Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 23, 2025 |
Tokenized securities are reshaping capital markets, but they also bring complex compliance and litigation risks. This guide explains how tokenized securities work, why they are usually regulated as securities, the rights and remedies available to investors and issuers, and how to build a defensib...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 22, 2025 |
California Penal Code 136 defines the core terms used in witness intimidation and victim harassment prosecutions. Understanding how the statute defines malice, witness, and victim can shape your defense strategy from day one and determine whether the government can actually prove a California Pen...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 22, 2025 |
New Hampshire HB 302 authorizes the state treasurer to invest a limited portion of public funds in digital assets and precious metals. For public entities, qualified custodians, and vendors that support government treasury operations, the law introduces new opportunities and new compliance risk. ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 22, 2025 |
The financial services industry is moving fast toward blockchain compliance automation. For U.S. banks, broker dealers, fintechs, funds, and Web3 platforms, the question is whether automation can reduce friction while meeting the same regulatory standards that make U.S. markets trusted worldwide....
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 22, 2025 |
Homomorphic encryption gives law firms a way to run searches, analytics, and even AI on encrypted information without ever exposing client data. For practices that handle medical files, trade secrets, and massive discovery sets, homomorphic encryption delivers the rare combination of speed, confi...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 19, 2025 |
A fourth DUI under California Vehicle Code 23550 is the most serious repeat-offense DUI in the state. If the new arrest falls within 10 years of three qualifying prior convictions, prosecutors can file the case as a felony, exposing you to state prison, mandatory minimum jail, and habitual traffi...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 19, 2025 |
California Penal Code 113 makes it a felony to manufacture, distribute, or sell false documents with the specific intent to conceal another person's citizenship or immigration status. If you or a loved one is under investigation or has been charged under California Penal Code 113, it is critical ...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 19, 2025 |
Blockchain legal compliance is no longer optional for California companies experimenting with smart contracts, tokenized assets, or distributed ledgers. As the technology moves into mainstream operations, executives must align innovation with clear legal duties under securities, contract, privacy...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 19, 2025 |
California Penal Code 126 perjury penalties are serious. A perjury conviction is a felony, and the statute authorizes a two, three, or four-year term imposed pursuant to California Penal Code section 1170(h). If you or a family member is under investigation or facing charges, understanding how ju...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 18, 2025 |
Cryptocurrency in international trade is no longer a thought experiment. From suppliers paid in digital dollars to marketplaces settling cross-border sales in stablecoins, businesses are adopting new rails to lower costs and move money faster. With that opportunity comes legal complexity. Califor...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 18, 2025 |
California Penal Code 13701 is the statute that requires every law enforcement agency in the state to adopt written domestic violence response policies. Those policies affect how officers investigate, document, and make arrest decisions. For anyone accused in a domestic violence case, understandi...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 18, 2025 |
California Penal Code 22210 is one of the state's strictest weapons laws. It criminalizes manufacturing, importing, selling, lending, giving, or possessing specific impact weapons such as leaded canes, billys, blackjacks, sandbags, sandclubs, saps, and slungshots. If you are charged under Califor...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 18, 2025 |
Executive Order 14067, signed on March 9, 2022, directs a whole-of-government approach to digital assets. For cryptocurrency and fintech stakeholders, Executive Order 14067 frames how federal agencies will balance innovation with consumer protection, financial stability, and national security. Th...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 17, 2025 |
California Vehicle Code 23154 sets a nearly zero tolerance standard for anyone on DUI probation. If you are on probation for a prior conviction under Vehicle Code 23152 or 23153, operating a vehicle with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.01 percent or more can trigger serious consequences. Becau...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 17, 2025 |
Smart contract platforms in California power everything from decentralized finance to digital collectibles, but their automation and immutability can turn small mistakes into costly disputes. This guide explains how these systems work, where disputes arise, and how Bulldog Law helps plaintiffs an...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 17, 2025 |
After child sexual exploitation, families often feel overwhelmed by trauma, logistics, and uncertainty. 34 U.S.C. § 11293 victim support for child sexual exploitation survivors sets out federal duties that help close those gaps. The statute directs the Administrator of the Office of Juvenile Just...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 17, 2025 |
DVRO e-filing in California allows you to request a Domestic Violence Restraining Order through a secure online portal instead of going to the courthouse. This guide explains who can use electronic filing, what the law requires, the forms you need, and how to move your case forward safely and eff...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 16, 2025 |
California Penal Code 121 narrows procedural defenses in perjury cases by making clear that irregularities in the way an oath was administered usually do not excuse false statements made under oath. For anyone facing perjury allegations, understanding California Penal Code 121 and where it does a...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 16, 2025 |
Zero knowledge encryption gives California law firms a way to use modern cloud tools while preserving attorney client privilege and confidentiality. By ensuring only the end user controls decryption keys, zero knowledge encryption keeps sensitive information inaccessible to vendors, platforms, or...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 16, 2025 |
Tokenized gaming assets are transforming how games define ownership, value, and player rights. As developers convert skins, items, currencies, and access rights into blockchain based tokens, they create digital property that can be traded outside a single game and persist beyond a publisher's con...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 16, 2025 |
California Penal Code 22290 classifies specific impact weapons as public nuisances and places them into a civil seizure-and-destruction framework. If police take a leaded cane, billy, blackjack, sandbag, sandclub, sap, or slungshot from you, the case may move forward even without a criminal convi...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 15, 2025 |
BRC-20 vs ERC-20 is not just a technical comparison. It is a legal strategy decision that affects securities exposure, smart contract liability, consumer protection duties, and multi-jurisdiction compliance. California founders, investors, and platform operators should weigh these frameworks earl...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 15, 2025 |
AI oracle systems are changing how smart contracts operate by turning passive data feeds into active decision engines. For California companies building or integrating these tools, the shift from static inputs to contextual inferences raises novel questions about accountability, governance, and r...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 15, 2025 |
Facing a charge tied to possession of a wooden club or baton in California does not automatically mean a conviction. Penal Code 22295 creates targeted exemptions that can completely bar prosecution when the right facts and documentation are present. This article explains who qualifies, what proof...
Posted by Bulldog Law | Sep 15, 2025 |
California Penal Code 4854 creates a pathway to restore firearm rights through a gubernatorial pardon, but the process is technical and the outcomes vary based on a person's conviction history. This guide explains how California pardons interact with firearm prohibitions, the limits that still ap...