Select a court or courts from the within drop-down. Enter the attorney's name in the Attorney field. Note: Leave out initials, middle names, and/or abbreviations as the court may or may not use these. Click Search.
Take the following steps to search by a law firm's name in the search box: Select a court or courts from the within drop-down. Enter plaintiff-lawfirm (xxx) or defendant-lawfirm (xxx) or others-lawfirm (xxx) in the search box. Note: The xxx stands …
To search for an attorney: At the search form, choose Attorney from the drop-down list to the left of the search field. Type the name of the attorney for which you want to search in the search field. Optionally, select the Filters drop-down list and …
To do this: At the search form, choose Attorney from the drop-down list to the left of the search field. If you don't know any part of the attorney's name, leave the search field blank. (If you know a portion of the name, enter it in the field.) Select the Filters drop-down list. A list of locations ...
The Litigation Profile Suite allows the researcher to examine attorneys (and judges and expert witnesses). Access by selecting the Litigation Profile suite from the upper-left drop down menu on Lexis.
Bloomberg's Litigation Analytics allows you to research law firms. Select Litigation & Dockets and then Litigation Analytics. Here's an example:
Westlaw Edge Litigation Analytics allows you to research attorneys and law firms. Select Litigation Analytics from Specialty Areas under Content Types. Then select Litigation Analytics and then Attorneys or Law Firms from the drop down menu. Type in the name of the attorney or law firm you'd like to research.
Legal practitioners researching case law always look for the most compelling evidence to persuade judges to interpret the law in your favor. However, citing pertinent case law that strengthens your case can require sifting through a multitude of cases to find the ones that solidify your argument.
Attorneys using Lexis know they’re relying on rigorously vetted content. The Lexis content goes through the scrupulous 29-step Shepard’s ® editorial process that combines extensive quality control measures with the work of attorney-editors, ensuring you get the most reliable, relevant and timely content.
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Lexis Search Advisor lets you refine the scope of your research before conducting more specific search requests. Based on a classification system of 43 legal topics and approximately 400,000 sub-topics, Lexis Search Advisor helps you quickly retrieve relevant information from case law, secondary sources and legal news.
However, there is no charge for the search if you stop it before the 3,000+ documents are retrieved. Conversely, keep in mind that the search charge is applicable if no (0) documents are retrieved. FOCUS always searches the original number of documents retrieved with the initial search request.
To fax or e-mail documents in your search results to yourself or others, click Fax or E-Mail on any search results page. Specify the documents you want and the format, include the delivery information and click Send.
Segments are divisions or sections within a document. For example, a case-law decision contains segments such as name, date, court, opinion, and judge while a newspaper article contains segments such as headline, dateline, and byline.
The FOCUS feature narrows your search results without changing your original search request. Use the FOCUS feature as often as needed to search for terms not included in your original search request, and explore various aspects of an issue.
Maximize the potential of your LexisNexis research with customized selection of up to 50 sources—combine cases, codes, law reviews, news, and more together in one search and get organized results!
The All Results page offers you the opportunity to see an overview of your entire results set with a breakdown of how many documents were retrieved in each source category as well as in each individual source.
If you have a citation to a case, access the case on Lexis and then check the sidebar for a heading labeled Related Court Materials with links beneath it to any related dockets, briefs, and other court documents.
On Lexis, if you do not have a citation to a case, you must separately search dockets and briefs, pleadings, and motions:
Lexis indicates how recently a docket was updated at the top of the docket, with the words "This case was retrieved on" followed by a date. Law school Lexis accounts do not allow you to update dockets.
To receive an email notification every time a new brief, pleading, or motion is filed by an attorney or party or on a topic, create a custom Briefs, Pleadings, and Motions search and then click the icon at the top of the screen.