Comments on this fastcase-public.interest.org announcement re online case law?

Submitted by emasters on Thu, 11/15/2007 - 1:25pm.

As somebody who is trying to build tools that require the use of
freely available case law, this is a big deal. Finding case law on
the web has always been a crap shoot. It is all over the place, in
different formats, and coverage is haphazard. Sources like LII have
done a great job with specific collections, but overall there are
gaps. Little exists before the early nineties on free public sites,
for example. The promised release by public.resource.org of all of
this material in a single, uniform collection is an incredible boon to
anyone looking for that case law or trying to build tools that use
case law.
A preview of the collection can be seen at
http://bulk.resource.org/courts.gov/c/. You can search the preview
collection with the Google CSE that I put up:
http://www.google.com/coop/cse?cx=004708334741545358535%3Aycoswf1894k
(though at the moment the links are not resolving properly.)
CALI will be using this repository to power a new generation of course
material creation tools. The eLangdell tools will allow faculty to
create and assemble course materials by drawing upon cases in this
collection and then editing editing and/or annotating them as they
like before sharing them with their students (or colleagues, or the
world).
I hope that others here see some of the tremendous possibilities that
this release makes available.

Elmer.

On 11/15/07, Ben Chapman wrote:
> Folks,
>
> Here are the first paragraphs from a recent announcement regarding making
> some federal appellate and Supreme Court case law available on line. I must
> be out of the loop, because this didn't seem like such a big thing to me,
> given the LII's good work, but I was curious if others had a different take
> on it ...
>

--
Elmer R. Masters
Director of Internet Development
Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction
emasters@cali.org 773-332-7508

( categories: teknoids )
Submitted by scott.matheson on Thu, 11/15/2007 - 3:31pm.

It doesn't mean too much to Wexis now - there is, as yet (see prior
comments on user-contributed headnotes) no indexing system. It also
leaves the F.Supp Federal District Court materials out, in addition to
pre-1950 appellate materials. Oh, and state cases (though some states
do make their corpus freely available - Oklahoma for one).

So for "professional" searching, those with licenses on the line will
still need wexis. For the rest of us - the non-lawyer professionals to
paraphrase tb - this is indeed a great boon. (On the other side, I
have no doubt that plenty of lawyers will use these materials -
hopefully to the benefit of their clients in the form of lower bills.)

Scott
---
Scott Matheson
University of Colorado Law Library

On Nov 15, 2007, at 12:57 PM, Whitcomb, Jeff wrote:

> I am not a lawyer, so someone tell me what this means for Westlaw
> and Lexis searches?
>
> Jeff Whitcomb
> Technology Services Manager
> Member: Staff Advisory Council
> Cumberland School of Law - Samford University
> 205-726-4662
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: teknoids-bounces@ruckus.law.cornell.edu [mailto:teknoids-bounces@ruckus.law.cornell.edu
> ] On Behalf Of Ben Chapman
> Sent: Thursday, November 15, 2007 8:38 AM
> To: Teknoids
> Subject: [teknoids] Comments on this fastcase-public.interest.org
> announcement re online case law?
>
> Folks,
>
> Here are the first paragraphs from a recent announcement regarding
> making
> some federal appellate and Supreme Court case law available on line.
> I must
> be out of the loop, because this didn't seem like such a big thing
> to me,
> given the LII's good work, but I was curious if others had a
> different take
> on it ...
>
> ============= start press release excerpt ==========================
>
> Announcement
> 1.8 million pages of federal case law to become freely available.
>
> WASHINGTON, D.C. / SEBASTOPOL, CA 2007 Fastcase, Inc. announced today that they will release a large and free
> archive of federal case law, including all Courts of Appeals
> decisions from
> 1950 to the present and all Supreme Court decisions since 1754. The
> archive
> will be public domain and usable by anyone for any purpose.
>
> ³The U.S. judiciary has allowed their entire work product to be
> locked up
> behind a cash register,² said Carl Malamud, CEO of
> Public.Resource.Org. ³Law
> is the operating system of our society and today's agreement means
> anybody
> can read the source for a substantial amount of case law that was
> previously
> unavailable.²
>
> =================================
>
> The full press release is here:
>
> http://public.resource.org/case_law_announcement.html
>
> Best,
>
> Ben
>
> --
> Benjamin J. Chapman, J.D.
> Assistant Dean for Information Technology
> Emory University School of Law
> ben.chapman@emory.edu V:404-727-6948
>