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Day of the Doctor Who Fans

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Have a jelly baby, reverse the polarity of the neutron flow, get out your recorder, power up your sonic screwdriver and pick out your best bow tie. It is time for the 50th Anniversary of Doctor Who.

Judge Matthew Sciarrino and I sat down to talk about Doctor Who. The good judge dutifully started watching Doctor Who, beginning with the 2005 series to present day. He also watched many of the classic episodes, including the Three Doctors, Trial of a Time Lord, plus others from the early years.

What can lawyers learn from Doctor Who?

Trial Presentation

For starters, Trial of a Time Lord has an interesting spin on trial presentation technology. Jurors today watch crime shows and documentaries where a conflict is neatly resolved in 45 minutes. Those same jurors expect attorneys to educate them with visual technology, whether it is an iPad App with exhibits or CGI recreations of events.

Right to Self-Defense

Davros in The Stolen Earth took a rather “how dare you be so violent” tone after the Doctor’s companions decided to fight back against the Daleks. This always struck me as odd, because the Daleks and Davros planned to use a “Reality Bomb” to exterminate all life in the universe.

Dalek_6519_

Those who attempt genocide have no right to claim to be victims against those who fight back.

It is well-established in common law self-defense to use lethal force against those attempting to use lethal force on you. Moreover, it is codified in the UN Charter that countries have the right to self-defense.

As such, Davros should not be surprised that human beings would rise up instead of line up to be slaughtered.

Davros_6741Do People “Upgraded” To Cybermen Still Have Civil Rights?

Cybermen were assimilating people long before the Borg on Star Trek. For those poor souls who have their brain cut out, placed in a robot body, and emotions blocked, do they still retain any civil rights?

I will go with no, on the simple fact their bodies have been destroyed and they are no longer legally alive.

Cyberman2_6715Who Owns the Earth?

Do the Silurians and Sea Devils have superior claim of ownership over the Earth than human beings? Or did they abandon the Earth?

Most abandonment laws require the owner clearly demonstrates surrendering property rights and a demonstration the owner knowingly gave up control over the property. See, Abandonment.

Silurians outright leaving the Earth for another planet clearly shows abandonment of the Earth. It gets a little more complicated with those who went into suspended animation. However, since the Silurians and Sea Devils went into suspended animation in excess of 65 million years, they really have no valid claim to the entire planet.

This does not mean the inhabitants could not share the planet. There are tons of places where humans would not survive that reptiles and sea creatures would thrive.

WeepingRAP_6732Wills & Weeping Angels

Weeping Angels can make estate planning strange, because someone who is a victim of a Weeping Angel could will themselves property in the future (which could create a paradox or a pre-destination loop). The victim could also leave property for another. This could get into the Rule Against Perpetuities, depending on how far back in time the victim is sent.

Adipose Paternity Rights

Do the victims who had Adipose created from their body fat have any paternity rights?

Might likely no, because paternity rights cases address children being conceived by human beings. As the Adipose are not human, but made from human body fat, they are not human beings, thus not subject to our paternity laws. See, Cal Fam Code § 7611.

Adipose_6735The Day of the Lawyer

Doctor Who has 50 years of legal issues. While few tune in to watch for possible causes of action or crimes to discuss, there is no question Doctor Who has been a great adventure in time and space loved across the planet.

Almost Legal on Almost Human

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Almost Human is a great ride in Constitutional criminal procedure. Could a robot be a police officer? Could a robot police officer arrest a human being? How about testify in court? What possible issues could arise from robotic law enforcement?

The most legally helpful comparisons we have are red light cameras and police dogs.

I blogged on hearsay issues over red light cameras on Bow Tie Law with PhotoCop & The Red Light of Admissibility. The California Supreme Court has held that that “our courts have refused to require, as a prerequisite to admission of computer records, testimony on the ‘acceptability, accuracy, maintenance, and reliability of … computer hardware and software.’ ” People v. Goldsmith, 203 Cal. App. 4th 1515, 1523 (Cal. App. 2d Dist. 2012).

What would that mean for a robot? Would any “testimony” from a robot be testimony or merely computer records?

If we are treating robots like “people,” they would be testifying in court. If we are merely processing data from a robot police officer, then the robot police officer could not technically make a statement, because the robot is not a person under the California Evidence Code section 175.

There is a large number of cases focused on police dogs. In one case, the failure to give a verbal warning by police before using a dog trained to bite and hold was sufficient to state a Fourth Amendment claim. Kuha v City of Minnetonka, 328 F.3d 427 (8th Cir., 2003). Other cases address excessive force with untrained police dogs. Campbell v the City of Springboro, 788 F.Supp.2nd 637 (S.D. Ohio, 2011). States also have punishments for harming police dogs. State v. Kisor, 844 P.2d 1038 (Wash.App.Div. 2, 1993), Utah Code Ann. 76-9-306.

The precedents for police dogs ranging from class three felony for intentionally harming a dog to excessive force lawsuits give a preview of how robotic police officers could be viewed by the law. A robot police officer that acts human, works with humans and protects humans, would likely be viewed as a “police officer” under the law. This would include enhanced punishments for destroying a robot police officer and even civil rights violations.

