Welcome

Thanks for stopping by my little place on the web. This parking spot is not for me to rant (though there will certainly be some of that), but as a place for my former and current students to converse about the full gamut of law school questions and about the class assignments and goals: you know I feel that conversation is the best learning experience.

So, follow. Check in every few days and chat away: anything is fair game (remember, I live vicariously through all your wild lives). To start, some of you already in law school can express some wisdom since decision time is beginning to arrive for this year’s seniors, and those of you currently being abused can ask the world your questions about the class assignments.

This is for you. Enjoy.

-Prof. B.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

For those of you who know I teach Hemingway in Arts and Hum classes:


UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
TAMPA DIVISION
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
  CASE NO.: 8:11-cr-269-T-23AEP
v.

CRISTIE FAY BOTTORFF
JERRY ALAN BOTTORFF
LUIS ANGEL LOPEZ
                                                                     /
ORDER

     Jerry Alan Bottorff stands accused of murder-for-hire, conspiracy to commit murder-for-hire, and a firearm offense.  For four months the parties have known with particularity when the trial begins – July 9, 2012; the parties requested the special setting.  Nonetheless, Bottorff’s counsel asks (Doc. 127) to suspend the trial on Friday, July 20th:
   
          Undersigned counsel, a perennial contestant in the Ernest Hemingway
          Look-alike Contest, is scheduled to appear as a semi-finalist at Sloppy
          Joe’s Bar in Key West, Florida at 6:30 P.M. on Friday, July 20, 2012.

          In order to be able to be in Key West at the appointed hour, undersigned
          counsel has planned to depart St. Petersburg after the trial recesses on
          Thursday, July 19, 2012, and drive toward Key West[,] arriving on
          July 20, 2012.

          Undersigned counsel has secured a block of six rooms to accommodate
          family, friends, and fans and has had to pay non-refundable deposits.

     Between a murder-for-hire trial and an annual look-alike contest, surely Hemingway, a perfervid admirer of “grace under pressure,” would choose the trial. At his most robust, Hemingway exemplified the intrepid defense lawyer:


          He works like hell, and through it. . . .  He has the most profound
          bravery. . . . He has had pain[] and the kind of poverty that you don’t
          believe[;] he has had about eight times the normal allotment of
          responsibilities.  And he has never once compromised.  He has never
          turned off on an easier path than the one he staked himself.  It takes courage.
Dorothy Parker, The Artist’s Reward, THE NEW YORKER, Nov. 30, 1929, at 28-30 (describing
Hemingway).  Perhaps a lawyer who evokes Hemingway can resist relaxing frolic in favor
of solemn duty.
     Or, at least, “Isn’t it pretty to think so?”
     Best of luck to counsel in next year’s contest.  The motion (Doc. 127) is DENIED.

Friday, June 22, 2012