CourthouseForum.com is the Internet's only website with a forum structure based upon the nation's court system. There is a forum for discussing and evaluating virtually every court and judge in the nation. Participation is free, and may be done anonymously.
(PRWEB)
August 3, 2005 --
Government Forums, Inc. announces the launch of CourthouseForum.com, the
Internet's only website dedicated to providing a way to monitor, discuss and
evaluate all of the nation's courts and judges.
CourthouseForum.com provides a unique message board and blogging forum designed
specifically for discussing each and every court, judge and judicial nominee in
the country. Users may post current legal news, events, verdicts, editorials,
and polls, as well as information about judges, such as their qualifications and
biography, opinions, judgments, commendations, misconduct, biases, judicial
temperament, understanding of the law, appearances of impropriety, and much
more. Participation in the forum is free, and may be done anonymously.
CourthouseForum.com's forum hierarchy is uniquely based upon the structure of
the nation's court systems. It is the largest forum structure of its kind. There
are currently over 500,000 forum categories for organizing information and
users' comments about courts, judges, cases, and more. There are forums for
every court and judge in the federal judiciary, as well as forums for federal
judicial nominees, and federal appellate court opinions. There are forums for
every state appellate court and state appellate judge, and forums for state
appellate court opinions. There are forums for virtually every venue, trial
court and trial judge in the following states: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona,
California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana,
Kentucky, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, New Jersey, New York,
North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Tennessee,
Texas, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin. CourthouseForum.com currently has
forums covering nearly 80% of the nation's courts and judges, with plans to
complete the remainder of the country's courts and judges in the coming months.
CourthouseForum.com's powerful search features make it easy to find a specific
judge, court, topic or blog, so that users can avoid getting lost in the maze of
our nation's court systems.
CourthouseForum.com allows users the flexibility of classifying their own posts.
For example, users can classify a post by whether the post is about a judge or
case, positive or negative, and opinion or objective. If about a case, users can
classify the post by the specific case type (e.g., civil, criminal, personal
injury, breach of contract, fraud, deceptive trade, antitrust, maritime, etc.).
CourthouseForum.com integrates blogging within the forum hierarchy. This feature
allows users to create blogs within any relevant area of the forum. Blogs
created in CourthouseForum.com have RSS feed capabilities.
CourthouseForum.com also has a Multi-Forum feature which gives users the ability
to post a topic or blog in multiple locations within the forum. This feature
helps ensure that the topic or blog will be read when the subject matter covers
multiple forum categories.
CourthouseForum.com's Case Notes is another unique feature of the forum. Case
Notes gives users the ability to provide a variety of information about cases in
a database format, and is integrated into the forum hierarchy. This allows for
easy review and retrieval of case information, such as the parties, allegations,
results, verdicts, settlements, attorneys, experts, and more. Users can search
on a variety of case criteria by using the Case Notes search feature.
CourthouseForum.com is the premier website covering the nation's courts, judges
and cases. Now, the public, attorneys and litigants have one source for locating
judicial information, and for monitoring, discussing and evaluating the nation's
courts, judges and cases – CourthouseForum.com, the nation's repository of
courthouse information!
http://www.courthouseforum.com/index.php