Will we see these issues unfold on Almost Human? I do not know, but would be happy to brainstorm with the writers.

A Concerned Brother Speaks Out on Diani & Devine Meet the Apocalypse

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Josh Gilliland shares his concerns over his brother Gabe Diani and how making a pledge on Kickstarter can save Gabe’s

Nepotism in Diani & Devine Meet the Apocalypse

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My brother Gabriel Diani is working on a new Kickstarter project for his film Diani & Devine Meet the Apocalypse. This makes me think of only one thing: Nepotism.

Here is what the Supreme Court of the United States had to say about nepotism in Louisiana in selecting shipping pilots:

The practice of nepotism in appointing public servants has been a subject of controversy in this country throughout our history. Some states have adopted constitutional amendments or statutes to prohibit it. These have reflected state policies to wipe out the practice. But Louisiana and most other states have adopted no such general policy. We can only assume that the Louisiana legislature weighed the obvious possibility of evil against whatever useful function a closely knit pilotage system may serve. Thus the advantages of early experience under friendly supervision in the locality of the pilot’s training, the benefits to morale and esprit de corps which family and neighborly tradition might contribute, the close association in which pilots must work and live in their pilot communities and on the water, and the discipline and regulation which is imposed to assure the State competent pilot service after appointment, might have prompted the legislature to permit Louisiana pilot officers to select those with whom they would serve.

Kotch v. Board of River Port Pilot Comm’rs, 330 U.S. 552, 562-563 (U.S. 1947).

What can we learn from the Supreme Court and Louisiana? It is sometimes OK to have nepotism in certain professions. However, simply appointing family members to government posts after being elected is rarely publicly accepted. It is often illegal.

Which brings me to my brother. Check out his Kickstarter video and ask:

Why are lawyers killed off in all the end of the world movies?

Doesn’t that seem odd people would just live like animals instead of trying to rebuild the world? It certainly goes against the message from Akira or Star Trek First Contact.

We may never know the answer unless Gabe meets his Kickstarter fundraising goals. You can help at www.ddmta.com.

Yeti Liability on Doctor Who

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Who is legally responsible for the damage caused by the Yeti in Doctor Who Web of Fear?

2ndDoctorTARDISProfessor Travers brought the robotic Yeti from Tibet to London after the events of Doctor Who The Abominable Snowmen.

In the 40 years that followed, the good Professor started experimenting on the control spheres that the Great Intelligence used to control the Yeti.

Could Professor Travers be civilly liable for the mayhem that occurred in Web of Fear?

There is no case law directly on point, but there is enough to show a high likelihood the Professor could be liable for some of the damage. The Great Intelligence would be a superseding factor, but the fact remains Professor Travers knew of the dangers, thus subjecting him to liability for the Yeti attacks.

There are no law suits about robot Yeti on a killing spree. However, there is case law about wild animals and robots.

Yes, there was a case about a robot that killed someone.

Wild Animal Liability

2ndDoctor_No_Pet_Yeti_0639_edited-2Cases across the United States holds that there is absolute liability for those who keep wild animals.

You cannot have a pet wild bear and not be responsible if it injures someone. Burns v. Gleason, 819 F.2d 555, 556-558 (5th Cir. La. 1987) citing Vredenburg v. Behan, 33 La. Ann. 627 (La. 1881).

Conversely, if you have a domesticated animal, such as a bull, the issue is one of strict liability. Rozell v. Louisiana Animal Breeders Cooperative, Inc., 496 So. 2d 275 (La. 1986).

The Restatement (Second) of Torts § 519 and § 520 explains that the doctrine of absolute liability applies to the exercise of ultrahazardous or abnormally dangerous activities.These activities cannot be made safe by the “exercise of utmost care.” Roth v. NorFalco, LLC, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 42032, 22-23 (M.D. Pa. Apr. 29, 2010).

Restatement § 519 states: One who carries on an abnormally dangerous activity is subject to liability for harm to the person, land or chattels of another resulting from the activity, although he has exercised the utmost care to prevent the harm. Id.

The test for whether an activity is abnormally dangerous is:

(a) Existence of a high degree of risk of some harm to the person, land or chattels of others;

(b) Likelihood that the harm that results from it will be great;

(c) Inability to eliminate the risk by the exercise of reasonable care;

(d) Extent to which the activity is not a matter of common usage;

(e) Inappropriateness of the activity to the place where it is carried on; and

(f) Extent to which its value to the community is outweighed by its dangerous attributes.

Roth, at *22-23, citing Restatement (Second) of Torts § 520.

Based on the above, Professor Travers would have the following troubling legal problems:

a) There was a known high degree of risk of the Yeti going on a killing spree if controlled by the Great Intelligence;

b) There was a high likelihood the harm would be great, as evident by the events in The Abominable Snowmen;

c) There was a high unlikelihood the Professor could make the Yeti safe or eliminate the chance the bodiless Great Intelligence would be able to take control of the Yeti;

d) Working on robotic Yeti controlled by a bodiless entity called the Great Intelligence is not a matter of common usage;

e) The experiments were conducted in London, not a secure lab outside of a populated area;

f) Could the community benefit from being able to control robot Yeti? Perhaps, but we have done OK without them so far.

