Family seeks return of park now used for parking
In 1904 the Springs family conveyed to the city of Charlotte a tract of land for use as a public park - not for public parking. Now that Mecklenburg County and Central Piedmont Community College have built a $21 million garage on what was once a part of the parkland, the Springses want it back.
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NEWSLINKS
- Absentee ballots on hold (The Asheboro Courier-Tribune)
- Ex-teachers aide pleads guilty to sex with child (The Durham Herald-Sun)
- Fayetteville man acquitted in murder case (The Fayetteville Observer)
- Judge refuses to throw out case of officer’s sexual assault (The Charlotte Observer)
- Jury to hear case in trooper’s killing (Asheville Citizen-Times)
- Prosecutors seek death in child’s killing (The Winston-Salem Journal)
VERDICTS & SETTLEMENTS
- $1.3M settlement in death caused by rock from dump truck

- Head-on DWI wreck results in $1M settlement

- Patient settles cataract surgery claim for $550,000

- Mediated settlement reached in Indian Beach condo dispute

- Defense verdict in suit over Watauga construction injury

- Insurance dispute results in $100K settlement for injured man

COMMENTARY
- Coach’s Corner: Of priorities and consequences in the practice of law
I recently spoke with an executive whose company makes software to help lawyers record billable time. He discussed failure to record time as a "time leak," because time is lost (and therefore not billed) when an attorney fails to make contemporaneous notations of work being done. Surveys done by the company suggest that at least one in five timekeepers consistently fails to record time contemporaneously, and almost 80 percent record their time days or even weeks later.
- Scribner’s Error: Wikipedia — Good start but bad finish
- Bad writers will end up on the naughty list
- To plan your revenue, plan your clients

- ‘Work ’til you drop’ is not a succession plan

Q&A INTERVIEWS
Most Important Opinions
- Civil Rights - Pretrial Release - Sexual Abuse - Municipal - 42 U.S.C. § 1983

Hill v. Robeson County. Plaintiff alleges that, while she was on pre-trial supervision, a county resource officer and three deputies sexually abused her. She has failed to show that the county is liable for these men's alleged actions. The court grants the motions to dismiss of the county and its officials.
- Criminal Practice - Sentencing - Death by Vehicle - Second-Degree Murder - Single Sentence - First Impression

State v. Davis. When a defendant's convictions for felony death by vehicle and second-degree murder arise out of the same conduct, he may be punished only for second-degree murder and not for felony death by vehicle. Also, when a defendant's convictions for felony serious injury by vehicle and assault with a deadly weapon inflicting serious injury (ADWISI) arise out of the same conduct, he may be punished only for ADWISI. We reverse the Court of Appeals' decision to the contrary and remand for re-sentencing.
- Criminal Practice - Evidence - Expert Testimony - Child Sexual Abuse - Physical Evidence

State v. Chandler. Contrary to the superior court's ruling, there has been no significant change in the law regarding admissibility of expert testimony in child sexual abuse cases since the time of defendant's trial and appeal. Defendant is not entitled to the relief he sought pursuant to the retroactivity rule of G.S. § 15A-1415(b)(7). Reversed.

