Using AirTags to track a spouse or child. Is it Legal? Should you do it? (Part 1)
Using AirTags to track a spouse or child. Is it Legal? Should you do it? (Part 1)
AirTags and other Bluetooth trackers, like Life360’s Tile, are coin-sized tracking devices. Using a Bluetooth signal, an AirTag pings off any Apple device using Apple’s Find My network and shows you the location of the AirTag. When out of range of the tracker, Tile’s app will show you the last location it was seen by your device and can ping off other Tile users to locate its current location.

Volunteering at Lawyers on Call: Giving Back to the Community Through Legal Aid
Volunteering at Lawyers on Call: Giving Back to the Community Through Legal Aid
As an attorney, my job is to help people navigate complex legal matters and advocate for their rights. But sometimes, the most rewarding part of being a lawyer isn’t representing clients in courtrooms or negotiating deals—it’s using your skills to make a direct, positive impact in your community.

Revenge Porn in North Carolina
Revenge Porn in North Carolina
With the use of social media and devices with technological capabilities that stretch the imagination, it can be challenging to keep the intimate details of our lives private. One racy image in the wrong hands can cause trauma, embarrassment and have serious criminal implications.

Wake County Court Filings Go Digital!
Wake County Court Filings Go Digital!
The state of North Carolina plans to invest over $100 million over the next ten years to convert its current court filing systems from paper filings to efilings. Wake County is one of four counties in the state to be part of a pilot program for this new eCourts system.

AirTags Part 2: How Can You Protect Yourself or Child from being Tracked
AirTags Part 2: How Can You Protect Yourself or Child from being Tracked
In Part 1, we discussed the use of AirTags to track your spouse and children and the implications in divorce and custody cases. Now you might be wondering, what can I do to protect myself or my child from being tracked?

Electronically-stored information, devices & social media: do’s and don’t’s
Electronically-stored information, devices & social media: do’s and don’t’s
In May 2017, we blogged about the “Do’s and Don’t’s” in Family Law. With the pandemic forcing most of us to live a “virtual life”, we thought it was important to revisit and update what you should and should not be doing on the Internet.

Social media: The do’s and don’ts in Family Law
Social media: The do’s and don’ts in Family Law
The Pew Research Center estimates that almost 70% of American adults use some form of social media, and that roughly 75 million of them check their social networks every day. With those kinds of statistics, it is clear that social media has become a part of our daily lives, and an increasingly significant factor in divorce and custody disputes.

Can I put an electronic tracking device on the vehicle my spouse drives?
Can I put an electronic tracking device on the vehicle my spouse drives?
Like most legal questions, there is not a simple “yes” or “no” answer to whether you can put an electronic tracking device on the vehicle driven by your spouse. The answer depends on a number of factors, including who is putting the electronic tracking device on the vehicle, who owns (or leases) the vehicle, and whether there is a court order protecting your spouse against assault, threats, harassment, following, or contact.