Gabe Diani, Josh's younger brother, enjoys the fact he has a Doctor Who toy that Josh does not have.
Gabe Diani, Josh’s younger brother, enjoys the fact he has a Doctor Who toy that Josh does not have.

Robots Killing People

Just because there is a case where someone sued over a death involving a robot does not mean we have I, Robot or Rise of the Machines.

The case of Payne v. ABB Flexible Automation involved a person who was killed in an industrial accident with robot in a production of aluminum automobile wheels. The Plaintiff argued the robot was defective and unreasonably dangerous.

The Plaintiff lost on a summary judgment motion, because the Plaintiff did not produce evidence that (1) defendant has failed to use the standard of care that a reasonably careful person would use; and that (2) the failure to exercise this care was the proximate cause of injuries suffered by the plaintiff. Payne v. ABB Flexible Automation, 1997 U.S. App. LEXIS 13571, 3-5 (8th Cir. Ark. June 9, 1997).

Could anyone killed by a Yeti demonstrate that Professor Travers did not use a reasonable standard of care and that his failure was the proximate cause of the deaths and injuries in Web of Fear?

I say yes.

Doing anything with the control spheres that did not involve a sledge hammer and melting them would be unreasonable. There is no question that because Professor Travers started experimenting with the Yeti control spheres that he awakened a long dormant threat. As such, he should be subject to liability for attacks caused by the Yeti.

 

A Veteran’s Day Note About My Grandfather

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Merchant Marrine StanHappy Veterans’ Day!

In honor of Veteran’s Day today I am writing a post about my grandfather, Grandpa Stan.  He was a Merchant Marine during World War II and I knew that, but I never really understood what it meant.  And just like many people of that generation, he never talked about what happened during his service during the war.  So I never thought much about his service, even when my mom told me about a medal he received from some town in Russia while I was in college (typical self-absorbed college kid!).

Today I am rectifying that mistake – I’ve learned about the Merchant Marines and why my grandpa got a medal from a Russian town and I’m going to share that knowledge with all of you.

The United States Merchant Marine is responsible for operating marine vessels that transport goods and services.  But during times of war, it can also operate as an auxiliary to the Navy, delivering troops and supplies for the military.  During World War II, the Merchant Marines were vital to the Allies’ success – transporting the personnel, supplies, and equipment needed for the military effort.  This key contribution was targeted by the enemy, however, and the Merchant Marines actually suffered a greater percentage of war-related deaths than any other U.S. service, with 1 in 26 mariners during World War II dying in the line of duty.

The mariners faced many deadly attacks, but one that was notoriously dangerous was known as the Murmansk Run.  Murmansk, a Russian seaport located north of the Arctic Circle, was a key city for the Allies because its harbor didn’t freeze in the winter.  So the Allies used this city to keep supplies running to the Russians, while the Germans used submarines and surface warships (along with bases in the north of occupied Norway) to try and stop the flow of supplies to the Russian front.

These convoys of vulnerable merchant marine ships were not only crucial to the Allies’ war efforts but also to the survival of the Russians under attack and blocked off by the Germans.  And it was for this service that my grandpa received his Russian medal.  He was one of the mariners that risked his life to deliver supplies (including salt pork, shoes, and tanks) to Murmansk in 1945.  Grandpa Stan was the Executive Officer on the William Wheelright, part of a convoy that sailed out of New York and stopped in Scotland for refueling before heading north of Norway and to Murmansk, facing attacks by the Germans along that route.  They landed in Murmansk just as President Roosevelt died and the Germans surrendered the same day they arrived back in Scotland.

Murmansk Medal for Stanley Hammer ArticleMy grandfather was in one of the last convoys to make the dangerous Murmansk Run.  And forty years later, in 1985, the Russian Federated Republic awarded a bronze medal to those who had made an outstanding contribution to the Allies’ effort, including those who made the Murmansk Run.  Grandpa Stan was invited to a ceremony in Russia but turned it down, asking them to mail the medal instead (he never liked to make a fuss over anything).

So, this Veteran’s Day, I’m proud to learn a little more about the risks taken – and sacrifices made – by the veterans among us.  In honor of my grandfather and the many other men and women (both civilian and military) who have risked (or lost) their lives defending us, I want to say thank you.  Your contribution and bravery are always remembered, but today we all take a moment to pause and reflect upon the heavy price you paid for the rest of us.  And I’m glad I’ve learned a little more about  my grandfather, although I wish I had learned this before he passed.  I love you, Grandpa.

Andrea Gibson from Kroll Ontrack on eDiscovery.com Review

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Andrea Gibson from Kroll Ontrack met with Josh Gilliland to demonstrate eDiscovery.com Review, discuss recent cases and geek out over