(Part 3) Top products from r/legaladvice

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We found 21 product mentions on r/legaladvice. We ranked the 564 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/legaladvice:

u/julio26pt2 · 1 pointr/legaladvice

Friend, I don't normally recommend books to posters, but I'll make an exception here.

I read this book a few years ago and found it useful throughout my career. It's called "Influence" and it focuses on how to be persuasive. It may save you a lot of headaches in the future if you can learn today how to be influential tomorrow. Telling people to do something and using "because the CEO said to do it" is rarely going to make a positive impact.

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0205609996/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1

Cheers!

u/sbwesq · 3 pointsr/legaladvice

Contact an attorney sooner and find out what it will cost. Then build that cost into your commission. Paying for good legal advice is the cost of doing business. You can also pick up, as a good reference guide to help you describe your needs to the attorney, and understand what all the legal terms mean, The Pocket Lawyer for Filmmakers It’s a great accessibly written legal guide specifically for filmmakers of all types.

u/LocationBot · 1 pointr/legaladvice

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I am a bot whose sole purpose is to improve the timeliness and accuracy of responses in this subreddit.

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It appears you forgot to include your location in the title or body of your post. Please update the body of your original post to include this information.

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Author: /u/wawjone

Title: Driving headset music bluetooth glasses for men and women polarized sunglasses

Original Post:

> https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07Y8BWNLK?ref=myi_title_dp




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LocationBot 4.97 23/269ths | Report Issues

u/JakeDeLaPlaya · 2 pointsr/legaladvice

Then if you're willing to put in the work, you might have a defense. One great resource is David Browns, "Fight Your Ticket and Win in California." The 2009 version is still valid. It gives a lot of information on the "speed trap" defense. This is where you were cited for 22350 using radar.

But basically if a traffic an engineering survey hasn't been done on that stretch of road within the past 5 years, the radar evidence isn't admissible. And given she was moving at the time, her estimation of your speed is a tough sell.

But before you do all that, plead not guilty by mail, pay the full bail ($367) and request a trial by written declaration.

u/justcallmetarzan · 2 pointsr/legaladvice

If you like to kind of geek out over the First Amendment, I'd recommend On Dissent. One of my law professors co-wrote it. It's a pretty good discussion of the history of First Amendment jurisprudence and how First Amendment ideas are conceptualized.

u/childhoodsurvivor · 22 pointsr/legaladvice

> I have a really hard time talking to people and get overwhelmed.

This is a book about assertiveness training so you can build your shiny spine. Good luck!

u/Lynn_L · 3 pointsr/legaladvice

Same answer. It's just a higher standard of proof if it's a public figure.

Here is an excellent example of not libel.

u/truenoise · 1 pointr/legaladvice

You should get yourself a copy of The Graphic Artist's Guidelines to Pricing & Ethical Guidelines to familiarize yourself with selling all rights to your work, when it will be distributed on an international level. http://www.amazon.com/Graphic-Artists-Handbook-Pricing-Guidelines/dp/0932102166/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1457753528&sr=1-1&keywords=graphic+artist%27s+guild+handbook+of+pricing+and+ethical+guidelines

u/truthandparadox · 2 pointsr/legaladvice

This book Crucial-Conversations will give you a lot of help in having that conversation and keeping it from derailing.

u/evil0S · 1 pointr/legaladvice

I believe this book actually covers the topic "defense of a third person" thoroughly. I know, like swalsh411 mentioned below. It can be risky. http://www.amazon.com/Self-Defense-Laws-States-Edition/dp/0984505873

u/boathole · 2 pointsr/legaladvice

Amen, brother.

I'll just add that OP should also read RPL 235-f

> 4. Any lease or rental agreement for residential premises entered into
by two or more tenants shall be construed to permit occupancy by tenants, immediate family of tenants, occupants and dependent children of occupants; provided that the total number of tenants and occupants, excluding occupants' dependent children, does not exceed the number of tenants specified in the current lease or rental agreement, and that at least one tenant or a tenants' spouse occupies the premises as his primary residence.

Ah hell, here's some more required reading:

https://www.nycourts.gov/courts/nyc/housing/pdfs/Landlordbooklet.pdf

http://www.amazon.com/New-York-Landlords-Law-Book/dp/0873379276 or http://www.amazon.com/Landlords-Legal-Guide-Survival-Guides/dp/1572485914 (and the Nolo book is good too, but not NY-specific).

u/thewholebagel · 59 pointsr/legaladvice

I'm so sad to hear this. He's not lazy, he's traumatized. He's not freezing up on purpose, he's dissociating under stress, a behavior kids learn to cope with abuse. It sounds like CPS didn't provide a class for parenting traumatized children, and that's a travesty. I highly recommend you check out this book. It might give you the information and tools you need to be able to safely and effectively parent this poor kid: https://www.amazon.com/Connected-Child-healing-adoptive-family/dp/0071475001

ETA: It does sound like he needs a 504. It has nothing to do with being smart, it's about accommodations for a disability. Taking away recess is a terrible consequence for a kid having social difficulties. He needs support, not punishment.

u/Brad_Wesley · 1 pointr/legaladvice

Buy or torrent this book. It worked for me, and has worked for a number of people I have given it to:

http://www.amazon.com/The-Easy-Way-Stop-Drinking/dp/1402736479

u/quasimodoca · 2 pointsr/legaladvice

In addition to the previous posts here is a link to the Ca tenant/renter guide from the Dept of Consumer Affairs.

http://www.dca.ca.gov/publications/landlordbook/catenant.pdf

And one more, The Nolo guide for landlords.

The California Landlord's Law Book: Rights & Responsibilities

u/Bob_Sconce · 4 pointsr/legaladvice

I think you just want to argue. In that case, go to /r/legaladviceofftopic

I'd point you to this book, for a broad description: https://www.amazon.com/End-Ownership-Personal-Property-Information/dp/0262035014/

I'd also refer you to:
Verner v. Autodesk at https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-9th-circuit/1537762.html

ProCD v. Zeidenburg at https://www.law.cornell.edu/copyright/cases/86_F3d_1447.htm

MAI Systems v. Peak Computer

and, Nimmer on Copyright talks about it as well

u/snkns · 2 pointsr/legaladvice

I read this book last year. It was pretty good. I don't think he had any issues.

The federal statute cited above as well as state laws I have seen require that an individual be physically harmed/injured in the commission of the crime. Your drug crime very likely does not have an injured victim.

u/malachi23 · 1 pointr/legaladvice

I messed up; It's "handbook" not "guide" -- ZSG

u/Aghast_Cornichon · 5 pointsr/legaladvice

An excellent primer on the topic: The Price of Admission, by Daniel Golden (2007).

It's an interesting question of whether the admissions administrator accepting a direct bribe would be a crime; it probably would be if this is a public institution, while it would merely be unethical privately.

But just pulling strings ? Hell, that's called Tuesday.