Posted by Bulldog Law | Mar 02, 2026 |
The landscape of digital finance continues to evolve at a remarkable pace. On February 11, 2026, a groundbreaking announcement revealed that BlackRock's USD Institutional Digital Liquidity Fund, known as BUIDL, would become available for trading through UniswapX technology. This development repre...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Mar 02, 2026 |
Most people think of contempt of court as something that happens to out of control litigants who yell at judges or ignore court orders. The reality is far broader and more complicated than that. In California, contempt encompasses a wide range of conduct, from a juror doing independent online res...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Mar 02, 2026 |
California's unclaimed property laws grant the State Controller sweeping authority over assets deemed abandoned or unclaimed. Code of Civil Procedure Section 1365 empowers the Controller with broad discretion to manage, protect, and conserve unclaimed property on behalf of multiple interests. For...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Mar 02, 2026 |
A quiet but consequential regulatory fight is playing out in Washington right now, and its outcome could reshape how digital asset firms access the national banking system for years to come. In January 2026, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency proposed a rule change that would alter the...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 28, 2026 |
The Grand Jury Just Went Public Now What?
Most people picture grand jury proceedings as secretive, closed door affairs where prosecutors build cases in the shadows. That picture is mostly accurate. But California law carves out a notable exception that can dramatically change the stakes for an...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 28, 2026 |
Mediation Does Not Always End With a Deal — And That Is Okay
There is a widespread assumption that mediation is supposed to produce a settlement. When it does not, some defendants feel as though something went wrong, that an opportunity was missed, or that the process itself failed them. That fr...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 28, 2026 |
Your Right to Stay Silent Does Not Disappear at the Grand Jury Door
Few constitutional protections are more fundamental than the Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Most people know they have the right to remain silent. What far fewer people understand is how that right operates in...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 28, 2026 |
The Alternative to State Prison You May Not Know About
If you or someone you love is facing criminal charges in California, the conversation around sentencing does not have to end with state prison. California law specifically authorizes community based punishment programs as a structured, funde...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 28, 2026 |
A New Legal Landscape Is Coming for California Defendants
Civil litigation in California is about to look different. Starting January 1, 2027, California Code Section 1775.5 becomes operative, bringing with it a structured set of conditions that govern exactly when a court can order a civil case...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 28, 2026 |
You Have More Options Than You Think
If you are a defendant in a California civil lawsuit, your first instinct might be to prepare for a long, expensive battle in court. That instinct is understandable, but it may not serve your best interests. California law was specifically designed to give pa...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 28, 2026 |
Why a Single Affidavit Can Carry Enormous Legal Weight
Most people outside the legal world have never thought twice about an affidavit of publication. It sounds routine — a piece of paperwork confirming that something was printed in a newspaper. But in California courts, this document carries re...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 28, 2026 |
Service Is Not a Formality — It Is a Constitutional Right
When someone files a petition against you in an arbitration proceeding, how they deliver that petition to you is governed by law, not by their own convenience. California Code of Civil Procedure Section 1290.4 lays out specific and enforc...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 27, 2026 |
Discovering that a federal tax lien has been filed against your property or assets is one of the most stressful moments a California resident or business owner can face. The paperwork is dense, the legal procedures are unfamiliar, and the consequences of inaction can be severe. But here is the th...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 27, 2026 |
When the IRS or another federal agency decides you owe money, one of their most powerful tools is the federal tax lien. It attaches to your property, follows your financial reputation, and can complicate everything from selling your home to securing a business loan. Understanding how these liens ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 27, 2026 |
Amending a homeowners association's declaration represents one of the most significant actions a community can take, fundamentally altering the governing document that defines property rights, restrictions, and obligations. Civil Code Section 4270 establishes the precise requirements for valid de...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 27, 2026 |
There is a moment in every eminent domain case that functions like a turning point — the day expert witness lists and valuation data are exchanged. Up until that point, both sides have been preparing their arguments, gathering appraisals, and building their case. On exchange day, those arguments ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 27, 2026 |
The Records You Need Are Being Withheld. Now What?
If you are defending a civil lawsuit in California, medical records are often the backbone of your entire case. They can confirm timelines, contradict a plaintiff's claims, reveal pre-existing conditions, and expose inconsistencies in testimony....
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 27, 2026 |
Real estate transactions often involve more than just an initial deposit. Buyers frequently make multiple payments throughout the purchase process, including initial deposits, additional earnest money installments, and other staged payments before closing. When sellers want the right to keep mult...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 26, 2026 |
Missing a Deposition Is Not a Minor Mistake
Depositions are one of the most powerful tools in California civil litigation. They lock in testimony, surface evidence, and shape the entire direction of a case. So when someone fails to show up or shows up and refuses to cooperate the opposing pa...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 26, 2026 |
When a mechanics lien expires or becomes unenforceable in California, property owners gain significant legal protection under Civil Code Section 8494. This provision serves as a critical safeguard, ensuring that expired or invalidated liens no longer cloud property titles or create ongoing obliga...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 26, 2026 |
When Your Private Records Become Part of Someone Else's Case
Few things feel more invasive than discovering that your medical history, bank statements, school records, or therapy notes are being handed over to another party in a lawsuit without your knowledge. In California, this happens through...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 26, 2026 |
One of the most overlooked aspects of a California partition lawsuit is what happens when the bills come due. Most co-owners walk into these disputes focused on the property itself, whether it gets divided or sold and what their share looks like at the end. Far fewer stop to think carefully about...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 26, 2026 |
When Your Work History Becomes a Legal Target
Your employment records contain some of the most personal information about your professional life: your salary, performance reviews, disciplinary history, attendance records, communications with HR, and much more. The idea that another party in a ci...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 26, 2026 |
Digital Data Is the New Battleground in Civil Litigation
Text messages. Emails. Cloud storage. Deleted files. Metadata buried inside documents you forgot you created. In modern civil litigation, electronically stored information has become one of the most aggressively pursued categories of evide...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Feb 26, 2026 |
The Moment That Can Change Everything
There is a particular kind of silence in a deposition room that costs people their cases. It happens when a question crosses a line — touching privileged communications, invading protected work product, or pulling in irrelevant and potentially damaging terri...