Turning 5

This is the annual post, where in the words of Colin McEnroe, I congratulate my blog for staying upright for another year.

These look awesome.

My very first post was on December 24, 2007 titled “Hello”:

I’ll be writing about legal issues, the practice of law, Connecticut legal stories and really anything law related that interests me enough to write about it.

Much has changed since 2007. There are 819 posts on this site. It has over 500,000 unique views. It has undergone 5 makeovers.  Posts on this site have resulted in a CT Supreme Court decision, legislation, and changes to ethical rules for attorneys. In 2010, the ABA Journal named this one of the best 100 law blogs.

A year ago, I wrote:

I’m looking forward to 2012. Through this site, I’ve realized that I really enjoy writing about the legislative process. In addition to it being interesting, our legislature gives me lots to write about.

I didn’t write about a single bill in 2012. Life happened. I co-founded FreedMcKeen with Meghan Freed and Kristen Marcroft. We formed a real estate partnership to build a home for Freed McKeen.

What interested me in 2012 was starting a law firm.  One of the core values of Freed McKeen is transparency. To that end we have open office space. We showed our struggles in building an office on this site.  Our dirty floors, bowling pins, and crushed cement were point on display for the world to see.

In 2012, Meghan joined me on this blog. Meghan is remarkable in many ways. One of those ways is she is a remarkable blogger. Her posts are well written, insightful, and entertaining.

I have no idea what 2013 holds in store for me or this site. We’ve re-upped the domain and will continue publishing.  We’ll continue to take you along for the ride as we explore “anything Connecticut law related that interests us enough to write about it.”

Many short posts are now being shared on Facebook. Please “like” our Facebook page.

Thank you for reading.

Sad City, Happy Office

Happily, local Hartford blogger Hakaan of Sad City Hartford visited our offices recently and just blogged about it.

The Sad City Hartford gents are famous around Hartford Blogland for their exploration of the buried Park River and their pay phone scavenger hunt.

One of the greatest things about their post on Freed McKeen is the inclusion of pictures from our office’s former life as the Emperor night club — a Hartford “hot spot” in the mid 2000s.  See our conference room when it was a private dining room.  See our basement when there were beds (yes, beds) in it.

No boring office for we three!

Finished Project: The Holiday Edition

My lovely mother reminded me yesterday that we never did a final video of the finished office.  Here it is — complete with holiday decorations.

Thank you all so much for your interest and feedback during our construction process.  We loved being able to share it.  Happiest holidays to you and yours.

What We’re Reading: The Marriage Equality Cases

Last week the US Supreme Court agreed to hear two cases pertaining to marriage equality. The issues presented by each case are complex.  Here’s a roundup of what the lawyers at FreedMcKeen are reading on the Supreme Court’s decision to take cases dealing with marriage equality.

Erwin Chemerinsky, the dean of UC Irvine’s law school, is confident about how the Supreme Court will end up ruling on Proposition 8.

“I believe the court will find that Prop. 8 and (the Defense Of Marriage Act) are unconstitutional,” Chemerinsky said. “The court decision will be 5-4 and I predict Justice Kennedy will write it. The court will say that the government has no legitimate interest in denying gays and lesbians the right to marry” – Constitutional Scholar,  Erwin Chemerinsky

The NYTimes has an excellent summary of the two cases before the Court. 

NPR has the story of a very unusual opponent in one of the cases:

Typically, when a court says a federal statute is unconstitutional, the federal government appeals to the Supreme Court to change the outcome. But after initially defending DOMA in the courts, the Obama administration made a highly unusual U-turn, and instead urged the Supreme Court to strike it down.

At that point, the House Republican leadership hired its own lawyer to defend the law. So when the case is argued, probably in March, it will be that lawyer — former Bush administration Solicitor General Paul Clement — who will be defending DOMA, while the Obama administration will be urging the court to strike down the statute.

These twists and turns apparently have caused the justices some concern as to whether they have the jurisdiction to decide the case when the federal government is no longer defending the law as constitutional. So the court has ordered the lawyers to also present arguments as to whether the Republican congressional leadership has standing to defend DOMA in place of the Obama administration.

The court may decide it doesn’t have standing to hear the cases writes Lyle Denniston from Scotusblog:

Each side gained the opportunity to make sweeping arguments, for or against such marriages.  But the Court left itself the option, at least during the current Term, of not giving real answers, perhaps because it lacks the authority to do so.

SCOTUS BLOG anticipates argument in late March and a decision in late June. 

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FreedMcKeen lawyers support marriage equality. Meghan Freed co-authored an amicus brief in support of marriage equality in the landmark case of Kerrigan v. Department of Public Health. Ryan McKeen handled one of Connecticut’s last dissolution of Civil Union cases.

