Want to learn how to set up your office infrastructure to save you time and money?
Ronin will show you how to save money on everything from copier costs to, scanning, electronic bates stamping and case management. Contact us today and we will show you how to save money while improving you bottom line.
Ronin can set up custom imports from Law Enforcement Databases into Sanction.
The buzz in the law enforcement community is Data warehousing. State and local police departments are creating huge data warehouses that are not being used by the defense bar.
The Chicago Police Department and other police departments across the country are using huge databases to manage their case reporting. That means that the police reports you read are really assemblies of data fields into reports. Ronin will help you draft subpoenas that compel the police to turn over the raw data. Ronin then takes that raw data and imports it into a Sanction case file so you can see for yourself whether police officers and detectives are “recycling scripts” as they write up their accounts of their investigations. We will set up a Sanction case file that imports data turned over in the discovery process into fields that you can search as you prepare for trial. The best prepared trial lawyer is the one who has the advantage. Let Ronin help you be that lawyer.
Ronin has courtroom presentation equipment in Illinois and New York
Ronin has equipment ready to go in Chicago and New York City. We use large LCD monitors with a 2nd one for the judge to run courtroom presentations. We have document cameras, lap tops and presentations ready to go so you can be ready to present your case with total confidence.
Our technicians can set the equipment up and run the presentations for you, or let you run them yourselves. Just tell us what you want an we will get it done.
Ronin Helps Chicago Attorney Fred Truglio Recover a Record Verdict!
Jury awards $3.5 million in girl's death
Published November 19, 2005
CIRCUIT COURT -- The family of a 6-year-old Streamwood girl killed in an car crash four years ago was awarded $3.5 million by a Cook County jury this week.
The girl, Alejandra Fajardo, died after the Ford Escort her father, Mario Fajardo, was driving on Wise Road in Schaumburg in June 2001 hit another car turning onto Springinsguth Road.
On Thursday, the jury in a wrongful death suit brought by Alejandra's family ruled against the driver of the second car, Pamela Layden, now 22. The jury awarded members of Alejandra's family more than $3.5 million, according to attorneys in the case.
At the time of the crash, Layden was ticketed with failure to yield while making a left turn. Fajardo also was ticketed, for failure to secure a child and endangering the life of a child, because both Alejandra and her sister, then 9, were sitting in the car's front seat.
Copyright © 2005, Chicago Tribune
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