May

  • March 24, 2015

A triple murder, a habitual liar on a stolen motorcycle and a confession that doesn’t add up.
Why would anyone confess to a crime they didn’t commit? On Life of the Law, the story of a man
dying of cancer on Texas’s Death Row who confessed to a crime he says he didn’t do.

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP2633742519.mp3
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Birth Rights

by Renee Gross

  • March 10, 2015

A midwife cares for a pregnant woman before, during, and after they give birth. By developing relationships with their clients, midwives say they can help each women determine how and where they want to give…

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP4296816269.mp3
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Call NOW!

by Sean Cole

  • February 24, 2015

I have always been so impressed by lawyer commercials on TV, and by impressed I mean…totally confused. I’m always like, “Who told you that disaster footage or wooden readings from cue cards or your cousin…

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP2228699759.mp3
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The Diaper Wars

by Audrey Quinn

  • February 10, 2015

In the 1980s, the world’s two largest diaper companies set out to destroy each other in a patent battle known as “the Diaper Wars.” The court battles lasted seven years and cost millions of dollars. What did we get out of it? Better diapers — and one very messy lesson in patent law.

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP2055727611.mp3
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Life After Doxing

by Ann Marie Awad

  • January 27, 2015

If you’re constantly harassed by someone in real life, you may be able to get a restraining order. But can the law protect you when these threats take place online?

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP4947866228.mp3
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Boiled Angel

by Hans Anderson

  • January 13, 2015

Freedom of speech is a right guaranteed by the First Amendment of the Constitution. One exception to the rule is obscenity. But determining what is obscene can be difficult –- especially for those accused of it.

http://cdn.panoply.fm/PP4924237093.mp3
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