Working In An Open Law Office

One of the great things about starting from scratch is getting to start from scratch.  Before we had an office, letterhead, or a phone number – we had each other.  Our firm is built on the belief in our team.

Our office is an extension of our belief in each other.  Meghan took the picture below. She posted it on twitter with the caption “best partners ever”.

Open Office Space

Working in an open office.

This picture was taken late in the afternoon. We had just gotten back from a mediation in the morning. A mediation that we had spent hundreds of hours preparing for. The case is high profile.

We are discussing what worked. What didn’t work. What needs to be done and how to do it. We are giving the case our best. We are arguing. In the process of arguing, we’re working to build the strongest argument possible for our case.

We don’t always agree. In fact, we often disagree. Disagreement is what happens whenever two or more lawyers are within speaking distance of each other.

Our firm mission is “to do great things”.

What we agree on is that walls between us are a barrier to doing great things.

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FreedMcKeen is a Hartford law firm.

 

Winter on Main

“Winter on Main”

View of Main Street from our office.

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Freed McKeen is a Hartford law firm.

The Light at the End of the Tunnel

Tonight we drank the first very red wine over our very white downstairs carpet.  My mom, who also chooses to tempt the fates with her own very white carpet, has this line about only serving guests oysters, mashed potatoes, and white wine.  She’s only kind of kidding.  (There isn’t cranberry sauce at Thanksgiving.)

Earlier this evening our sweet friends popped sweetly by with a lovely bottle of red.  After today’s painting (round 875), doorknob installing, and tv mounting, by tonight work had settled down into the basement — aka, land of the white carpet.  Our efforts involved Ikea (again), and so the wine was especially appreciated.  And it was appropriate that the very first wine quaffed on the very white carpet would be very red.  After all, we may as well be bold — even when it comes to the bitty bits.

Here is the latest:

@freedmckeen powered by ifttt.com

freed mckeen

We weren’t going to tweet. There wasn’t going to be an @freedmckeen account. That was two months ago.

Last night we created @freedmckeen.

Our reasons for not tweeting were:

1. No one really follows law firm accounts.; and

2. Firms that launch twitter accounts and tweet four times are lamer than firms that don’t tweet at all. There’s only so much time in a day. Sending tweets from an account that no one was going to read seemed like a giant waste of time.

This summer we had lunch with an expert on such things. We discussed twitter. We explained our reasons for not tweeting. Her response was “you should claim your page before someone else does”.

She’s right. The internet is full of cybersquatters and trolls. I’m not sure the good folks at Day Pitney have anything to do with @DayPitney.

Last night, I looked at twitter in an entirely different way. Twitter accounts come up high in search engine results.

When someone searches for “Freed McKeen” I want them to land on a page that coveys who we are. A page where we control both the content and appearance.  A firm twitter page does those things.

We solved the problem of content by using ifttt.com . ifttt.com is cool. ifttt stands for “If This Then That”. We set up a trigger in ifttt.com. A trigger makes something happen. When we post a status update on our Freed McKeen facebook page an identical tweet is automatically generated from our @freedmckeen account.

This allows us to easily generate content for our twitter account. Potential searchers will find a page we control that is up to date. All without us ever having to login to twitter. We think ifttt.com is smart.

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Freed McKeen is a Hartford law firm.

(Another) Late Night in the (Almost) Office

Last night Kristen removed the remaining tile in the downstairs bathroom.  Ryan assembled our desk chairs.  I painted.

Kristen and I have been painting for days now.  So that we are not in the contractors’ way,  we put on our painting outfits (they are very attractive), go down into the space, and paint away on the weekends and after the contractors leave at night.  (At this point I am convinced we have installed enough wainscoting to circle the sun.)

Although as Ryan pointed out there are struggles associated with balancing building out an office, starting a law firm and prioritizing one’s family, we are mindful of what a tremendous opportunity this is.  We are proud to be able to put our bodies as well as our brains into these initial months of FreedMcKeen.  We know that everything we amateurs can do in between the contractors’ serious skilled work gets us closer to the goal line of opening our physical office.

Kristen and I live above our office.  We run down with our coffee in the morning to answer questions.  Although at times during this phase it can be a bit much to have such easy access to the office, it is also extremely efficient for moving things forward.

(Lately we also take down a green smoothie for Brian Nelson, our awesome general contractor, who last Saturday won the Hogsback Half Marathon in an hour and fourteen minutes.  His winnings included a pink pig cookie and a piece of chocolate-covered bacon.  Brian is a vegetarian, so let us know if you want in on the chocolate bacon raffle.)

We three are really, really lucky to be opening this law firm.

But if you come too close, I am likely to paint you China White.

Here we are, last night:

Knock, Knock

We now have doors to join our floors.

(In this video Ryan, Kristen and my Dad all make brief appearances.  Oh, and please ignore the multi-colored stripes — the video is fine.)

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